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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: [OT] The stigma of schemas
On Sun, 01 Jul 2001, Nik O wrote: [filet vs fillet] > I suspect that this is due to the much larger per centage of > Francophones in the USA, hence the "respect shown the original > language" (a very important recent reminder from Uche Ogbuji on > this thread). Could certainly be. I wonder did the word travel as "fill-it" from the UK originally but get modified back to the French pronounciation later. I look for the day when XML gets used for a chronic lexicon so that we can trace mutation through time (maybe one already exists). > As a cheeky Yank, i have always though the English > deliberately mis-pronounced "foreign" languages as an > expression of imperialism (true of most languages to one extent > or another, yes?). They certainly tended to do this in times past. One thinks of the aristocratic mother cited in Jilly Cooper's _Class_ who remonstrated with her school-age son, "Speak French well, dear, but not like _them_." And both Brits and Yanks suffer from the delusion that repeating oneself louder is a guarantee than the foreigner will understand :-) > Because the USA is such a mutt of a nation, it seems that we > are more likely to have contact with the original > pronunciation, and use a reasonable facsimile thereof. Even us > cowboys in Wyoming say GRO-vawnt for "Gros Ventre" (named by > les trappeurs Quebecois). Otoh, the nearby town named "Dubois" > is pronounced "DOO-boyz" instead of "duBWA" -- go figure! To say nuthin' of Des Moines... [noospeke] > I can only agree with this in a narrow sense. Just because we > have added a wonderful new specialized lexicon of many words, > doesn't mean that the language as a whole has been enriched. I was thinking more of those words and usages which ooze out into the mainstream, like "debug". > How many early adopters of PCs wish they had never learned > the word "DOS"? Or late adopters Windows :-) > Agreed -- i say "schemas", you say "schemata", can't we just > call this little thing off? Happily, so long as no-one uses schema as a plural :-) > P.S. The lack of diacritics is an intentionally provocative > reminder that much of the Net still remains based upon > text/plain ASCII, alas. I don't think it's intentional, it's that British and American manufacturers still regard diacritics as an optional extra, not an essential. Hopefully XML's grounding in Unicode is changing that. ///Peter
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