The Irish Times is murdering the English language!
Discussion
Hammerwerfer said:
Since when does one call an actress an "actor"?
This is the seconde time I have seen an obituary for an "actor" only to read on to find out that the deceased was a female.
This might be a problem in adult film recruitment:This is the seconde time I have seen an obituary for an "actor" only to read on to find out that the deceased was a female.
Director: "OK Hammerwerfer, you tied good to that bed? Right, bring out the actors".
We use gender in a few instances in English, and I think we should retain as much as possible.
If ther is a gender specific description of a profession, I think it should be kept. Sure, we have female doctors, and male nurses, but the language loses something when we go all PC aqnd try to eliminate the word "actress".
Ther Germans are very attached to gender, and it doesn't seem to do them any harm.
If ther is a gender specific description of a profession, I think it should be kept. Sure, we have female doctors, and male nurses, but the language loses something when we go all PC aqnd try to eliminate the word "actress".
Ther Germans are very attached to gender, and it doesn't seem to do them any harm.
Hammerwerfer said:
We use gender in a few instances in English, and I think we should retain as much as possible.
If ther is a gender specific description of a profession, I think it should be kept. Sure, we have female doctors, and male nurses, but the language loses something when we go all PC aqnd try to eliminate the word "actress".
Ther Germans are very attached to gender, and it doesn't seem to do them any harm.
I think "actor" was used before "actress" for women....in fact I think they may all have been "players" at one point...If ther is a gender specific description of a profession, I think it should be kept. Sure, we have female doctors, and male nurses, but the language loses something when we go all PC aqnd try to eliminate the word "actress".
Ther Germans are very attached to gender, and it doesn't seem to do them any harm.
Edited by esselte on Monday 9th March 21:22
Hammerwerfer said:
Since when does one call an actress an "actor"?
This is the seconde time I have seen an obituary for an "actor" only to read on to find out that the deceased was a female.
The Irish Times would therefore appear to be following the same rationale as that used by the Oxford English Dictionary.This is the seconde time I have seen an obituary for an "actor" only to read on to find out that the deceased was a female.
kthxbye.
Depends wether she was an actor or an actor, as I see two types of actor. You have the actors in films and tv and then you have actor's, said "ac-taw" which I class as a proffesional actor usually in plays etc.
Not sure why your worried about the Irish murdering the English language, America have been doing it fo years, so has most people under 20 with there text speak and there making up of new words shenanigans
Not sure why your worried about the Irish murdering the English language, America have been doing it fo years, so has most people under 20 with there text speak and there making up of new words shenanigans
pits said:
Depends wether she was an actor or an actor, as I see two types of actor. You have the actors in films and tv and then you have actor's, said "ac-taw" which I class as a proffesional actor usually in plays etc.
Not sure why your worried about the Irish murdering the English language, America have been doing it fo years, so has most people under 20 with there text speak and there making up of new words shenanigans
Is someone able to translate this into English please? Unless it is meant as a joke?Not sure why your worried about the Irish murdering the English language, America have been doing it fo years, so has most people under 20 with there text speak and there making up of new words shenanigans
Edited by Bushmaster on Tuesday 10th March 02:43
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