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Full wave antennae on 137kHz?
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July 27th 17, 11:11 AM posted to uk.radio.amateur,rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Custos Custodum
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Sep 2010
Posts: 43
Full wave antennae on 137kHz?
On Wed, 26 Jul 2017 23:46:00 +0100,
(Roger Hayter)
wrote:
Custos Custodum wrote:
On Wed, 26 Jul 2017 21:16:02 +0100, Gareth's Downstairs Computer
wrote:
ITYM, "antennae"
It is "antennas" for the things connected to radios and "antennae" for
things connected to insects and arthopods even in the UK, not just in the
US, according to Collins English Dictionary.
Try a dictionary for grownups such as the OED and not one
targetted at disuptive children.
Your wish is my command. From OED3, March 2016:
antenna, n.
View as: Outline |Full entryKeywords: On |Off
Quotations: Show all |Hide all
Pronunciation: Brit. /an't?n?/, U.S. /æn't?n?/
Frequency (in current use):
Inflections: Pl. antennae, (esp. in sense 4) antennas.
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin antenna, antemna,
Italian antenna.
Etymology: classical Latin antenna, earlier antemna... (Show More)
4. A wire, rod, or other structure by which airborne radio waves are
transmitted or received, usually as part of a radio or television
transmission or receiving system; = aerial n. 3.
1902˜2013(Show quotations)
Interpreting that, it does bear out Gareth's theory that antennae is the
original plural but says that antennas is also used "especially" with
radio aerials. So the conclusion I draw is that both are correct but
that antennas is growing in popularity.
Like disc/disk and programme/program, it's a useful distinction that
apparently goes over the heads of the Luddites among us.
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