T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
4640.1 | Vendorize | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Tue Jun 04 1996 10:28 | 9 |
| From 4597.39:
> vendorizing
This apparently means something like "Selling Off" but differing
in some yet-to-be-explained way.
Atlant
|
4640.2 | ex | JOKUR::MACDONALD | | Tue Jun 04 1996 10:28 | 4 |
| Atlant,
You might want to cross post this to thebay::joyoflex as well. There a
couple of threads there that discuss this kind of thing.
Bruce
|
4640.3 | | SSGV02::GRANT | Margo, DTN 381-6192 | Tue Jun 04 1996 12:03 | 4 |
| I heard that the term for modifications to a group of offices, shrinking the
cubicle size to less than 10' x 10' -- I am not making this up -- is:
Densification
|
4640.4 | | CSC32::PITT | | Tue Jun 04 1996 12:06 | 4 |
|
actually the real term for cube shrinking is "smurfing".
|
4640.5 | | LJSRV2::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @LJO | Tue Jun 04 1996 12:32 | 3 |
| They've used "densification" extensively during the, um, densification
process here at LJO. Densification has been, as one would expect,
modified to "dunce-ification" in colloquial usage here, too.
|
4640.6 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Tue Jun 04 1996 13:13 | 3 |
| re:dense-si-fi-ca-tion
3 or more managers in a room at the same time
|
4640.7 | | MARIN::WANNOOR | | Tue Jun 04 1996 13:23 | 4 |
| Ha ha ha! well, that was my first reaction to these nu werdz!
How about sending them to Scott Adams? That'll be a hoot.
|
4640.8 | proactive, de-emphasize, re-engineer | CSC32::C_REESE | | Tue Jun 04 1996 13:40 | 15 |
|
My humble submissions:
"Proactive" is something that I have only heard within Digital. Is it
*really* a word? Possibly an adjective that has gained professional
status?
"de-emphasize". Meaning: We like it but it costs too much so we are
going to cut funding, *maybe* we will "emphasize" it at some unspecified
date in the future. But we still like it.
"re-engineer" Meaning "fix".
|
4640.9 | | DECWET::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual um...er.... | Tue Jun 04 1996 13:48 | 3 |
| Re: "densification"
That's known locally as, "Honey, I shrunk the cubes!"
|
4640.10 | | BOXORN::HAYS | Some things are worth dying for | Tue Jun 04 1996 13:50 | 9 |
| RE: 640.9 by DECWET::FARLEE "Insufficient Virtual um...er...."
> "Honey, I shrunk the cubes!"
How can they do that in DECWest, as most of the cubes are not cubes, but
offices with doors?
Phil
|
4640.11 | | ALEPPO::notbuk.mse.tay.dec.com::bowker | Joe Bowker, Multivendor Sys Eng'g | Tue Jun 04 1996 13:57 | 10 |
| "Special Project"
Back before TFSO, if you were put on a "special project" you were
expected to find another job right quick.
"Opportunity"
I should go hide when my manager has an "opportunity" for me.
Joe
|
4640.12 | SuccessShare ?!... | STOWOA::DEHEK | | Tue Jun 04 1996 14:05 | 1 |
| Value Propositions == bonuses handed out to Digital VPs / Officers.
|
4640.13 | a new verb is bornized | JOKUR::MACDONALD | | Tue Jun 04 1996 14:13 | 3 |
| Check out thebay::joyoflex
"a new verb is bornized"
Bruce
|
4640.14 | from sales | DECWET::BERKUN | A False Sense of Well-Being | Tue Jun 04 1996 14:30 | 6 |
| I'll never forget this one from years ago, when a sales rep sat down
with a customer and said
"Let's do a little conceptual foundationing."
ken b.
|
4640.15 | | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Tue Jun 04 1996 16:40 | 2 |
|
Any noun can be verbed.
|
4640.16 | | MARIN::WANNOOR | | Tue Jun 04 1996 17:02 | 8 |
| .15 Yep, like "impacted", which drives me crazy.
The only valid usage of "impacted" is like in "impacted
wisdom teeth".
OK I'll add one or two --- how about "paradigm shift" and the other
favourite, "synergy". Big yuchs.
|
4640.17 | It is the system | SALEM::GEORGE_N | data center test | Tue Jun 04 1996 17:15 | 1 |
| I think all these werdz are "systemic" of our digital culture!
|
4640.18 | | MPGS::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Tue Jun 04 1996 17:23 | 4 |
| Digits seem to believe that incentives "incent" people (they don't; the
verb is "incite").
Leslie
|
4640.19 | | NOTAPC::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Tue Jun 04 1996 17:48 | 4 |
| My personal hangups are using input and output as verbs. you don't "input the
command" or "output the report".
-mark
|
4640.20 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Buzzword Bingo | Tue Jun 04 1996 17:53 | 3 |
|
See my p_n for 1 of my favorite "Dilbert" references.
|
4640.21 | | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Tue Jun 04 1996 17:56 | 7 |
|
resource == engineer
Oh, and "attrit" as a noun... that's pretty cool.
TW
|
4640.22 | another!? | PCBUOA::WHITEC | Parrot_Trooper | Tue Jun 04 1996 18:17 | 10 |
|
wnat about the oldie from the wave of yuppie hires a few years
ago......
'Grounded'......like I need to be grounded on what you are doing?
Ground this!Q#$&@$^*@$&
me
|
4640.23 | | DECWET::ONO | The Wrong Stuff | Tue Jun 04 1996 19:07 | 14 |
| re: .10
Actually there are lots of cubes here at DECwest, which is why
people roll their eyes when facilities mentions replacing the
carpet.
re: .9
> "Honey, I shrunk the cubes!"
Wasn't it Fred Wang (An Wang's son) who said, "Daddy, I shrunk
the company."
Wes
|
4640.24 | | STAR::MKIMMEL | | Tue Jun 04 1996 19:59 | 1 |
| No, I think that was Bob Palmer.
|
4640.25 | Au Contraire, imho | DRDAN::KALIKOW | MindSurf the World w/ AltaVista! | Tue Jun 04 1996 22:42 | 13 |
| Unfair, imho (though I was only a spectator of Fred Wang's tenure, not
part of Wang). As far as I could see, Fred Wang UNintentionally shrank
his company; Bob Palmer did it, in a hard-nosed bid for survival.
He may not have won legions of admirers amongst those who left or were
forced to leave during that effort -- or even amongst those who are
still here. But I'll wager that -- friends or no -- there are FAR more
of us here now, than there would be had Bob Palmer NOT done his thing.
For more, related sentiments -- see Stan Rogers' 4033.178 and my .180.
For proof, check out http://www.upside.com/current/palmer.html ...
|
4640.26 | | METSYS::BENNETT | Straight no chaser.. | Tue Jun 04 1996 23:27 | 40 |
|
A few words and phrases that I've come across:
> Uninternationalizationability
> Stovepiping.. and I still don't know what it means
> Learnings
> Trainings
> Positivize and Positivization
> Mind focussing
> Negative salary increase
> Touch base
> Let's take that one off-line
> Let's do lunch
"Well, that's it for now. I know you've got what it takes and we need
200% of it. It's gonna be wall to wall, soup to nuts and the game's all
over in spades. And at lighting-up time, even the company dog gets
freed up for the big party.."
Now that is culled from the words and style of an English marketing
manager I knew in another company some years back.
Keep 'em coming,
John
|
4640.27 | Stupidity or madness ??? | BIS1::GEERAERTS | | Wed Jun 05 1996 03:54 | 13 |
| A new expression often used currently bu HRO for people who want to
make carreer but can't get higher up.
For them there exists a way out, namely
multifunctional availability (affectiveness)
Another favorite expression often used is
a possitive ZERO salary review
Regards,
Frans
|
4640.28 | | ICS::CROUCH | Subterranean Dharma Bum | Wed Jun 05 1996 08:26 | 3 |
| Universal worker
|
4640.29 | | ALEPPO::notbuk.mse.tay.dec.com::bowker | Joe Bowker, Multivendor Sys Eng'g | Wed Jun 05 1996 09:12 | 1 |
| Done deal
|
4640.30 | what about collaboration? | STOWOA::EHRAMJIAN | Sanka...Ya Dead?! | Wed Jun 05 1996 10:02 | 5 |
| My favorite is collaboration, and any derivitive of such...
Don't they shoot collaborators during war time 8%)
C
|
4640.31 | kind of like deliverables | HDLITE::MODI | | Wed Jun 05 1996 10:24 | 2 |
|
Actionables
|
4640.32 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Wed Jun 05 1996 11:37 | 6 |
| if you shift the paradigm without a cluth, does the metal grind?
we once had a manager that loved the word paradigm..everytime he said
it in a meeting, we'd throw a couple of dimes his way....grate laughs.
deadhead
|
4640.33 | | AOSG::PBECK | Paul Beck | Wed Jun 05 1996 11:57 | 2 |
| When I hear the term "paradigm shift" I generally get out two
ten-cent coins and start moving them from one hand to the other...
|
4640.34 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Wed Jun 05 1996 11:59 | 7 |
| And, of course, you've all heard the old joke:
Q: What's a 'paradigm'?
A: A 50� word that's been downsized 60%!
Atlant
|
4640.35 | Here's some more.... | MPOS01::BJAMES | I feel the need, the need for SPEED | Wed Jun 05 1996 13:18 | 29 |
| Internalize: I don't know what the f you are talking about so I need
some time to think about it.
Action Item: The crummy work I don't want to do that I want you to do
on my behalf.
Customerize: We've tried this approach so many times we finally had to
give it a name.
Partner: The thing we stick with all our excess inventory in Q4.
Performance review: Anyone....Buhler...Anyone....
Digitize: The opposite of Analogize
Goalsheet: The thing they change in Q4 when managment knows they are
coming up short. See Partner.
Cross Function: we really don't know who owns this hot potato so we're
going to cross functionalize it and share the blame.
Mea Culpa: The thing you say when the poop is hitting the windmill. As
in, "What do you want me to do, have a Mea Culpa on this?"
Rightsize, Downsize etc...: sorry folks we blew the forecast so we
need to make some adjustments in headcount.
Let's keep this going.....
|
4640.36 | some more.. | NPSS::URVA | | Wed Jun 05 1996 13:46 | 10 |
| Mindshare - I don't know how to use it in a sentence, but
seen it all the time in presentations.
Mindset - That's a "major mindset" !
Shortlist - We'd like to be in everybody's (customer's) shortlist.
Productize -
|
4640.37 | | NETCAD::BRANAM | Steve, Hub Products Engineering, LKG2-2, DTN 226-6043 | Wed Jun 05 1996 14:41 | 11 |
| Actually, a number of terms listed here that are allegedly Digitalizations (do I
get a quarter? I just made that up!) have common usage in the "business world".
You see them in books on quality and management, in magazine articles, and at
other companies. We're just one of the gang. Not that we can't strive for
excellence in leading the fight against good language...
RE "opportunity" - When I worked at TI, it was known tongue-in-cheek as OTE, or
"Opportunity To Excel" (with the implied meaning "Opportunity to fail
miserably"). Successfully pulling off an OTE could actually be a boost to your
career, worth major atta-boys; more often, though, it meant a crummy job that no
one else wanted to do and was doomed to failure before it even began.
|
4640.38 | I feel incented to add these... | ACISS1::THORNE | Ask me about my vow of silence | Wed Jun 05 1996 14:56 | 15 |
|
I just had to add these...
Planful -- As in "It was done in a planful way."
Co-locate -- As in "these two things will be co-located."
Leverage (used as a verb) -- As in "This will leverage sales."
and my current favorite phrase...
"We need you to go to the customer and facilitate knowledge transfer".
I certainly could be wrong about this, but I think they wanted me to teach
someone something. No doubt to leverage sales in a planful way.
|
4640.39 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Basket Case | Wed Jun 05 1996 15:15 | 8 |
|
RE: a few back
I've used "mindset" [this morning, in NOTES somewhere] and I'm
only a peon.
Should I start to worry?
|
4640.40 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Wed Jun 05 1996 15:17 | 10 |
| Shawn:
> I've used "mindset" [this morning, in NOTES somewhere] and I'm
> only a peon.
>
> Should I start to worry?
Depends on your mindset!
Atlant
|
4640.41 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Basket Case | Wed Jun 05 1996 15:20 | 3 |
|
Thanks, Atlant. I should definitely table that notion.
|
4640.42 | | AOSG::PBECK | Paul Beck | Wed Jun 05 1996 15:29 | 2 |
| Nobody's mentioned 'functionality' ... too obvious? You should all
be tasked to check its dictionariality.
|
4640.43 | | GOLLY::KNIGHT | | Wed Jun 05 1996 15:30 | 1 |
| anyone "architected" anything recently??
|
4640.44 | not by design | ESSC::KMANNERINGS | | Wed Jun 05 1996 15:34 | 1 |
| well, you-know-who has been crafting something with partners
|
4640.45 | What about | SIPAPU::KILGORE | The UT Desert Rat living in CO | Wed Jun 05 1996 15:57 | 3 |
| prioritization
It is in my performance feedback info sheet.....
|
4640.46 | more yet | SALEM::LYMAN | | Wed Jun 05 1996 16:14 | 6 |
| Two favorite verbed nouns: task and goal, as in "I'm going to goal you
on that" or "He tasked me to finish by Friday."
And - this must have appeared in joyoflex - the all-purpose Digital
preposition "around", as in "I have some issues around that."
|
4640.47 | barbarisms | TNPUBS::PHALEN | | Wed Jun 05 1996 17:00 | 15 |
| Allow me to add a few more barbarisms:
Share as in "I want to share my thoughts about..."
Verbiage used to mean written explanation. "We'll add
the verbiage later."
Verbage barbarized form of "verbiage."
|
4640.48 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel Without a [email protected] | Wed Jun 05 1996 17:01 | 6 |
| RE: .39
I'm just gonna have to raise the flag on that one and consider
that for candidatation statusizing..
mikieazator
|
4640.49 | Audio-visual | ALFA2::ALFA2::HARRIS | | Wed Jun 05 1996 17:13 | 3 |
| To signal one's understanding:
"I hear where you're coming from."
|
4640.50 | Word Usage | SCAMP::JANEB | See it happen => Make it happen | Wed Jun 05 1996 17:23 | 19 |
| For a nice long list of commonly used non-words found in Digital, check
out the Word Usage newsletter. It also includes grammar tips and other
valuable written English information.
My favorites:
Irregardless
and apostrophe's used in inappropriate way's
To subscribe:
"This message was delivered to you as a Reader's Choice subscriber to
Word Usage. Subscriptions for this newsletter are collected through the
following tools:
- Reader's Choice profile in VTX use keyword PROFILE. At the main
menu, select #1, Select Topics of Interest; then #4, Newsletters.
- While viewing the document in the Information Repository (VTX
keyword IR).
- Subscription Services via the Internal Digital Homepage,
URL: http://www-iu.ako.dec.com/int/subscription-services.html. "
|
4640.51 | | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Wed Jun 05 1996 18:00 | 2 |
|
wordsmith (no idea what this means)
|
4640.52 | Turn it into something totally different! | HSOSS1::HARDMAN | Digital. WE can make it happen! | Wed Jun 05 1996 20:29 | 8 |
| >wordsmith (no idea what this means)
To re-write a memo or document so that it is politically correct,
several pages long, contains many of the words presented earlier in this
string and is content free. :-)
Harry
|
4640.53 | | USAT02::HALLR | God loves even you! | Wed Jun 05 1996 21:52 | 1 |
| " I feel your pain "
|
4640.54 | | SHRCTR::PJOHNSON | aut disce, aut discede | Wed Jun 05 1996 22:14 | 2 |
| A term I think stinks is "significant other", like everyone *else* in
the universe is *in*significant.
|
4640.55 | Calvin and Hobbes | GVA05::DAVIS | | Thu Jun 06 1996 03:41 | 6 |
| Calvin: "I've been disempowered! My centering, self-actualizing anima
has been impacted by toxic, co-dependent dysfunctionality!"
Mother: "You've been temporarily inconvenienced. Take out the trash."
Calvin: "Are you saying there's a difference?!"
|
4640.56 | Opportunity | LORDS::COLE | Share and enjoy | Thu Jun 06 1996 05:26 | 11 |
|
Just imagine the scenario (sorry)
Apollo 13, 200,000 miles away from earth when Jim Lovell says:
"Huston, we have a opportunity"
|
4640.57 | seen coming from all levels of the corporation.... | CONSLT::HITZ | George Hitz DTN:223-3408 W1DA | Thu Jun 06 1996 09:33 | 3 |
|
Congradulations
|
4640.58 | Frayzes | WRKSYS::WALLACE | Dirk, Nasty, Stig & Barry | Thu Jun 06 1996 09:48 | 4 |
|
"We're reorganizing to focus on our core competency"
-Dilbert
|
4640.59 | | FX28PM::SMITHP | Written but not read | Thu Jun 06 1996 10:15 | 12 |
| For the Dilbert impaired...
"We're reengineering your function"
Meaning: "Adios, Tonto, and the horse you rode in on"
"You are empowered"
Meaning: "You're the monarch of unimportant decisions"
|
4640.60 | Dilbert "Business Language Explained" | ALEPPO::notbuk.mse.tay.dec.com::bowker | Joe Bowker, Multivendor Sys Eng'g | Thu Jun 06 1996 10:24 | 25 |
| More Dilbert:
"We must focus on our core business"
Meaning: "We can't find our butts with both hands
"We value employee input."
Meaning: "We think humor is important."
"Training is essential"
Meaning: "We're trying to hire some trained people."
"We have to be more competitive."
Meaning: "Say goodbye to salary increases."
"We're market driven."
Meaning: "We blame customers for our lack of innovation."
|
4640.61 | cost cutting exercise | UTRTSC::SCHOLLAERT | Ajax: World Champions 1995 | Thu Jun 06 1996 10:27 | 6 |
| "cost cutting exercise"
"The ALL-IN-1 kit should be out on the Alpha condist now, with the VAX kit on
the June issue. I have been informed that as a cost cutting exercise for MCS,
the SSB kits will be held until the start of the next fiscal year (ie July)
before they can be shipped from SSB."
|
4640.62 | keep them coming | MPGS::WENTWORTH | | Thu Jun 06 1996 11:22 | 4 |
| Just came from a meeting.....
"Possible-izing"
|
4640.63 | I've never seen this one before... | LEDDEV::DELMONICO | Jim --<Philippians 4:4-7>-- | Thu Jun 06 1996 11:34 | 8 |
|
In a data book we give to customers this word is really used:
"Symmetrator" - Its context implies that the intended meaning for
the word is, "one who creates symmetry".
Yikes - the number of replies here seem to indicate a new language
is emerging!
|
4640.64 | | GALVIA::confer.ilo.dec.com::duke | | Thu Jun 06 1996 12:21 | 12 |
| there was a discussion here at one stage about "issues" and how you can
"own" one, "talk" to them, "put them to bed" etc ( i forget the rest)
..which reminds me of a Moroccan (sp ?) employee here in Galway who
couldn't understand why one of our American colleagues wanted to "put a
stake in the ground". When he left here, we got him a stake with an
arrow on it saying "ground this way" ...
-ronan
|
4640.65 | | EPS::RODERICK | NH - Bienvenue au Construction | Thu Jun 06 1996 12:46 | 202 |
| I'm sure this is in here somewhere, but it bears reposting:
From the Feb 20, 1995 issue of Fortune - Volume 131, No. 3:
CLICHE'D CORPORATE CONVERSATIONS FROM HELL
You don't have to be a rocket scientist to recognize that corporate America
is a leading-edge recycler of tired phrases. It's a no-brainer. Pitch
artists swearing they walk the talk, bearing offers of win-win situations,
are legion. But the bottom line is that you don't want to be left out of
the linguistic loop while colleagues who are a bit slower on the learning
curve throw out slews of mouth-bitten cliches' every time they touch base
with you. That's why we ratcheted up our very own Devil's Dictionary - to
take you through the worst of the worst just one more time.
Our nations bulging inventory of business cliches' is spun out by pundits,
picked up by senior executives and regurgitated by pilot fish imitating
their bosses. The explosion of management tomes and seminars in the past 15
years has fostered a top-down commitment among business folks to pepper
their vocabularies with the latest business jargon. As the pace of work
becomes lightning-quick, people condense complex historical events into
flashy insights. "Just as reading diet books is a substitute for losing
weight, reading management books is a substitute for good management,"
comments Vanderbilt University professor Terrence Deal (whose own LEADING
WITH SOUL is due in bookstores soon). In this age of cliches', meaningless
reigns. Does anyone truly know what the "value chain" is? Or exactly what
is "empowerment"? Avers Ralph Kilmann, professor at the University of
Pittsburg's business school: "People feel comfortable with these concepts.
They think they understand them because they use them in conversation,
memos, and publicity statements, but there is virtually no substance to
these words. Now that's vision!
The Devil's Dictionary
TEAM PLAYER - An employee who substitutes the thinking of the herd with
his/her own good judgment
REENGINEERING - The principal slogan on the Nineties, used to describe any
and all corporate strategies.
VISION - Top management's heroic guess about the future, easily printed on
mugs, T-shirts,, posters and calendar cards.
PARADIGM SHIFT - A euphemism companies use when they realize the rest of
their industry has expanded into Guangdong while they were investing in
Orange County.
RESTRUCTURING - A simple plan instituted from above in which workers are
right-sized, down-sized, surplused, lateralized, or in the business jargon
of days of yore, fired.
EMPOWERMENT - A magic wand management waves to help traumatized survivors of
restructuring suddenly feel engaged, self-managed, and in control of their
futures and their jobs.
===============================================================================
Some additions from Digital employees and their friends:
NETWORKING - Low Management (as opposed to Middle) term used to describe
one's ability to substitute effort for substance, or loyalty for ability.
Also a synonym for INTERFACING (which tends to be NETWORKING's ruder
elements).
PARTNERING - Management term now used to inadequately describe a company's
inability to sell their own products themselves.
VALIDATION - the *new* term to describe one's inability to complete
one's own tasks in reference to one's opinion on how someone else is
completing theirs.
EMPOWERMENT - putting a dog on a leash and telling it to run as far as it
can.
FACILITATE - Attending a meeting with the goal of getting everyone else
to do the work
COMPETENCY - Special skills that we tell customers we have but really don't
AFFINITY - A group of consultants with like competencies but with different
goals and managers
GOALED - When they want to say "measured" but know there is no possible way
to measure or reward a consultant
DIALOG - The mutual exchange of meaningless cliches
REENGINEERING - What you have to do when you screwed up your first attempt
at engineering
EMPOWERED - An employee with an up-to-date resume
Top 20 Engineers' Terminologies:
1. A NUMBER OF DIFFERENT APPROACHES ARE BEING TRIED --
We are still pissing in the wind.
2. EXTENSIVE REPORT IS BEING PREPARED ON A FRESH APPROACH TO THE PROBLEM --
We just hired three kids fresh out of college.
3. CLOSE PROJECT COORDINATION --
We know who to blame.
4. MAJOR TECHNOLOGICAL BREAKTHROUGH --
It works OK, but looks very hi-tech.
5. CUSTOMER SATISFACTION IS DELIVERED ASSURED --
We are so far behind schedule the customer is happy to get it
delivered.
6. PRELIMINARY OPERATIONAL TESTS WERE INCONCLUSIVE --
The darn thing blew up when we threw the switch.
7. TEST RESULTS WERE EXTREMELY GRATIFYING --
We are so surprised that the stupid thing works.
8. THE ENTIRE CONCEPT WILL HAVE TO BE ABANDONED --
The only person who understood the thing quit.
9. IT IS IN THE PROCESS --
It is so wrapped up in red tape that the situation is about hopeless.
10. WE WILL LOOK INTO IT --
Forget it! We have enough problems for now.
11. PLEASE NOTE AND INITIAL --
Let's spread the responsibility for the screw up.
12. GIVE US THE BENEFIT OF YOUR THINKING --
We'll listen to what you have to say as long as it doesn't interfere
with what we've already done.
13. GIVE US YOUR INTERPRETATION --
I can't wait to hear this load of bull!
14. SEE ME or LET'S DISCUSS --
Come into my office - I'm lonely.
15. ALL NEW --
Parts not interchangeable with the previous design.
16. RUGGED --
Too damned heavy to lift!
17. LIGHTWEIGHT --
Lighter than RUGGED.
18. YEARS OF DEVELOPMENT --
One finally worked.
19. ENERGY SAVING --
Achieved when the power switch is off.
20. LOW MAINTENANCE --
Impossible to fix if broken.
RE-ENGAGE EMPLOYEE MORALE - We've fixed the uncertainty of continuing
employment for at least 50% of the staff by firing them.
OUTSOURCE: "Hit the bricks"
"Employee Sale - 15% off"
"Redeployment of contributing resources to local economy"
YOU ARE VALUED BUT NOT PART OF OUR CORE STRATEGY: "You don't have to go
home, but you can't stay here."
TECHNICAL SEMINAR: A one-day event geared to confuse even your best
engineering resources.
SALES TRAINING: A Technical Seminar for 3-year-olds
TARGETED ACCOUNTS: Companies whose checks don't bounce.
SYNERGY - the thrill you feel when breaking the rules in order to "do the
right thing". Second spelling SIN-ERGY.
SYNERGY - the search for common part numbers beyond power cord plugs for
more than one product.
SYNERGY - synchronized energy, what happens when a group of people act as
a team
TEAM - A group of people who excel at expending energy together in
meetings
MEETINGS - 99 3/4% Pure (waste of time); the 1/4% is for identifying new
terms that defy traditional meaning.
PAY RAISE - Formerly looked forward to. Presently seen as an historical
concept for rewarding mismanagement.
EMPOWER: Management's way of foisting off their responsibilities onto the
worker-bees
COACH: What I would have expected if I had joined a little league team
rather than a corporation
INTEGRATION: What one does with the left-over parts.
DIS-INTEGRATION: What one does when the left over parts work.
RE-INTEGRATION: What one does if the left over parts don't work.
STAKEHOLDERS: Former employees
MIDDLEWARE: When underware isn't appropriate
SOMETHING MUST BE DONE!! - Used to justify riding roughshod over common
sense.
MORE NEEDS TO BE DONE!! - Used after some of our previous phrases which hide
the fact that a situation is hopeless or has been grossly mismanaged or
both.
SETTING THE CUSTOMER'S EXPECTATIONS - "There's not a snowball's chance in
hell we'll do what you want."
OPPORTUNITY - "Do we have a headache for you...."
THE SUBJECT IS UNDER CONSIDERATION - We've lost the file.
THE SUBJECT IS UNDER ACTIVE CONSIDERATION - We're looking for the file.
|
4640.66 | | MPGS::WENTWORTH | | Thu Jun 06 1996 13:13 | 8 |
| How many time have you heard this one
"get in bed with your customer"
Even heard a VP say this
"be careful who you let in your pants"
It just keeps getting better.
|
4640.67 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Crazy Cooter comin' atcha!! | Thu Jun 06 1996 13:30 | 3 |
|
I guess it depends on the customer.
|
4640.68 | Signage, etc. | SUBSYS::JAMES | | Thu Jun 06 1996 13:32 | 22 |
|
"Signage" for signs As in "Who is reposnsible for trade show
signage?"
"Make the tough decisions"
"Interviewee"
"Physical year" For Fiscal year or chronological year?
Dilbert: "At this company we're dedicate to the principle of
employee empowerment"
Job applicant: "The principal of employee empowerment? Why would you
have a special phrase for something like that? If you
could really make decisions on your own, it would never
occur to you to invent a phrase for it."
"Don't tell me you have 'Quality Teams'!"
|
4640.69 | | LJSRV2::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @LJO | Thu Jun 06 1996 13:53 | 5 |
| Re: last
"signage" is used extensively in architecture (the building kind) and
industrial design. It may be a dumb word, but we can't be blamed for
this one.
|
4640.70 | | BIGQ::SILVA | | Thu Jun 06 1996 13:55 | 3 |
|
Shawn, what does Depends have to do with this?
|
4640.71 | Life in the newage | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Jun 06 1996 13:56 | 8 |
| > "signage" is used extensively in architecture (the building kind) and
> industrial design. It may be a dumb word, but we can't be blamed for
> this one.
Which is true, but just goes to show you how far all of
our vocabularies have gone down the drainage.
Atlant
|
4640.72 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Jun 06 1996 13:57 | 11 |
| > How many time have you heard this one
> "get in bed with your customer"
>
> Even heard a VP say this
> "be careful who you let in your pants"
But you know you're *REALLY* in trouble when they
"...open the kimono."
Atlant
|
4640.73 | goto guy? guy: print "hello world" | ZIPLOK::PASQUALE | | Thu Jun 06 1996 14:06 | 6 |
| hmmm.. not sure if this one works or not.. but i hear this quite often
....
goto guy as in "You are my goto guy!"
any clues??
|
4640.74 | Talking to a slide? | STOWOA::NOETH | Mike Noeth, DTN 276-9282 | Thu Jun 06 1996 14:07 | 1 |
| How about "talking to an issue" as compared to "speaking to it"?
|
4640.75 | And in tight circles... | MPOS01::BJAMES | I feel the need, the need for SPEED | Thu Jun 06 1996 14:49 | 4 |
| "Off the record....." meaning I'll tell you this and if I hear it come
around from somewhere else I know you leaked it!
Mav
|
4640.76 | | LJSRV2::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @LJO | Thu Jun 06 1996 14:53 | 15 |
| Re: .73
Go-to guy seems to come from sports talk radio.
Usage: "If the Patriots are going to be successful, Drew Bledsoe needs
a go-to guy."
Translation: the Pats need a wide receiver who can catch more than a
cold.
Re: .74
Yup. When did "to" replace "about"?
George
|
4640.77 | | MPGS::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Thu Jun 06 1996 14:56 | 5 |
| re .74: BZZZZT. Talking [or speaking] ABOUT inanimate objects.
"Growing" the business (vs. increasing it...)
Leslie
|
4640.78 | sigh, this is a bad sign. | NETCAD::CREEGAN | | Thu Jun 06 1996 15:26 | 9 |
| I don't have time to go through all the replies to see if
this one is mentioned:
WORK SMARTER...
[like I'm working dumber until someone made that suggestion.]
Don't have enough "CYCLES" to go through all the replies to see
if that was mentioned previously.
|
4640.79 | thrashing mode | SUBSYS::JAMES | | Thu Jun 06 1996 16:53 | 5 |
| One I like is "thrashing" which happens when a computer spends all of
its cycles moving data into memory and never does useful work.
Often due to "reprioritization"
|
4640.80 | Remember "Client Engagements" ??? | DV780::WATSONC | | Thu Jun 06 1996 17:48 | 8 |
| Back in the days of Digital Consulting (remember Gresh!?) I recall a
comment about one of our salespersons who was abandoning customers
(or "clients" in the vernacular of DC) right and left. A management
consultant for one of my projects said, "I think she's in the process
of disengaging!"
At the time, knowing exactly what he meant, I could not think a word
that was better.
|
4640.81 | he meant to say they are too busy | ESSC::KMANNERINGS | | Thu Jun 06 1996 18:01 | 15 |
| "reprioritization"
Umm. I just had the following dialogue:
Me: "When will W95 be installed on my pc, it was going to be done 4
weeks ago ?"
Him: "It can't be done yet."
Me: "Why not?"
Him: "It hasn't got a high enough priority"
Me: "Why not?"
Him: "It's been given a lower priority!"
Me: "Aha!"
Let's face it, we could have saved a lot of time if he had had the
above. I would have been gobstoppered straight away.
|
4640.82 | | USAT02::HALLR | God loves even you! | Thu Jun 06 1996 21:44 | 4 |
| leave a message on my voicemail and i'll get back with you
Yeah, right!
|
4640.83 | Another theory _in re_ .73 "You are my goto guy!" ... | DRDAN::KALIKOW | MindSurf the World w/ AltaVista! | Thu Jun 06 1996 23:36 | 5 |
| "*You* are the SW Engineer I can always turn to when I need to have
some 'spaghetti-code' created!"
OK, so it's Geek Humor, so sue me.
|
4640.84 | Surfing?? | VARESE::SICHERA | Gimme a crystal ball, or I won't debug your program | Fri Jun 07 1996 04:01 | 8 |
|
"Surfing the Web" is a not-so-new term that at certain times of the
day (when the network is busy) is terribly wrong.
I wonder if it is more adequate to say "rowing" or "wading" :-)
- Maurizio
|
4640.85 | Tribal tokens | CHEFS::PARRYD | Aromatherapy stinks | Fri Jun 07 1996 06:43 | 13 |
| These things are very group-specific. Digital talks about
leverage, push back and now, Gawd 'elp us, marketing "collateral" (by
which I think people mean "material". Has anyone asked, "Collateral
to what?")
When I was in ICL (U.K. computer company) we would talk about
pullthrough, as in "Systems pull through services" and -- the
sensitive should switch off -- a legopener. (You don't need too much
imagination to understand that one.)
Some of my favourite abominations: learnings, "my take on that",
historic data. And while I'm at it, it's "lose" not "loose" and
kudos is singular.
|
4640.86 | Further to .85's "collateral" ... | DRDAN::KALIKOW | MindSurf the World w/ AltaVista! | Fri Jun 07 1996 06:55 | 9 |
| Good ones, Dave, insensitive or not. The language, as she is spoke.
And broke.
What *I* find amusing about our/business's use of the term "collateral"
is that the MILITARY business has also decided to play the fast & loose
euphemism game with it. So now, when I hear marketeers talking about
collateral, I can't help seeing Pentagon SpokesPersons discussing
"collateral damage."
|
4640.87 | | USAT02::HALLR | God loves even you! | Fri Jun 07 1996 07:44 | 4 |
| Dan:
At least the military "know" what their meaning is when they use it,
inlike others....
|
4640.88 | way to many 'z's.... | WOTVAX::STONEG | Temperature Drop in Downtime Winterland.... | Fri Jun 07 1996 08:02 | 8 |
|
>> Now that is culled from the words and style of an English marketing
>> manager I knew in another company some years back.
I assume he was marketing something other than English ?
Graham
|
4640.89 | Adrift on the Web | HELIX::LUNGER | | Fri Jun 07 1996 09:37 | 7 |
| > "Surfing the Web" is a not-so-new term that at certain times of the
> day (when the network is busy) is terribly wrong.
>
> I wonder if it is more adequate to say "rowing" or "wading" :-)
"Adrift on the Web" is the term that comes to mind... with the image
of being on a raft on a calm sea in the middle of a vast ocean.
|
4640.90 | | ASDG::IDE | My mind's lost in a household fog. | Fri Jun 07 1996 10:02 | 9 |
| We recently had some filing cabinets temporarily moved out of the lab
while the floor was replaced. They were "defacilitated" and "brought
back on-line."
One I've heard recently is "the wood behind the arrow," a/k/a the
shaft, though that's not the connotation the speaker intends. Lately
"the target in front of the arrow" might be more appropriate.
Jamie
|
4640.91 | Re .89 < Adrift on the Web > | DRDAN::KALIKOW | MindSurf the World w/ AltaVista! | Fri Jun 07 1996 10:02 | 3 |
| Pardon my insufferable boosterism, but the vastness of the ocean is not
so daunting when you have a compass... See personal_name above.
|
4640.92 | | OHFSS1::FULLER | Never confuse a memo with reality | Fri Jun 07 1996 10:04 | 7 |
| ================================================================================
Note 4629.29 Sun Micro ad 29 of 46
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re.27:
This is being actioned in the UK. I can't speak for the rest of the world.
^^^^^^^^
|
4640.93 | | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Fri Jun 07 1996 10:55 | 2 |
|
"take off line" == discuss after the meeting
|
4640.94 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jun 07 1996 12:45 | 1 |
| "Surfing the Web" is often "treading water."
|
4640.95 | | BBPBV1::WALLACE | Whatever it takes WHO?(sm) | Fri Jun 07 1996 12:46 | 1 |
| Becalmed on the web (except be FRUSTRATED would be closer)
|
4640.96 | Repurposing | NUBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Fri Jun 07 1996 13:33 | 5 |
| Someone mentioned "repurposing" at a documentation meeting this week.
It's supposed to mean taking existing technical information and redoing
it, so to speak, for a new medium (i.e., the Web).
|
4640.97 | | AOSG::PBECK | Paul Beck | Fri Jun 07 1996 13:35 | 3 |
| RE Surfing the net ...
That's because World Wide Web is based on a Client-Surfer design.
|
4640.98 | | HELIX::CLARK | | Fri Jun 07 1996 13:49 | 3 |
| Yes, "learnings" is an abomination.
I keep wanting to say, "Let that be a learning to you."
|
4640.99 | | NETCAD::BRANAM | Steve, Hub Products Engineering, LKG2-2, DTN 226-6043 | Fri Jun 07 1996 16:16 | 4 |
| Re "collateral damage" - let's not be too quick to reward the military for
incisive language. The Pentagon and the various branches of the military are
regularly recognized with "doublespeak" awards. Remember "arbitrary deprivation
of life"?
|
4640.100 | | DRDAN::KALIKOW | MindSurf the World w/ AltaVista! | Fri Jun 07 1996 16:33 | 7 |
| Am I missing the point, Steve? I didn't think my note was anything
close to rewarding the military, but rather lumping it in with the same
sort of doublespeak that we in Fortune-500Land use as well. Just that
after the Captains of the MILITARY finish squonking a word, it seems
rather unfair to for the Captains of INDUSTRY to march over the same
territory and attempt to ravish it again -- and curiously ineffective.
|
4640.101 | And from our own notesfile... | CSLALL::JKEENAN | Jay Keenan (603) 883-7913 | Fri Jun 07 1996 16:45 | 4 |
| Transgendered (DECplus note #????). Is this what sex
you are if you're born in Transylvania?
Jay
|
4640.102 | | NETCAD::BRANAM | Steve, Hub Products Engineering, LKG2-2, DTN 226-6043 | Fri Jun 07 1996 17:25 | 6 |
| RE .100 - Actually, I was referring to .87, I was just too lazy to hunt it down.
I guess the point is, the *military* may know it means blow up
everything/everyone unfortunate enough to be near a target, but people try to
obscure the full meaning by using language that is unfamiliar and obtuse to the
rest of us. Thus, Transitional Financial Support Option sounds like a pretty
good thing!
|
4640.103 | | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | Lord help the Mr. w/out AltaVista! | Sat Jun 08 1996 08:11 | 17 |
| Ah, I see, but I think you're giving the military too much credit.
You say that THEY understand what they mean, but (to me) gloss the
point that they hope WE don't.
Anyone who could say "collateral damage" instead of "we blew up stuff
we weren't aiming at" and "arbitrary deprivation of life" instead of
"they got killed" could just as easily say "While restructuring to our
core competencies, we were forced to play the ADOJC (Arbitrary
Deprivation Of Job Card), but this caused collateral damage amongst
troop morale, so we decided that we should rename ADOJC to Transitional
Financial Support Option (TFSO)."
:-)
In other woids, a euphemism's a euphemism, and both Industry & the
Military use 'em for exactly the same reason. Imho. And I think we
agree!
|
4640.104 | it ain't over | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 227-3978, TAY1) | Sun Jun 09 1996 07:55 | 40 |
| re Note 4640.25 by DRDAN::KALIKOW:
> He may not have won legions of admirers amongst those who left or were
> forced to leave during that effort -- or even amongst those who are
> still here. But I'll wager that -- friends or no -- there are FAR more
> of us here now, than there would be had Bob Palmer NOT done his thing.
It's a wager whose outcome is unknowable.
I used to, grudgingly, agree with this position, but we don't
know what else could have happened instead.
Certainly if *nothing* had been done, Digital would have been
in bankruptcy in short order, under the control of imposed
management.
But would someone else who came in as a new president have
done nothing -- of course not!
Another possible outcome would have been for Digital to have
been acquired by another company. That would have resulted
in massive downsizing and many parts of the business being
sold off. But isn't that what happened, anyway? And if that
happened we probably would have had even greater changes in
upper management, and we might have picked up some good
traits from the parent company (e.g., aggressive marketing).
Of course, we'll never know. Since Digital is still having
to act internally as if it were in desperate financial
condition (which may well be true), then it is premature to
conclude that the company has been "saved" -- it may just be
a slow, lingering death.
Mr. Palmer does get credit for keeping the company from
bankruptcy and for maintaining sales during the restructuring
(assuming that the restructuring is over, which I don't). I
think it is pure speculation to say that he saved jobs (other
than for certain parts of upper management).
Bob
|
4640.105 | | METSYS::BENNETT | Straight no chaser.. | Sun Jun 09 1996 12:06 | 10 |
| Re: .88
Err.. yes. Himself, I think. He's one of those types who manages to get
promotion before the reality of his efforts is percieved to have a
brown tinge.
He was "encouraged" to look elsewhere, and now he's a share-option
millionaire here in the UK.
John
|
4640.106 | | VANGA::KERRELL | salva res est | Mon Jun 10 1996 04:42 | 9 |
| re.85:
> leverage, push back and now, Gawd 'elp us, marketing "collateral" (by
> which I think people mean "material". Has anyone asked, "Collateral
> to what?")
Collateral to the message of course!
Dave.
|
4640.107 | ASSETize | HGOVC::SRIDHAR | | Mon Jun 10 1996 06:29 | 8 |
|
Anyone heard of 'Assetization', not that we have many things left.
Cheers
Sridhar
|
4640.108 | WHAT??? | REFINE::COHEN | | Mon Jun 10 1996 10:48 | 12 |
| I have been testing the Multia products, which have been
moved on to the PC Business Unit. I just got the "official"
notification today (thru email) of this, hence I am
moving on to testing other project in Components & Perphials.
Anyway, in the memo, check out this quote, "...we will continue
to perform rationalization and optimization of the Multia product line..."
WHAT?????
--Brian
|
4640.109 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Mon Jun 10 1996 11:02 | 2 |
| Meaning Multia didn't have enuf volume to justify a separate design
from what the PCBU already makes.
|
4640.110 | Here's more ! | DV780::MORALES | | Mon Jun 10 1996 13:57 | 15 |
| Low Hanging Fruit - when there is something (work) that should've been
performed long time ago, but it still hanging
loose, or as they say 'fell through the crack'.
Sink or Swin - old Deccie term meaning, we won't traing you, however
you must perform your job (what ever it is - we won't
tell) efficiently and effectively or you will be sent
packing 'pronto'!!!!
Rightsizing - lay-off or impending lay-off.
Hiring Freeze - we will only hire temps.
Seamless Effort - when no one knows what is going on.
|
4640.111 | | METSYS::BENNETT | Straight no chaser.. | Mon Jun 10 1996 14:22 | 12 |
| Re: An earlier reply..
>> "I hear where you're coming from."
Here in the UK, that _could_ be taken as an insult.
"I hear where you're coming from".. yes I know what you're saying
and it's.. (striving to be polite) less than rational.
jb
|
4640.112 | ... | WONDER::CASABONA | | Mon Jun 10 1996 15:08 | 12 |
|
Let's not forget "internalize" .
and then there is:
Functional Specification (as opposed to Disfunctional spec?) -
I have seen both.
as in "The DW-widget Functional Specification"
Doesn't "DW-widget Function Specification" work a bit better?
|
4640.113 | It's a functional function specification, then | SMURF::PBECK | Paul Beck | Mon Jun 10 1996 15:13 | 2 |
| If the specification does its job of communicating the details well
enough, it's a functional specification, right?
|
4640.114 | | NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Mon Jun 10 1996 16:10 | 11 |
|
> Anyone heard of 'Assetization', not that we have many things left.
Yup. FY95, Q1 Logistics process to change the way (financially) the field
handles product used to service equipment.
|
4640.115 | Strong stomachs in the Pacific Northwest | WOODYS::SLOUGH | | Mon Jun 10 1996 16:58 | 18 |
| A metaphor which is apparently popular within Microsoft (I heard it used
twice by two different Microsoft employees, including a VP);
"Eating your own dog food",
meant to suggest "we're using our own products", (and apparently enjoying
the experience).
Another favorite metaphor recently noted by the NY Times in an article on
downsizing;
"Drowning the kittens",
is attributed to a Canadian banker. It does a nice job reversing the trend
to *prettify* (had to do it) the nasty word layoff.
Dennis
|
4640.116 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel Without a [email protected] | Mon Jun 10 1996 17:01 | 6 |
| RE: .115
Yes, there is even a Dogfood Lab at Microsoft. That is where the
systems that were testing Exchange with live users live(d).
mike
|
4640.117 | Corporate bulemia ... | SMURF::PBECK | Paul Beck | Mon Jun 10 1996 18:04 | 8 |
| ... is my favorite alternative to "downsizing".
I guess you have to apply a form of bulemian logic to run a
downsizing effort ...
|
4640.118 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Mon Jun 10 1996 19:10 | 16 |
| > A metaphor which is apparently popular within Microsoft (I heard it used
> twice by two different Microsoft employees, including a VP);
>
> "Eating your own dog food",
>
> meant to suggest "we're using our own products", (and apparently enjoying
> the experience).
As documented in the book "Showstoppers" (about the development
of Windows/NT), this phrase was in wide use in Dave Cutler's
"Windows/NT" development area; the phrase may originate with
Cutler. (I'm sure he'd *CLAIM* it originates with him -- all
good ideas do.) It sounds a lot like his blunt manor of speech
except that the last word may occasionally have been different.
Atlant
|
4640.119 | | NETCAD::BRANAM | Steve, Hub Products Engineering, LKG2-2, DTN 226-6043 | Tue Jun 11 1996 09:29 | 4 |
| RE .110 - I always thought "low-hanging fruit" meant easy pickings, with no
effort required. Just reach up and pluck one off instead of having to climb the
tree for the hard-to-reach stuff. I guess some of these metaphors get twisted
around over time.
|
4640.120 | the house of euphemisms | JOKUR::MACDONALD | | Tue Jun 11 1996 10:04 | 4 |
| Atlant,
I like that "blunt manor of speech", sort of the opposite of the modern
corporation, including ours, which might be called, "the cardboard
house of euphemism." May we become a more "blunt manor of speech!"
|
4640.121 | | RLTIME::COOK | | Tue Jun 11 1996 10:15 | 6 |
|
I think the "blunt speech" Atlant was refering to was rude, abusive and vulgar.
From what I have heard, there are still plenty of euphemisms.
|
4640.122 | Affect this effectively!! | WOTVAX::HATTOS | It's simple - but it's not easy | Wed Jun 12 1996 07:30 | 13 |
| It drives me nuts!
Why do managers think the words 'affect' and 'effect' are
interchangeable?
The phrase "We are going to effect a change which will affect the way
you work" is correct, isn't it?
Then why say "We are going to effect a change which will effect the way
you work"???
Oh and another thing, "I hear what you say". What this really means is,
whats that buzzing in my ear, wish it'd go away.
|
4640.123 | | ODIXIE::MOREAU | Ken Moreau;Technical Support;Florida | Wed Jun 12 1996 07:55 | 27 |
| RE: .122 -< Affect this effectively!! >-
> Why do managers think the words 'affect' and 'effect' are
> interchangeable?
It isn't just managers who make that mistake.
I started noticing major (>20 per book) numbers of typographical errors
in the books I read starting about 5 years ago. It has gotten so bad that
I have kept a small pool with myself, where the different publishers are
in competition for the most errors per number of books published.
What does this have to do with 'affect' and 'effect' you say? Well, the
types of errors changed dramatically 5 years ago. Before then, the errors
were honest typos: interchanged letters, simple mis-spellings, etc. Starting
about 5 years ago the mis-spellings stopped and the use of the *wrong* word
began, such as 'affect' for 'effect' or vice-versa.
The answer is obvious, of course. Both the publishers and the people here
down-sized their people who reviewed the text: publishers cut copy editors
and Digital cut secretaries, all of whom were very good at catching errors
like that, and replaced them with spell-checkers, which will catch the typos
but won't catch the wrong word which is spelled correctly.
Be prepared to see a **LOT** more of this kind of thing everywhere... :-(
-- Ken Moreau
|
4640.124 | Spell checkers ? | STAR::FENSTER | Yaacov Fenster, Process Improvement, Quality & Testing tools @ZK | Wed Jun 12 1996 09:25 | 5 |
| Another reason is because they started using automated spell checkers.
These will catch the mis-spelled words, but not those used in the wrong
way.
Yaacov
|
4640.125 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Cyclops no more! | Wed Jun 12 1996 10:08 | 10 |
| This sort of thing has been going on for years:
Insure and Ensure
Inquire and Enquire
License and Licence
Practise and Practice
and so on...
Cheers, Laurie.
|
4640.126 | pet peeves | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Wed Jun 12 1996 10:46 | 14 |
|
its vs. it's
their vs. they're vs. there
These are the ones that kill me. Simple as pie to get right
but not worth anyone's bother... including professionals such
as copy writers, newspaper editors, and secretaries. Let
alone engineers.
The language is actually changing. Eventually perhaps
everything will be spelled phonetically, an ironic consequence
of the pervasiveness of written communication.
Tom
|
4640.127 | | WOTVAX::HATTOS | It's simple - but it's not easy | Wed Jun 12 1996 11:05 | 9 |
| I hate it personally. In the UK we are continually going on about the
education system not being what it was, kids can't spell etc.
And then we have (some of us) the gall, to write drivel which is
gramatically and syntactically incorrect.
No excuse for it.
Stuart
|
4640.128 | Write! | NQOS01::nqsrv420.nqo.dec.com::SteveS | Goin' for Growth! | Wed Jun 12 1996 11:07 | 1 |
|
|
4640.129 | kernal vs kernel | MAIL2::GOODMAN | I see you shiver with antici.........pation! | Wed Jun 12 1996 11:14 | 0 |
4640.130 | Does it matter? | CHEFS::PARRYD | Aromatherapy stinks | Wed Jun 12 1996 11:25 | 7 |
| Stuart,
I once ran a team of thirty scientific programmers who couldn't spell
for toffee whereas I am a spell checker. But then I couldn't integrate.
Of the two I thought mine was the more trivial skill.
dave_P
|
4640.131 | | SMURF::PBECK | Paul Beck | Wed Jun 12 1996 11:40 | 6 |
| > And then we have (some of us) the gall, to write drivel which is
^------
> gramatically and syntactically incorrect. \
\
\
ahem...
|
4640.132 | just authenticising a little | ESSC::KMANNERINGS | | Wed Jun 12 1996 11:49 | 11 |
| No it dusnt matta. I dont no wot they are goin on abaht. Most of it is
caused by elitist educationalists who want to standardise everything
and create rules about how a language should be used. If you
communicate honestly what is the problem? The point about the jargon is
that it is often used to avoid honesty.
spellecheckers are grate for people like me wiv dyslexia. Einstein had
it so bad he couldn.t do up is shoelaces. So did Leonardo, but it
didn't stop them didit?
|
4640.133 | (-: Re .123 and .124 :-) | DRDAN::KALIKOW | MindSurf the World w/ AltaVista! | Wed Jun 12 1996 11:50 | 4 |
| Was there an echo in there, or what???
Hey .124, you need a READ-checker as well as a SPELL-?? :-)
|
4640.134 | | WOTVAX::HATTOS | It's simple - but it's not easy | Wed Jun 12 1996 11:55 | 5 |
| re .131
Err. Well done Paul, you spotted my incorrect use of the comma.
Damn!
|
4640.135 | It's GramMatically too | CHEFS::PARRYD | Aromatherapy stinks | Wed Jun 12 1996 12:00 | 1 |
|
|
4640.136 | | METSYS::BENNETT | Straight no chaser.. | Wed Jun 12 1996 12:02 | 14 |
| Well, you don't have to be a Master Chef to appreciate a good dinner,
but it helps.
And before I finish, I'd just like to say that a good Functional
Specification, like any good technical document, or indeed any
business communication document should be open to one, and only
one interpretation.
That's it. The rest is utter time-wasting rubbish.
Regards,
John
|
4640.137 | 8*)) | WOTVAX::HATTOS | It's simple - but it's not easy | Wed Jun 12 1996 12:20 | 1 |
|
|
4640.138 | When things get REALLY bad... | KAOM25::WALL | DEC Is Digital | Wed Jun 12 1996 12:27 | 19 |
| [Names removed to protect the innocent]
From: KAOMxx::WALL "Another Brick in the...." 1-JUN-1987 08:59
To:
Subj: xxxxxx: of no fixed address.
Shawniel.
Howzit goin?
I wuz just wunderin if u cud tell mi ware i mite find waldo
awn the netwurk. I trid xxxx on xxxxv4 & 3 but kno such uzer wuz found.
I think hez stil n towrana but i thot eyed try and male him a knote.
How wuz yor weak end aniwai. I enjoied yesterdai, wachin the wrain
cum doun and the gras (weads) gro up. Fridae i bot a wridin moer so
i downt miend if the stuf groes.
wrawb.
|
4640.139 | it's | SMURF::CCHAPMAN | | Wed Jun 12 1996 13:26 | 5 |
| re .126
It's ... a contraction of it is.
C.
|
4640.140 | Flushed with pride. | FOUNDR::CERVA | | Wed Jun 12 1996 13:35 | 12 |
| I increasingly hear the substitution of the word "flush" for the word
"flesh".
Example: let's flush out that idea later.
When I first heard it used, I thought that the speaker was using a
hunting metaphor. Somehow we would sneak up to the where the idea was
hiding, startle it, flush it out, and then start shooting at it.
Given the quality of ideas at meetings recently, I now respond:
"no, I think that we should flush that idea right now."
|
4640.141 | must of | ENGPTR::MCMAHON | DEC: ReClaim TheName! | Wed Jun 12 1996 14:11 | 5 |
| And my favorite of the last year or two:
"must of" instead of "must've"
e.g. "He must of gone to the movies instead of the library."
|
4640.142 | RE: "must of" | RICKS::PHIPPS | DTN 225.4959 | Wed Jun 12 1996 14:14 | 5 |
| > e.g. "He must of gone to the movies instead of the library."
How about, "He must have gone to the movies instead of the library."?
mikeP
|
4640.143 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Do ya wanna bump and grind with me? | Wed Jun 12 1996 14:31 | 4 |
|
Yes, Mike, I believe that .141 knew the correct usage and was
giving an example of the incorrect, currently popular usage.
|
4640.144 | | NOTAPC::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Wed Jun 12 1996 14:52 | 9 |
| > I increasingly hear the substitution of the word "flush" for the word
> "flesh".
>
> Example: let's flush out that idea later.
actually, I've heard a number of ideas that are better off being flushed...
-mark
|
4640.145 | | NOTAPC::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Wed Jun 12 1996 15:04 | 8 |
| I saw a note in this conference in which someone spelled 'received' wrong. I
did an altavista search on 'recieved' and 'recieve' and found almost 43000 hits.
Then I did a search through the newsgroups and found almost 14000 hits.
I don't know if it means anything or not, but I wonder how much information
people CAN'T find due to spelling mistakes...
-mark
|
4640.146 | | SMURF::PBECK | Paul Beck | Wed Jun 12 1996 15:37 | 2 |
| Interesting way to find how bad things are. I note there are over
19k references to "accomodate" [sic].
|
4640.147 | quick, someone "productize" this! | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Jun 12 1996 17:19 | 6 |
| How hard would it be, I wonder, to combine a spelling checker/corrector
into the AltaVista search engine? I know I make at least my share of
fat-fingered typos, and my spelling ability is no better than most
people's is, either.
/Charlotte
|
4640.148 | a thesaurus would be nice... | ICS::MORRISEY | | Wed Jun 12 1996 17:55 | 6 |
|
Thesaurus functionality (end-user customizable) would be a
nice enhancement to Alta Vista to help handle these situations
as well as increasing the 'sophistication level' of the search.
Dennis
|
4640.149 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Don't get even ... get odd!! | Wed Jun 12 1996 17:58 | 5 |
|
Are there tools available to "anticipate" common spelling mist-
akes and either correct automatically or verify with the author
before correcting?
|
4640.151 | | JGODCL::APETERS | Let's make it happen! | Thu Jun 13 1996 04:19 | 16 |
| >Are there tools available to "anticipate" common spelling mist-
>akes and either correct automatically or verify with the author
>before correcting?
Souds like you mean something like the "soundex" system, where a
program finds searchstrings that sound like the one you are searching
for. ELF has this (or a similar algorythm) and it's very nice. Maybe
Alta Vista could use this as an option? It would be very
compute-intensive, but also a leap ahead of the competition.
On a their-there-the're etc note: us people from abroad, who learned
english in school, can have a hard time when these are interchanged.
Mis-use breaks the logic in the sentence. I hope it will never be
accepted to interchange them.
Andr� ;^)
|
4640.152 | They're you go !*)) | WOTVAX::HATTOS | It's simple - but it's not easy | Thu Jun 13 1996 05:08 | 3 |
| It will never be accepted by me...
Stu
|
4640.153 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Cyclops no more! | Thu Jun 13 1996 06:15 | 19 |
| RE: <<< Note 4640.145 by NOTAPC::SEGER "This space intentionally left blank" >>>
>> I don't know if it means anything or not, but I wonder how much information
>> people CAN'T find due to spelling mistakes...
Only this week I answered a posting in rec.antiques from a person who
claimed to be a "collector" bemoaning the fact that she was unable to
find any information on Royal Daulton[sic] on the Web. Of course, as
any collector should know, it's "Doulton", and there's a lot of
information out there.
"Congradulations" is another example of (American) phonetic spelling
gone mad, which I see quite frequently. As I see it, there are two
reasons for this trend towards illiteracy. Firstly, many people are
simply too idle to bother with correct grammar and spelling (but seem
to be able to find the energy to defend themselves vigourously), and
secondly, poor educational standards.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
4640.154 | which came first | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 227-3978, TAY1) | Thu Jun 13 1996 07:38 | 10 |
| re Note 4640.151 by JGODCL::APETERS:
> On a their-there-the're etc note: us people from abroad, who learned
> english in school, can have a hard time when these are interchanged.
> Mis-use breaks the logic in the sentence. I hope it will never be
> accepted to interchange them.
Well, it already is accepted in *spoken* English.
Bob
|
4640.155 | Alternatively ... | CHEFS::PARRYD | Aromatherapy stinks | Thu Jun 13 1996 10:42 | 6 |
| ALTERNATE (n.)
If you had AN alternate it would have to occur every other time. I
don't think you mean that.
dave_P
|
4640.156 | Jarring Jargon | WOODYS::SLOUGH | | Thu Jun 13 1996 11:34 | 12 |
|
"Significant differences exits between NT users and users of other
platforms, in demographics and psychographics."
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
from NT USERS PROFILES AND PERCEPTIONS Research Notes, Sentry Market
Research, May 1996 (and Reader's Choice).
Probably legitimate but a strange piece of jargon. Perhaps it means
pictures drawn by Norman Bates.
Dennis
|
4640.157 | In need of analysis? | SPECXN::WITHERS | Bob Withers | Thu Jun 13 1996 12:46 | 4 |
| I had a co-worker who saw nothing wrong with "analization".
BobW
|
4640.158 | accidental scatology | UNXA::ZASLAW | | Thu Jun 13 1996 13:48 | 4 |
| >I had a co-worker who saw nothing wrong with "analization".
Reminds me of people who discuss whether to have some bit of work done "in
house" or "out house." That brings us back to "flush," or lack thereof.
|
4640.159 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri Jun 14 1996 09:48 | 16 |
| > <<< Note 4640.156 by WOODYS::SLOUGH >>>
> -< Jarring Jargon >-
>
>
> "Significant differences exits between NT users and users of other
> platforms, in demographics and psychographics."
AHD:
psy-cho-graph-ics (sh1k�-graf2�ks) n.
1. (used with a sing. verb). The use of demographics to study and measure
attitudes, values, lifestyles, and opinions, as for marketing purposes.
2. (used with a pl. verb). The data obtained from such study.
[PSYCHO- + (DEMO)GRAPHICS.]
|
4640.160 | What is a tissue, here? | ELBERT::TIMBERLAKE | | Fri Jun 14 1996 15:28 | 9 |
|
One of my favorite Digitalisms is "issue." There's never a problem,
concern, difficulty, disagreement, question, puzzle, dilemma, or
uncertainty here in DECworld. No, only ISSUES. And, of course, it's
never an ISSUE about, concerning, anent, in re, or anything else but
AROUND, as noted in .46.
Dick T.
|
4640.161 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Fri Jun 14 1996 15:51 | 16 |
| > Insure and Ensure
> Inquire and Enquire
> License and Licence
> Practise and Practice
> They're, Their, and There
> It's and Its
> Who's and Whose
To which one might (now) add "manor" and "manner" (and perhaps
"manure"?). Generally speaking, I *KNOW* the difference, but for
some reason, the word just doesn't get to my fingers in time.
Its there job to insure that I Hughes the write won, butt four
sum reason, the massage doesn't get their.
Atlant
|
4640.162 | New ones for me | PLESIO::SOJDA | | Fri Jun 14 1996 16:04 | 10 |
| > Insure and Ensure
> Inquire and Enquire
> License and Licence
> Practise and Practice
Okay, I'll bite. What is the difference between these? I always
thought they were alternate, British spellings for the same words.
Larry
|
4640.163 | and Canadian! ... oh, I'm sorry.... | KANATA::ZUTRAUEN | always lookin' to learn | Fri Jun 14 1996 16:06 | 1 |
|
|
4640.164 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Fri Jun 14 1996 16:32 | 17 |
| Well, according to my dictionary, some *ARE* simply alternate spellings.
*BUT*...
"Ensure" means to take steps to guarantee a certain occurence.
For example, "I locked the door to ensure the safety of my stuff."
"Insure" is to obtain a financial instrument that will pay you back
if something bad happens. "I insured my stuff just in case a nasty
thief steals it anyway."
"Assure" is to inspire confidence. "Honest, officer, I assure
you that I locked the door!".
Unless you're British in which case "assure"="insure", too.
Atlant
|
4640.165 | | BSS::BRUNO | Wise Guise | Fri Jun 14 1996 16:45 | 11 |
|
I'm afraid that participation on a network makes you much more
likely to begin misspelling or misusing words. I had never seen the
misspelling "definately" before I saw it on Digital's network. After
that, several other people began using it. The same thing happens on
the internet.
Have fun with it. When somebody says: "Your ugly!", answer by
saying "My ugly WHAT?"
Greg
|
4640.166 | the argument is? | MAZE::FUSCI | DEC has it (on backorder) NOW! | Fri Jun 14 1996 19:56 | 1 |
| fallacious or fellatious?
|
4640.167 | THAT's easy... | DRDAN::KALIKOW | MindSurf the World w/ AltaVista! | Sat Jun 15 1996 00:52 | 2 |
| The former is merely wrong; the latter is illegal in some states! :)
|
4640.168 | Life assurance, fire insurance | SNOFS1::WILLIAMSJOHN | | Sun Jun 16 1996 08:15 | 10 |
| Re: .164
"Assure" and "insure" - strictly speaking, in Britain, "assurance"
applies only Life assurance - fire, accident, motor etc. are insurance.
Life assurance is the only case that you can be assured of the event
happening (for traditional whole of life assurance at least).
BTW
Licence and license - one's a noun, one's a verb.
|
4640.169 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Cyclops no more! | Mon Jun 17 1996 05:20 | 30 |
| RE: <<< Note 4640.162 by PLESIO::SOJDA >>>
>> -< New ones for me >-
>>
>> > Insure and Ensure
>> > Inquire and Enquire
>> > License and Licence
>> > Practise and Practice
>>
>> Okay, I'll bite. What is the difference between these? I always
>> thought they were alternate, British spellings for the same words.
Atlant has (correctly) covered insure and ensure, but he's wrong on
assure=insure in Britain, as he demonstrated by his example. As the
previous noter pointed out, in the Insurance business, there is some
confusion
"Inquire" is to look into, and "enquire" is to ask about. One would never
see a Public Enquiry, for instance, and one would never see a help desk
labelled "Inquiries", rather "Enquiries".
"Licence/License" and "Practice/Practise" are noun/verb in exactly the
same way the Advice/Advise are, which are better known simply because
they, unlike the others, are pronounced differently. However, even that
considered, I often see Advice/Advise incorrectly used.
Increasingly I note that the distinction between all these pairings is
becoming lost, which is to their detriment, and adds to the degradation
of the language.
HtH, Laurie.
|
4640.170 | well... | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 227-3978, TAY1) | Mon Jun 17 1996 08:18 | 24 |
| re Note 4640.169 by PLAYER::BROWNL:
> Increasingly I note that the distinction between all these pairings is
> becoming lost, which is to their detriment, and adds to the degradation
> of the language.
We're becoming a post-literary society.
Spoken language came first.
Then writing was devised to record language.
Now we have the technology to convey, relay, and record
spoken language to any level of fidelity -- including with
video to capture body language.
Writing is a technology that has been with us for a long,
long time. I don't think it will ever completely disappear
from use (far from it, I suspect!). However, it seems only
to be expected that distinctions that are primarily
distinctions in *written* language will in many cases be
lost.
Bob
|
4640.171 | then vs. than | KHUFU::EVENSON | Don Evenson @MWO DTN 446-2470 | Mon Jun 17 1996 10:59 | 12 |
| My latest aggravation point is interchanging then with than. At first I
thought it was only one or two people who were doing it, but now it
seems to be rampant.
I can't figure out how people confuse the two, since they are spelled
differently, pronounced differently and mean totally different things.
Than again, I suppose it's more important to be understood then
correct.
Just kidding, I know then has to do with time and than has to do with
comparison ...
|
4640.172 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jun 17 1996 11:05 | 3 |
| May I suggest taking this discussion to THEBAY::JOYOFLEX? Thanks.
Steve
|
4640.173 | | TAVIS::JONATHAN | | Tue Jun 18 1996 08:35 | 11 |
| re .157
>I had a co-worker who saw nothing wrong with "analization".
Reminds me of the story I read in an English newspaper (think it was the
Daily Telegraph) a few years ago.
The secretary of an accounting firm wrote a letter to a lawyer informing
him that the accounting fees were going up and were to be "paid annally".
The lawyer wrote back and said that was OK with him, as he was getting
sick and tired of paying through the nose.
|
4640.174 | ignorance on the other foot,perhaps | MKOTS3::16.126.176.180::blocher | | Tue Jun 18 1996 12:15 | 11 |
| Re: .169
According to the American Heritage Dictionary, which is the dictionary provided
to Digital employees here in the USA, license and practice are both verbs and
nouns and enquire has both of the meanings Laurie mentioned as belonging to
enquire and inquire. It further describes inquire as a variant of enquire.
So the ignorance here is of the differences in American English and British
English, not necessarily one of mis-spelling, nor of using the wrong word for
the meaning intended.
Marie
|
4640.175 | Ye can't speak it right, can ye? | ESSC::KMANNERINGS | | Tue Jun 18 1996 14:45 | 27 |
| That's right Marie, but it goes much further, or indeed farther than
that. The drive to standardise (dize) the English language has been
accompanied by the discrimination against regional accents and usage in
the workplace and in schools. What right have the toffs of Oxford and
Cambridge got to decide what is right and what is wrong ? I have heard
the opinion expressed that American English is actually different to
the (Queen's, Oxford, BBC)English because of the lack of education of
those who speak American English. The Australian journalist John Pilger
has described some quite funny incidents of discrimination against
colleagues who had too thick an Aussie accent.
Am I right in thinking there is similar discrimination against people
from the South of the USA?
Perhaps the worst case of Language discrimination was the long effort
to eradicate the Irish language.My mother's parents spoke Irish, but
she was taught English. Some of the structure she uses would not be
seen as correct by the rule-makers, but so what? It seems to me that
some of what is American English has been brought in by the rich
variety of people who migrated there. It should be valued and
respected.
Let's use language to discuss openly with each other, and if we feel
like inventing a few new Wurdz, then why not? Digital has its own
culture, why shouldn't it have its own bits of language to celebrate?
Kevin
|
4640.176 | The language corruptions go both ways | STOWOA::16.125.64.181::nbufton | | Wed Jun 19 1996 11:34 | 19 |
| As an ex-pat Brit in the U.S. I have enjoyed studying the two variants of the language. Each has varied from
the common root, although Webster did clearly perform an overhaul to reduce irregular forms so that
English was easier to learn for the non-English speaking immigrant population.
Even so, there are many, many words which England has corrupted, and the U.S. maintains the original
form. Some examples:
Orientate: Backward corruption from orientation.
Got (past participle): Corruption of gotten. (Would the English consider "I have forgot your name" to be
good English?)
Aluminium: Changed earlier this century by scientists who didn't like aluminum not rhyming with sodium,
etc.
BTW, I was taught (in the U.K.) that ensure means to make certain it happens, assure means to convince
that it will happen, and insure means to provide protection against it not happening. One cannot ensure
that it will rain, but one can assure another that it will, and one can insure against it.
|
4640.177 | | MKOTS3::tcc180.mko.dec.com::blocher | | Wed Jun 19 1996 11:56 | 24 |
| Yes, Kevin, people from the South, with their "Southern Accent" are looked
down upon when they travel north, and the opposite is true, too. All the
regions have somewhat different pronunciations, although the influence of
radio and TV announcers has mitigated that a good deal over the last
generation. Now almost everyone has TV and hears the national broadcasting
"non-regional" voice, so everyone knows how words are "supposed" to be
pronounced. I expect that the regional differences in pronunciation will melt
away completely over time. What may not change is the regional choice of
words to describe the same or similar items. For instance the utensil one
fries eggs in is called a spider in the Mid-west, a frying pan in the South,
a skillet in some parts and a griddle in others. I could give you a whole
list of things I had to learn new names for, when I moved from Texas to
New England. :>)
In addition to all the various countries that contributed bits and pieces
of their languages as well as ship loads of people, our language has been
enriched by the Native American tribes' contributions, too.
I feel it behooves all of us to not just be tolerant of the culture of
others, but to learn about, appreciate and value those cultures. Only
by doing so, can we expect others to value and appreciate ours.
Marie
|
4640.178 | Re-wrapped... | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Wed Jun 19 1996 12:03 | 25 |
| <<< Note 4640.176 by STOWOA::16.125.64.181::nbufton >>>
-< The language corruptions go both ways >-
As an ex-pat Brit in the U.S. I have enjoyed studying the two variants of the
language. Each has varied from the common root, although Webster did clearly
perform an overhaul to reduce irregular forms so that English was easier to
learn for the non-English speaking immigrant population.
Even so, there are many, many words which England has corrupted, and the U.S.
maintains the original form. Some examples:
Orientate: Backward corruption from orientation.
Got (past participle): Corruption of gotten. (Would the English consider "I
have forgot your name" to be good English?)
Aluminium: Changed earlier this century by scientists who didn't like aluminum
not rhyming with sodium, etc.
BTW, I was taught (in the U.K.) that ensure means to make certain it happens,
assure means to convince that it will happen, and insure means to provide
protection against it not happening. One cannot ensure that it will rain, but
one can assure another that it will, and one can insure against it.
|
4640.179 | To continue a rathole in a rathole | CUSTOM::ALLBERY | Jim | Wed Jun 19 1996 12:41 | 10 |
| >For instance the utensil one
>fries eggs in is called a spider in the Mid-west, a frying pan in the South,
>a skillet in some parts and a griddle in others.
That's interesting. While I'm familiar with "frying pan," "skillet,"
and "griddle," I've never heard "spider" used in this context. I grew
up in Ohio and now live in Michigan (which at least *used* to be in
the Midwest). Although there may be other regional usages, a griddle
is typically square or rectangular (and very shallow), while a skillet
is round. Of course one could fry eggs on either.
|
4640.180 | Me neither | SSGV02::GRANT | Margo, DTN 381-6192 | Wed Jun 19 1996 13:59 | 11 |
| > That's interesting. While I'm familiar with "frying pan," "skillet,"
> and "griddle," I've never heard "spider" used in this context. I grew
> up in Ohio and now live in Michigan (which at least *used* to be in
> the Midwest). Although there may be other regional usages, a griddle
> is typically square or rectangular (and very shallow), while a skillet
> is round. Of course one could fry eggs on either.
And I've spent YEARS in Minnesota and Wisconsin ... and have never heard of
a "spider" either! Where does it come from??
Margo
|
4640.181 | | EVMS::MORONEY | It's alive! Alive! | Wed Jun 19 1996 14:25 | 16 |
| re spider:
I have heard that word used for a skillet/frypan/etc but only a few times. I
think my grandfather may have used this word. He was not from the Midwest but
(far) northern New York.
Another object with many many different regional words is sub/hoagie/grinder
etc. for the sandwich on a long roll.
re .176:
Another English corruption is "burgle", a back formation of "burglar" treated
as if it it had the "-er" ending which could be removed. The American word
meaning the same thing (burglarize) is awkward, however.
-Mike
|
4640.182 | re: spider | PAMSIC::STEPHENS | | Wed Jun 19 1996 14:41 | 1 |
| makes great cornbread...round iron skillet, divided into 8 sections
|
4640.183 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Wed Jun 19 1996 14:51 | 9 |
| re spider:
I have heard that word used for a skillet/frypan/etc but only a few
times. I think my grandfather may have used this word. He was not
from the Midwest but (far) northern New York.
Which would seem to correlate with my knowing it, and I'm from New
England.
|
4640.184 | I'm with the Midwesterners | PLESIO::SOJDA | | Wed Jun 19 1996 15:08 | 9 |
| >> I have heard that word used for a skillet/frypan/etc but only a few
>> times. I think my grandfather may have used this word. He was not
>> from the Midwest but (far) northern New York.
Having lived in (far) northern New York most of my life, I've never
heard this term either. Maybe it really is a spillover from New
England.
|
4640.185 | | MPGS::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Wed Jun 19 1996 17:31 | 5 |
| I know a "spider pan" to be a cast-iron skillet; all spiders are
frying pans, but not all frying pans are spiders. I guess i assumed
that Spider was a? the original? brand name.
Leslie (born in Worcester, MA)
|
4640.186 | | AOSG::PBECK | Paul Beck | Wed Jun 19 1996 19:09 | 3 |
| Little-known fact: the verb "to escalate" is a backwards derivation
from the trade name Escalator.
|
4640.187 | This spider also had legs once! | EVMS::MORONEY | It's alive! Alive! | Wed Jun 19 1996 21:42 | 6 |
| I looked up "spider" in the dictionary and, other than the arachnid and other
nonrelevant definitions, spider meant "a skillet, originally a skillet with
legs to support it above a fire". No regional association was listed. Another
definition was a tripod or stand to support a pot above a fire.
-Mike
|
4640.188 | | DRDAN::KALIKOW | MindSurf the World w/ AltaVista! | Wed Jun 19 1996 23:05 | 10 |
| Hey folx, there seems a lot of you who would enjoy all the wordplay we
indulge in over THEBAY::JOYOFLEX-way. Iffen we are not going to
further skewer the DIGITAL way of neologisms in this string, then may I
humbly request that you press KP7 and join us over there as we debate
who debased whose language, whose skillet is used in Worcester, and
other linguistic stuff? I am sure that the local Modstabulary would
applaud us as we go...
... and we could use the new blood ... :-)
|
4640.189 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Jun 20 1996 13:01 | 3 |
| Indeed, we would, and I am disabling further replies here as an inducement...
Steve
|