T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
968.1 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Fri May 22 1992 15:40 | 8 |
| I think it's more that "international" is a sexy word more than "foreign"
being a bad word. Kind of like calling a landing strip in the U.S. "Podunk
International Airport" because an occasional flight from Bermuda lands there.
Of course I wouldn't put it past some New York or Boston station to report the
temperature in foreign cities, like Pittburgh or Santa Fe.
Clay
|
968.2 | | SIMON::SZETO | Simon Szeto, International Sys. Eng. | Fri May 22 1992 21:24 | 17 |
| While I can't say how old this usage is, I do remember that I was once
an "international student," and that was some thirty years ago.
The group I'm working in now is truly international, but it's primarily
(about 95%) based outside the US. It is marginally better than its
predecessor (IED under David Stone), which was basically "foreign"
(European, to be exact) with a token presence in the US.
"Foreign" does sometimes have a somewhat negative connotation, but I
don't know about politically incorrect, especially as the opposite of
"domestic." I don't particularly care to be called a "foreigner,"
(I prefer "American" or, if you want to make the distinction,
"naturalized American") but a derivative of "international" can't be
susbstituted in this context.
--Simon
|
968.3 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat May 23 1992 01:28 | 13 |
| I would describe Geneva, Paris, London as international cities, but
I don't think I would use the same term for Munich or Nice, though that
is a marginal decision. The only U.S. city I have seen enough of to judge
is Boston, and I wouldn't class that as international.
I have mixed thoughts about "foreign". I am British, but I have
lived in Valbonne longer than I have lived anywhere else, so I don't
think of either Britain or France as "foreign". The way the EEC is
developing I will probably have to consider "foreign" as being
equivalent to "non-European". My wife's father refers to everything
from outside the three counties of Devon, Cornwall and Somerset as
"foreign", and wants to know why "foreigners" (and that includes people
from London and Manchester) can't speak English.
|
968.4 | CNN-ism | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Sat May 23 1992 23:48 | 9 |
| .0> Has 'foreign' become a bad word, perhaps politically incorrect?
I believe that CNN (or at least CNN International) has an in-house policy not
to use the word "foreign" as a synonym for "outside the United States of
America". "International" is the preferred substitute, probably for lack of a
better alternative.
While this makes sense for CNN, there must be contexts in which it is just
silly.
|
968.5 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Sun May 24 1992 06:16 | 9 |
| An international weather report is one with temperatures in Celsius.
A bit more seriously, an international anything is an anything that
spans two or more countries, while a foreign anything is an anything
that is somehow distinguished from what is local. The newest member
of the U.S. supreme court is on record as having found a foreign
object on his container of an international beverage.
-- Norman Diamond
|
968.6 | how about 'overseas'? | SIMON::SZETO | Simon Szeto, International Sys. Eng. | Sun May 24 1992 15:55 | 11 |
| The word "overseas" seems to have fallen out of vogue; it may be more
appropriate than "international" in the contexts under discussion,
without carrying the baggage that "foreign" does.
> An international weather report is one with temperatures in Celsius.
And a foreign weather report is one with temperatures in Centigrade.
(Uh-oh! Rathole alert.)
--Simon
|
968.7 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Sun May 24 1992 22:09 | 9 |
| >And a foreign weather report is one with temperatures in Centigrade.
Some foreign weather reports have temperatures in Fahrenheit.
But most are in Celsius.
And for some reason, domestic weather reports (Japanese) use the word
������졼�� (Senchigure-do) instead of ���른���� (Serujiasu).
-- Norman Diamond
|
968.8 | a technical term | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon May 25 1992 00:42 | 7 |
| "International airport" defined:
[ICAO] Any airport designated by the Contracting State in whose
territory it is situated as an airport of entry and departure for
international air traffic, where the formalities incident to customs,
immigration, public health, animal and plant quarantine and similar
procedures are carried out.
|
968.9 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Mon May 25 1992 11:04 | 12 |
| Obviously the word we are looking for to replace these confused words
must be
Extranational
like extraterrestrial for things not of earth
extranational is for things not of the nation.
Stuart
|
968.10 | | IEDUX::jon | Five more years? I need five more beers! | Tue May 26 1992 06:58 | 6 |
| This discussion of international and domestic airports reminds me of a
totally irrelevant sentence in a Dutch tourist guide which stuck in my memory:
"Lelystad has the largest small airport in the Netherlands."
Jon
|
968.11 | | ULYSSE::WADE | | Wed May 27 1992 02:53 | 7 |
| >> "Lelystad has the largest small airport in the Netherlands."
Ah, but there is probably a formal definition of
"small airport" that you didn't take into account.
Jim
|
968.12 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed May 27 1992 13:32 | 3 |
| "Small airport" means one that is not "international" :-)
So largest "small airport" makes perfect sense.
|
968.13 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri May 29 1992 11:31 | 5 |
| re .8:
There's a sign along some highway in New York state designating the exit
for Sullivan County International Airport. I'd be surprised if they have
customs facilities.
|
968.14 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Emotional Baggage? Just carry-on. | Fri May 29 1992 12:09 | 5 |
| Perhaps not, but that airport may support flights to other countries
(Canada comes to mind), and it could be the Canadian airports that
have the customs facilities.
andrew
|
968.15 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Sat May 30 1992 00:16 | 2 |
| "Sullivan County International Airport" is not listed in the FAA's
Airmans' Information Manual (AIM) as an international airport.
|