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Subject: 
Re: Treacleheads
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.loc.au, lugnet.off-topic.debate
Date: 
Wed, 8 Nov 2000 19:06:27 GMT
Viewed: 
2164 times
  
In lugnet.loc.au, Dave Schuler writes:
In lugnet.loc.au, David Low writes:

Parts one and three of this argument only hold true if you decide in
advance that they're true.

Absolutely, which why it's In My Humble Opinion.

Fair enough, but you must agree that because of that circular reasoning
the argument won't convince anyone who doesn't already agree with it.

I am so _not_ going to get in a cultural relativism argument over grammar
and aesthetics. I'm a liberal in principle and a conservative in practice
(except for anything from the seventies).

If, as a LEGO user, I identify a single brick as
"a Lego," why is it grammatically incorrect to refer to several bricks as
"Legos?"

I would argue (and again, this is entirely the way it works in my fat
head)that you, as a LEGO user, would be as wrong (or right) to identify a
single brick as "a Lego" as you would be if you called it "a blue". Maybe
there's a missing noun in there, so it's "a blue (brick)" vs "a yellow
(brick)", or "a Lego (brick)" vs "a Tente (brick)".

I understand and accept that, but many people identify LEGO as a singular
noun in that usage, but might also refer to "a LEGO set," thereby using it
as an adjective.

Just to get all terribly anal, adjectives do not agree with the number
(singular /plural) of their corresponding nouns in English.

You're absolutely correct.  However, if "LEGO" is taken as a noun rather
than an adjective corresponding to a noun, there's plenty of precedent for
pluralization by "s."  I know what you're driving at, but I don't think your
interpretation accounts for the various ways the word LEGO is perceived.

And is LEGO an adjective or a collective noun or something so
wacky (like a gerund or something) that I just don't get it?

That's the essence of our disagreement.  If, as you suggest, LEGO is only
an adjective, then you're correct in asserting "LEGO bricks" as the correct
usage.  Likewise, if it's a collective noun, a la "fleet" or "family," then
"I am building with LEGO" is also correct.  However, if, as I suggest, some
people see LEGO as a singular noun, then "I am building with LEGOs" is
correct (grammatically--not in terms of trademark.)

Yeah, it's not really a disagreement. I know that some people see LEGO as a
singular noun. But to me it seems "wrong". And not just because TLC are
stinky IP obsessed whiners. More because it sounds like the kkind of
illiterate garble that some one who said "Laura and I really don't realize
how bright our children is sometimes until we get an objective analysis."
might say.

New topic.

If Americans voted for Dubya, do they deserve him?

--DaveL



Message has 1 Reply:
  Re: Treacleheads
 
(...) Huh? The argument is circular whether viewed from a cultural relativist standpoint or not. (...) I understand that you're working on very little sleep, but to proclaim someone's lexicon as "illiterate garble" just because it doesn't adhere to (...) (24 years ago, 8-Nov-00, to lugnet.loc.au, lugnet.off-topic.debate)

Message is in Reply To:
  Re: Treacleheads
 
(...) Fair enough, but you must agree that because of that circular reasoning the argument won't convince anyone who doesn't already agree with it. (...) I understand and accept that, but many people identify LEGO as a singular noun in that usage, (...) (24 years ago, 8-Nov-00, to lugnet.loc.au, lugnet.off-topic.debate)

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