[Sca-cooks] remove vs course
tom.vincent at yahoo.com
tom.vincent at yahoo.com
Mon Jun 5 10:33:38 PDT 2006
As another example: In Britain, people go to hospital. In the US, people go to the hospital.
Nouns become verbs and verbs become nouns (cruise, walk, ride, etc.). That's a fairly standard feature of a living language.
Here's more extensive documentation on course vs. remove, "Of Course It's 'Course'!"; or "Remove 'Remove'" , from 1996: http://dialup.pcisys.net/~mem/course.html
Duriel
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Tom Vincent
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US Marines: Murdering toddlers to protect us from Saudi terrorists.
----- Original Message ----
From: Anne-Marie Rousseau <dailleurs at liripipe.com>
To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>; betta <ladylisabetta at yahoo.com>
Sent: Monday, June 5, 2006 1:18:23 PM
Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] remove vs course
just as a point of data, course is used by lots of people up here in AnTir, especially the
cooks :).
remove seems to be "old school" sca, along with feasto-crat, merchants row and other such SCA
based terms.
personally, I think whoever is organizing the event gets to call it whatever they want ;) tho I
tend to promote "course" meself.
--Anne-Marie, who also thinks the word "feast" is a noun, as in "we went to THE feast",
or "ate THE feast" not a (whatever term it is being used as) when people say "went to feast"
(no THE. what the heck is up with that?) and while we're there, when did "disrespect" become a
verb? *pant pant pant*..... ;)
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