Mickymouse
Ubuntu Linux user
I don't know if any one is interested but if you go to http://www.yourdictionary.com/ they have a rather nice forum devoted to words and such.
Mick
Mick
I take your point, but locals will be better placed than foreigners on such things. To non-locals these are recondite names to be sure. It would be better to use lower case in my view as that follows conventions most of the time.Michael Frankis said:Hi Steve,
I may know them myself (much of the time) - I'm thinking more of the immense confusion it gives to birders with less knowledge than you or I do.
And there are plenty of birds which I genuinely don't know whether they're derived from proper names or not, nor any reasonable way of finding out . . . how about a Huia? or an ‘Apapane? an ‘I’iwi? or an O’ahu ‘Amakihi? (yes, these are real birds that English speakers have to deal with, on New Zealand and Hawaii, respectively )
Michael
That would fit with my perception that it's mainly wildfowl and waders that are treated this way. Would Sir like another helping of Golden Plover?Charles Harper said:... as usual I missed all the fun. Missing '-s' plurals has something to do with venery, as I recall-- many game birds and animals considered as meat...
That might depend whether it was a white-rumped sandpiper or not.robinm said:Just another example that came to mind.
If, days after a birding trip, I posted here that I had seen a solitary sandpiper should I be accused of suppression or terminological inexactitude?
Don't you mean White-rumped Sandpiper 3Bluetail said:That might depend whether it was a white-rumped sandpiper or not.
Far from universal!Katy Penland said:The writing convention for marine mammals is NOT to capitalize common names at all (unless, as mentioned, one of the names is proper)
The conventions are clear - it is people who, often out of ignorance of a convention, choose to use a non-standard style. Some of those folk then insist they are "correct" - all very human, of course, and especially for those today who claim to so hate rules (well... the rules that don't suit, anyway).Katy Penland said:All of the above with tongue only slightly in cheek. My sympathies to all you editors out there who have to struggle with such conventions. Couldn't we birders organize some kind of protest to the relevant authorities and get rid of all the ambiguous common names? Okay, tongue *firmly* in cheek there.
Hi Steve,scampo said:It might catch on, one day in the future, that bird names should be capitalised, but I doubt it.
But when the convention has been shown to be inadequate it should change. The logic of the opposite argument is that grammar conventions are fixed: that is the tail wagging the dog. Grammar is only of value if it is an aid to clarity of expression.scampo said:The convention is that no English word takes an initial capital unless it starts a sentence, or the equivalent of a sentence, or is a proper noun (...or is the name of a genus!). All so very straightforward. Folk can do what they like but they can't on their own create a convention. It might catch on, one day in the future, that bird names should be capitalised, but I doubt it.
I see no evidence at all that it aids understanding or is inadequate. In fact I think it might even detract from understanding: it is surely useful to know when a bird has been named after a person or place, for example.robinm said:But when the convention has been shown to be inadequate it should change. The logic of the opposite argument is that grammar conventions are fixed: that is the tail wagging the dog. Grammar is only of value if it is an aid to clarity of expression.
I think we have demonstrated that capitalisation aids understanding and therefore is an improvement on the current convention. I shall certainly use it.
You pays your money... At least you can usually tell when a species has been named after someone because the name is in the genitive (Cetti's Warbler). What would your solution be to the solitary sandpiper/white-rumped sandpiper ambiguity highlighted above?scampo said:I see no evidence at all that it aids understanding or is inadequate. In fact I think it might even detract from understanding: it is surely useful to know when a bird has been named after a person or place, for example.
No such luck here. I had a copy of his first (1954?) British field guide, but that got replaced long ago. I do have the 1944 edition (first published 1930) of Kirkman & Jourdain's British Birds and that uses capitals, even for families ("Ducks"). It also employs the old-fashioned habit of hyphenating adjectives to following nouns (e.g. "Garden-Warbler"; "Whitetailed-Eagle").Michael Frankis said:It would be interesting to know who started the process; I'd guess perhaps Peterson, as he started the field guide industry. Anyone got a copy of his first (1934) field guide they can check in?
Whilst I have both feet planted firmly in the capitalising corner, I suppose it must be said that English (and I suspect all languages) has its (have their) grammatical ambiguities in many areas other than just naming conventions.Bluetail said:What would your solution be to the solitary sandpiper/white-rumped sandpiper ambiguity highlighted above?
Hi Jason,Bluetail said:At least you can usually tell when a species has been named after someone because the name is in the genitive (Cetti's Warbler)