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Brian Reay wrote:
On 22/05/16 10:27, Stephen Thomas Cole wrote: Roger Hayter wrote: Stephen Thomas Cole wrote: Ian Jackson wrote: In message , Stephen Thomas Cole writes Roger Hayter wrote: Spike wrote: On 21/05/2016 11:20, Ian Jackson wrote: In message , Jeff writes Well my UK 1956 Collins Dictionary says for 'antenna' noun... (Wireless)...plural antennas. So antennas was certainly accepted as correct in the UK in 1956. Jeff In the UK, I think it's only some of the more-esoteric scientific research boffins in WW2 who would have used 'antenna' and 'antennae'. When R V Jones wrote his report on the Luftwaffe's X-Gerate navigation and bombing system, he included a photograph of a Heinkel 111 annotated with arrows pointing to the three aerials of the system, which he had labelled 'X-Beam antennae'. [uk.radio.amateur added] Yes, I think it has more to do wtth the kind of education one has had (in school, or self-selected), than to with with being 'esoteric' or a 'boffin'. In fact, the very term 'boffin' is rarely heard except when used by the wilfully ignorant (those who think football is important for instance) about people who seem cleverer than themselves. I can honestly say that the only people I have ever heard use the word "boffin" are tabloid newspaper journalists, usually in stories about cloning sheep or GM food. And now you. Congratulations! Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear! I've never heard a "real person" say it, other than Rog, ITT! Since I only quoted it, in inverted commas, from Ian, that seems a bit unobservant of you. Heavens, so it is! Yours was the first post in the thread I'd bothered to read, my sincere apologies for the confusion. My point stands, though, this thread is still the first time I can recall "boffin" being used outside of a tabloid newspaper! Ian, for shame! I must admit, I'm surprised it was used in a tabloid in recent times, guru being both shorter and more 'trendy' or 'on trend' as the current term is, I believe. I haven't read a tabloid in quite a while, but you see enough headlines from these rags posted to Facebook and Twitter that the form of language they use sticks in your mind. Perhaps you are reading one of the 'better' tabloids these days, such as the Mail ;-) Urgh... -- STC / M0TEY / http://twitter.com/ukradioamateur |
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