T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
683.1 | Close to Home... | ULYSSE::HEMMINGS | Lanterne Rouge | Mon Jun 19 1989 10:51 | 7 |
|
Naturally...
DEC Corporation ??????
|
683.2 | Possibly the worst ever ... | KESU::PETERS | Steve Peters, @VBO x5470 | Mon Jun 19 1989 14:20 | 1 |
| The dreaded: VAT tax
|
683.3 | ISBN number | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Running old protocol | Mon Jun 19 1989 16:08 | 23 |
| Before `PIN numbers' were dreamt of (I think) I was haunted by `ISBN
number'. This was serious, because I worked in a bookshop at the time.
To answer .0's last question, I don't think there is anything anyone
can do. But languages stay around for quite a while, and I guess that
sometime in the next millennium (dv) everyone (except readers of
historical dictionaries and students of etymology) will be unaware
that `PIN' implies a noun.
In the meantime, a lot of people find it annoying. I find it
irritating, but don't lose any sleep over it. When I'm feeling
pedantic (esp. with security people, who are very fond
of saying `PIN number') I just say `PIN'. This often hinders
communication (an important consideration, esp. when dealing with
a jobsworth); so - when necessary - I tack some other noun on
(but not `number'): `PIN whatsit' or `PIN doofer' or `number thingy'.
Plain `number' sometimes works.
Wise coiners of acronyms leave the noun out - e.g. Geep (in which the
P stands for a noun all right, but not for the vehicle itself - which
is a General Purpose vehicle/car/w.h.y.)
b
|
683.4 | Not all are bad | KAOA01::LAPLANTE | Not the Northern Magus | Mon Jun 19 1989 19:13 | 8 |
|
In Canada we have a Social Insurance Number which the government
uses to track.
In this case its not too bad. Ask someone for their SIN number;
it could be fun.
Roger
|
683.5 | | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Mon Jun 19 1989 19:18 | 5 |
| SCUBA gear
LASER light
Dan
|
683.6 | 2 more... | SKIVT::ROGERS | Damnadorum Multitudo. | Mon Jun 19 1989 19:32 | 4 |
| SALT Treaty.
COBOL Language.
Larry
|
683.7 | They are more sinned against than sinning. | PSTJTT::TABER | handy hints for around the home | Mon Jun 19 1989 20:55 | 11 |
| Maybe the fault lies not in the people who use the acronyms, but in the
people who make them up. If anyone seriously thought people would be saying
"I'll take my SCUBA topside," or "Oh good, they've signed the SALT!" they
are badly out of touch with people's speaking habits. This is especially
true in cases like SALT or PIN where the acronym is a commonly used word
that can only cause confusion when heard in context.
So don't get angry at the persons who try to make themselves understood by
adding these little redundancies, get mad at the idiot who put them in that
awful position.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
683.8 | Taking account | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Mon Jun 19 1989 23:05 | 14 |
| It is also true of abbreviations that are neither common words nor
pronounceable as words. Our project is performing extensive testing
now and it is quite common to hear people speak of "DVT tests" and
"SVT tests."
I agree with .0 - the practice is maddening and it does take an
effort to keep from correcting people when they use such locutions.
There seems, moreover, to be little pattern to the practice. We
never hear, for instance, people speaking of the "AMA association"
or the "GNP product," but "PIN number" and "DDA account" are quite
common.
Bernie
|
683.9 | bum raps? | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Tue Jun 20 1989 08:32 | 11 |
| Some of the examples in previous replies aren't fair.
For example, "SALT" could refer to the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks,
the negotiations that produce a SALT treaty.
Also, is there an official corporate interpretation of "DVT"? If it stands
for Design Verification Testing, then "DVT tests" would be correct if used
as follows:
"In the course of Design Verification Testing, the xxx group ran
a total of 200 DVT tests during the last month."
|
683.10 | A counter-example | IOSG::CARLIN | Dick Carlin IOSG | Tue Jun 20 1989 14:39 | 20 |
| It works the other way too:
In the UK the Ministry of Transport (MOT) instigated a roadworthiness
test for cars which gave rise to the following usages (both meaningless
if you think about them too hard) -
"Let's see its MOT" - ie MOT certificate
"It failed its MOT" - ie MOT test
Looking at the latter, perhaps people were afraid that T stood for test
and therefore didn't want to fall into the trap described in previous
replies :-)
Dick
Language lives. I'm still a pedant on such things as correct usage of
fewer/less but "PIN number" rolls off the tongue sufficiently well for
me to use it (except that I've forgotten mine :-). After all, the
history of language is one of anomalies becoming the "norm".
|
683.11 | An unredundancy | SHARE::SATOW | | Tue Jun 20 1989 15:54 | 7 |
| A problem of a different sort occurs almost universally with the acronym
"MIT".
The first (and just about only time) I heard someone refer to "MIT" as
"the MIT", it sounded funny, but preceding "MIT" with "the" is correct.
Clay
|
683.12 | Best test | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Tue Jun 20 1989 17:04 | 11 |
| Re: .9
It is not unfair to criticize "DVT tests." If the T stands for
"testing," it is at best awkward to say "Design Verification Testing
tests," and much more satisfactory to refer to them simply as "Design
Verification Tests." Why add the extra word and the redundancy
"testing tests"? Also, even if the T stood originally for "testing,"
it is not incorrect to change the form to "test" or "tests" as required
in sentences.
Bernie
|
683.13 | | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Tue Jun 20 1989 20:56 | 5 |
| But "MIT" could very well include the "the", just as it
includes the "of", despite there not being a letter in
the acronym for it.
Dan
|
683.14 | Mit schlag | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Tue Jun 20 1989 22:10 | 6 |
| It certainly sounds awkward to say "the MIT," but then it doesn't
sound awkward at all to say "the FBI." I suppose this is yet another
part of the language in which one should not expect to find an excess
of logic.
Bernie
|
683.15 | Terminology Verification test | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Wed Jun 21 1989 08:28 | 16 |
| re .12
I certainly agree with you that "Design Verification Testing tests" sounds
awkward, and I have no problems with "Design Verification tests". The point
that I was trying to make was that "DVT tests" is not incorrect in the way
that that "PIN number" (meaning Personal Identification Number number) is.
"Design Verification Testing tests" is a clumsy, but appropriate, term for
tests that are run in the course of the procedure called Design Verification
Testing. "DVT tests" is less clumsy, and means exactly the same thing.
Perhaps we can reach a compromise on this issue, by agreeing to an alternative
term. Instead of either "DVT tests" or "Design Verification tests", how
about "that goddam waste of time that didn't detect the problems that it
should have"?
-- Eric, who remembers DVT for a product whose name I won't bother mentioning
|
683.16 | Not Gone With the Wind | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Wed Jun 21 1989 18:49 | 26 |
| Re: .15
> "Design Verification Testing tests" is a clumsy, but appropriate,
> term for tests that are run in the course of the procedure called
> Design Verification Testing. "DVT tests" is less clumsy, and
> means exactly the same thing.
Well stated. Why may it not be the case as well that "Design
Verification Test test" is also a clumsy but appropriate term for
a test that is run in the course of the procedure or process called
Design Verification Test? And in that case "DVT test" would also
be a less awkward way of saying exactly the same thing. I just
do not see the difference between the two. I think neither is
incorrect. Both are merely redundant and awkward.
Incidentally, we may never know what the "T" was intended to stand
for. In the publication _Corporate Phase Review Process Guide_,
there occurs a glossary entry "Design Verification Testing (DVT)"
and the following statement in the text: "Design Verification Test
(DVT)...units must be the same as the production units."
I like your proposed compromise very much and shall adopt it. If
we change the name to GWT (Goddamn Waste of Time), then GWT test
would not be redundant.
Bernie
|
683.17 | not the MIT | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Sat Jun 24 1989 01:07 | 7 |
| After four years of going there, I assure you that "the MIT" sounds
very strange. (I hestitate to say it's wrong.) The text, carved into
stone above the entrance says,
MASSACHVSETTS INSTITVTE of TECHNOLOGY
"The" simply isn't there.
|
683.18 | Lopping bits off .. | CLARID::BELL | David Bell, ASD Program Office, VBO | Wed Jul 12 1989 10:24 | 6 |
| A favourite (in the French computer press at least) is to talk
about proceesing power in MIPS. Unfortunately, only those
processors with 2 or more MIPS are quoted correctly.
Often reference is made to 1 MIP processors - 1 "Million
Instructions Per" processors
|
683.19 | What about VUP(s)? | BISTRO::BLOMBERG | Ancient Systems Support | Wed Jul 12 1989 12:29 | 2 |
|
On the same line, is VUP plural? 5 VUP or 5 VUPs?
|
683.20 | | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | 1:25000 - a magic number | Wed Jul 12 1989 14:16 | 11 |
| G'day,
MIPS = Meaningless Information for P....... Saletalk
djw
(or so 'twas defined to me , once )
|
683.21 | Sigh! | WECARE::BAILEY | Corporate Sleuth | Mon Jul 24 1989 22:31 | 18 |
|
Just as an example of redundancy that I've always liked, an artist
friend of mine did a work in college called:
Bare Naked Nude Without Any Clothes
(And ALL acronyms are annoying, redundant or not! List all the
alternatives for any one of them -- PC is a good one:
Personal computer
Pocket caluclator
Personnel Committee
Pop corn
Portable computer
you can go on from there into meaninglessness forever...)
Sherry
|
683.22 | that was no typo, that was ... | LESNET::KALLIS | To thine own self be candid. | Mon Jul 24 1989 22:43 | 10 |
| Re 21 (Sherry):
>(And ALL acronyms are annoying, redundant or not! List all the
>alternatives for any one of them -- PC is a good one:
... not to mention the granddaddy of them all:
Printed Circuit.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
683.23 | PC Plimp... | EGAV01::DKEATING | Don't you YUH me mate! | Tue Jul 25 1989 15:36 | 13 |
| .22� ... not to mention the granddaddy of them all:
.22� Printed Circuit.
Nah Steve...surely "Police Constable" would be the granddaddy???
and who would be greatgranddaddy?...
...why...Perry Como of course!!! :-)
- Dave K.
|
683.24 | Pretty Cute | LESCOM::KALLIS | To thine own self be candid. | Tue Jul 25 1989 17:30 | 5 |
| Re .23 (Dave ,K):
Hmph! I was keeping it in the realm of electronics.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
683.25 | more | LEDS::HAMBLEN | Professional procrastinator | Tue Jul 25 1989 17:47 | 8 |
|
> Hmph! I was keeping it in the realm of electronics.
> Steve Kallis, Jr.
Then we must certainly include Programmable Controller.
Dave
|
683.26 | | CNTROL::MENTAL | I'm lost and then I'm found | Thu Jul 27 1989 15:58 | 6 |
|
Don't forget Program Counter...
/ken
|
683.27 | Please consider | ECCGY4::HAIGH | Ich glaube mein Schwein pfeift! | Mon Jul 31 1989 19:44 | 1 |
| Personnel Consultant
|
683.28 | Aren't You Glad You Asked? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Aug 28 1989 21:54 | 12 |
| re somewhere back there - VUPs are not like MIPSs. A VUP is a VAX
Unit of Processing. A VUP is roughly a VAX MIPS. VUPs got invented
because a VAX I (as in MIPS) can be a whole lot bigger than a RISC
I, making VAX MIPS and RISC MIPS unfairly comparable.
By the way, the use of MIP as a pseudosingular form is also ubiquitous
in the US.
Of course, the classic acronymnyms are AC current and DC current.
len.
|
683.29 | Sportscaster talk | SHARE::SATOW | | Mon Oct 02 1989 18:44 | 20 |
| In baseball, there is a statistic called "run batted in", normally referred to
by its acronym (or more correctly, I suppose, its initialism) "RBI". The
plural is "runs batted in". Question: what is the plural of the initialism --
"RBI" (with the "R" standing for "runs") or RBIs?
Lately, baseball announcers have taken to saying, e.g. "He now has 100 RBI".
That sounds funny to me, but I don't know whether it sounds funny because it
is incorrect or because I'm used to hearing it the other way.
According to the "Handbook of Technical Writing", the correct way to form the
plural is to add an "s", but their examples (MIRVs, CRTs, and GIs) are all
initialisms for phrases ended by a noun. I guess VUP is and example in which
the last word of the acronymned :^) word is not a noun, so if "VUPs" is
correct, then "RBIs must be also.
My guess is that "RBIs" is correct, and sports broadcasters (the least
literate of media folks) just want to sound linguistically correct, but end up
sounding silly.
Clay
|
683.30 | Oh, Who Cares? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Oct 03 1989 22:59 | 8 |
| re .29 - it's obviously RsBI, pronounced ArzBeeEye.
Of course, that would mean we'd have to adopt VUsP and MIsPS etc..
Uhm, "initialism"? Whatever happened to acronym?
len.
|
683.31 | Ribbies | KAOO01::LAPLANTE | Not the Northern Magus | Wed Oct 04 1989 14:22 | 7 |
| re .29
Everyone knows RBI is pronounced 'ribbie' and the plural is 'ribbies'
Well just about every baseball anouncer does.
Roger
|
683.32 | Acronym vs Initialism | SHARE::SATOW | | Wed Oct 04 1989 14:54 | 10 |
| re: .30
According to the "Handbook of Technical Writing" and acronym is pronounced as
a word, while and initialism is pronounced as separate letters. So, COBOL,
scuba, laser, DEC, RSTS (at least to me), VAX and RBI (pronounced `ribbie' are
acronyms, but IBM, RSX, PDP, and RBI (pronounced `are bee eye' are initialisms.
I have no idea what the significance is. I usually use "acronym" for either.
Clay
|
683.33 | Initialize and Initialism Have Initial Is! | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Oct 04 1989 20:25 | 9 |
| re .32 - Aha - now I believe I finally understand the true meaning
of such technologisms as "initialize" and "initialization".
I wonder - do acronyms and initialisms (how do all the anti-neologists
(paleologists?) tolerate that neologism?) hinge solely on the
pronounceability of an arbitrary assemblage of letters?
len.
|
683.34 | Note Also - Apostrophe: A Digression in Discourse | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Oct 04 1989 20:30 | 7 |
| Did we discuss the issue here or elsewhere of whether such plurals
require or prohibit an apostrophe? E.g., in the title to .33, should
I have written "I's" rather than "Is"? Do the pluralization rules
for acronyms and initialisms differ?
len.
|
683.35 | | PROXY::CANTOR | $ DEL [*...]*.*;* fixes any problem! | Fri Oct 06 1989 07:33 | 5 |
| Re .34
Note 480 in this conference.
Dave C.
|