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Flowery language - again

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January 19, 2015, 07:05
arnie
Flowery language - again
quote:
For some time, I have been pondering on your use of "dogmatic" to describe my(?) comments.
That was, as I thought I made clear, in a comment I tried to make (but it either failed or was deleted) on the blog Proofreader linked to. According to one on-line dictionary dogmatic means "so sure that your beliefs and ideas are right that you expect other people to accept them".


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
January 19, 2015, 20:34
Kalleh
I know a few people like that. Wink I had only thought dogmatic meant to be sure in your beliefs and ideas - not that you expect others to accept them. That is arrogance.
January 20, 2015, 01:59
WeeWilly
quote:
"so sure that your beliefs and ideas are right that you expect other people to accept them"
... and so, supporting arguments would be totally unnecessary! Dogmatic belief is diametrically opposed to a reasoned-out position.
quote:
I know a few people like that.

... who doesn't? The world is full of dogmatic belief. Wink


"The smell of the dust they kicked up was rich and satisfying" - Grahame
January 20, 2015, 05:47
Geoff
quote:
Originally posted by WeeWilly:
Dogmatic belief is diametrically opposed to a reasoned-out position.
Yet dogmatists will go to great lengths to establish an apologia for their beliefs, but base it on false or unprovable premises.

As the bumper sticker says, "My Karma ran over my dogma." Wink
January 20, 2015, 12:01
WeeWilly
quote:
Yet dogmatists will go to great lengths to establish an apologia for their beliefs, but base it on false or unprovable premises.
... and so, in any given case it behooves one to examine whether this is what is actually at work! And the obvious way to do that would be to consider whether the premises are unreasonable (or false, unprovable or unlikely).

BTW, I love your "dogma" and "karma" quote!

This message has been edited. Last edited by: WeeWilly,


"The smell of the dust they kicked up was rich and satisfying" - Grahame
January 20, 2015, 17:07
Duncan Howell
When my bitch had her litter, did she immediately turn into a........Oh ferget it. Wink
January 21, 2015, 07:34
Geoff
quote:
Originally posted by Duncan Howell:
When my bitch had her litter, did she immediately turn into a........Oh ferget it. Wink

A mother?
January 22, 2015, 05:44
goofy
http://www.writing.wikinut.com...t-the-Same/1c4q0-bs/

Here are my problems with the wikinut article.

quote:
Merriam-Webster defines utilize as, “to make use of; turn to practical use or account.” So how is this different from use? In a nutshell, to utilize something is to give it a use it may not have originally had. For example:


Hold on... They quoted a dictionary definition and then in the next sentence claimed that the definition was something different. Where did this new definition come from?

quote:
Yes, you can utilize the conference room for your holiday party.
• We utilize Excel for our database instead of Access.
• Our company utilizes many common tools to come up with new innovations.


These are assertions about how to use the word. Where is the evidence?

quote:
How to Choose Between "Use" and "Utilize"
Basically, the choice between use and utilize depends on how the item you are referring to is normally employed. For example:

• You use a pen to write, but can utilize it as a weapon.
• You use a dining table for eating, but can utilize it as work space.
• You use a car for driving, but you and your hot date can utilize it for…


More assertions about how and how not to use the word. What if I disagree with these judgments? Even if I agree, how do I know that everyone I talk to will understand this difference? That is, is this difference really part of English or is it just my idiosyncrasy? Where is this coming from? Is there a usage manual that talks about this? Is there a dictionary that gives this definition?

quote:
As the opening quote implies, when you use utilize when you really mean use, you’re employing utilize in a way it’s not intended for (incorrectly applying its own definition). And, if you’re ever in doubt about choosing between the two, just use use and you won’t be guilty of misuse.


Here the writer is basically saying "use the word the same way I do."
January 22, 2015, 07:30
WeeWilly
quote:
turn to practical use
The careful use of "turn to" in that Merriam-Webster definition of "utilize" suggests the notion of "a use not intended". You hardly turn a steering-wheel to the practical use of steering, but you might "Utilize the steering wheel as a weapon to bludgeon someone to death!"


"The smell of the dust they kicked up was rich and satisfying" - Grahame
January 27, 2015, 20:33
Kalleh
It does seem to me that I don't use "utilize" and "use" as synonyms. It is just hard to articulate when I use one versus the other.
January 28, 2015, 10:50
WeeWilly
Kalleh: Quite so, and that is what Goofy and I have been hammering away at, even continuing this discussion to lengthy PM'ing on the matter, since all others have apparently lost interest - small blame on them! Of course, this strikes at the raison d'etre of a forum on words, doesn't it? Roll Eyes


"The smell of the dust they kicked up was rich and satisfying" - Grahame
January 28, 2015, 15:46
Geoff
To me it boils down to the all-to-common overcomplication of simple words. "Ize" isn't necessary in most situations, and never, as far as I know, where a simpler word suffices. (Or is that sufficizes?" No, it's "sufficifies, isn't it?)
January 28, 2015, 20:59
Kalleh
Oh, no, WeeWilly and goofy, I haven't lost interest at all. I've been reading, but haven't had anything too substantial to contribute. As Cicero said, "Silence is one of the great arts of conversation."
January 28, 2015, 21:45
WeeWilly
Goofy and I have continued this off-line, but if there is interest, I shall here post my last offering to Goofy (just made), noting that he has not yet had any opportunity to respond. We are getting closer to understanding these words and, more importantly, their usage.

quote:
If "utilize" is correct, how do you know it is correct? Because it agrees with wikinut's definition (says you). Where does wikinut's definition come from?
As I see it, Wikinut's definition, and uses for "utilize" come from - or at least, agree with - the M-W definition, in particular the notion of "turning to practical account", etc. By the way, why do you qualify your remark with “(says you)” … as if I have made some sort of [incorrect] interpretation of WikiNut’s examples? Do you think I have?

Anyway, as I mentioned before, it is not only WikiNut that has this view of “utilize”, for it is all over the internet. Again, as I did at the very beginning of the discussion on these two words, I went Googling "use" vs "utilize" to come up with other sites on the topic. For example:Grammar Party and Difference Between. I think the basic points to take from all these discussions about these verbs are as follows: …you’ll notice that points 3 and 4 follow from the the first two points (viz, the definitions). Many of the websites explicitly offer point 5 as an opinion about using “utilize”. However, as always, one is free to choose one’s diction … and indeed, to commit whatever atrocities of language one wants! Wink

So, it is points 3 and 5 that I lean on for preferring the sentence “The steering wheel having come off, he managed to use a wrench to steer the truck.”, although I concede that the following is valid and relatively unpretentious: “The steering wheel having come off, he managed to utilize a wrench to steer the truck.”.


... I also added to Goofy the remark that I would (and did) offer similar reasoning about the usage of "home" and "house", but that I would find less independent backing for it, and far more controversy. Wink

This message has been edited. Last edited by: WeeWilly,


"The smell of the dust they kicked up was rich and satisfying" - Grahame
January 29, 2015, 05:36
goofy
All I want is some evidence. Why did the lexicographers at the OED and M-W not include "particularly one other than the normal function of the thing” in their definitions? Maybe because they had no evidence?
January 29, 2015, 11:27
WeeWilly
This is a copy of my PM posting to Goofy's response that was longer than what he offers here

There is nothing that you would accept as evidence beyond (a) the notion of "turning to" in the definition offered by Merriam Webster - to wit, "turning to a practical use or account" combined with (b) the general usage of the suffix "ize", combined with "utilis" (Latin for "useful"). Among the meanings for "-ize" are "cause to be or conform to or resemble"; "cause to be formed into", and "treat like". Thus, "utilize" means "to treat like something useful", or "to resemble, or to form into, something useful", or simply [my] "to treat like a tool".

So "utilize" seems to contain some sense of turning into something that can be plied as a tool. The point is that this is fairly cogent evidence (for me, at least) that some sort of [ad hoc?] "transformation into usefulness" seems to apply for any object's being "utilized". This notion hardly seems germane to a fork's being used as a fork, or to a steering-wheel's being used as a steering-wheel ... and herein lies the niggling sense that "utilizing" a thing contains some measure of plying in a way "that is not expected", or "for which it was not intended" - to wit, my fanciful "transformation into usefulness". Whew!

To summarize, no-one is arguing that there are any great differences between "use" and "utilize", for they are quite obviously close synonyms. But I am suggesting that "utilizing" a thing obliges it "to undergo at least a minimal transformation into something useful", or, simply, "to be used in a way not intended".


"The smell of the dust they kicked up was rich and satisfying" - Grahame
January 30, 2015, 20:51
Kalleh
Would this be a good question for Quinion?
January 31, 2015, 04:48
Geoff
Sure, go ahead and utilitate him.
February 01, 2015, 21:05
Kalleh
I'd suggest either WeeWilly or goofy contact him. They are the ones who have the most knowledge and evidence with these two words.
February 09, 2015, 17:27
WeeWilly
Who is Paragon Quinion?

Actually, for me, this question is laid to rest, for the arguments and usage examples seem to me to be clear and in harmony. My previous posting of the 5 points about using these two words summarizes my findings on the "correct" way (IMHO, to be sure) to use these two words. Goofy's demands for "evidence", with his questioning of it, is an entirely separate issue. To steal from Nero Wolfe, "No indeed. I am telling you what is, not what I can prove!" Roll Eyes


"The smell of the dust they kicked up was rich and satisfying" - Grahame
February 09, 2015, 17:53
goofy
quote:
Originally posted by WeeWilly:
Goofy's demands for "evidence", with his questioning of it, is an entirely separate issue.


Of course it isn't. You're making a claim, and I'm asking for evidence. That's completely unseparate.
February 09, 2015, 18:45
WeeWilly
Whoops, Goofy, you apparently overlooked my introductory remark:
quote:
Actually, for me, this question is laid to rest
...for, it is only in this context that I assert "Goofy's demands for 'evidence', with his questioning of it, is an entirely separate issue." Big Grin


"The smell of the dust they kicked up was rich and satisfying" - Grahame
February 10, 2015, 01:49
arnie
quote:
Who is Paragon Quinion?
I don't know about 'Paragon', but Michael Quinion's personal page is here.


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
February 10, 2015, 08:11
WeeWilly
Thanks, Arnie. Looks like an interesting site.


"The smell of the dust they kicked up was rich and satisfying" - Grahame
February 12, 2015, 20:21
Kalleh
It is a wonderful site, and I find Quinion charming and approachable. If you were to ask him, he'd respond.