MarekSusicky
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2020
- Messages
- 154
- Points
- 83
How dare you! It's not it! It's she!calling all the ships "it."
I mean... She's she?
How dare you! It's not it! It's she!calling all the ships "it."
Well she is used for ships but at least in german the word itself uses it (das schiff), I guess you can think of it as if ships were animals that when you know them use not it.I've been working on my pirate story a bit, and I just realized that I've spent the entire thing (which admittedly isn't much) calling all the ships "it." "He turned the ship's wheel and turned it to starboard." I really don't want to have to go back and replace every instance of "it" with "she" or "her." Is this the kind of thing you, as a reader, would care about, or even notice?
Well, call it 'she' when spoken by true sailors.I've been working on my pirate story a bit, and I just realized that I've spent the entire thing (which admittedly isn't much) calling all the ships "it." "He turned the ship's wheel and turned it to starboard." I really don't want to have to go back and replace every instance of "it" with "she" or "her." Is this the kind of thing you, as a reader, would care about, or even notice?
Referring to ships as she or her has been a tradition for centuries. Why Are Ships Referred to as She? It is generally accepted that ships are referred to as ‘she’ or ‘her’ due to language evolution from the Latin word for ship ‘Navis’ being feminine.
Only dumbass Leftists/American Democrats agree with that bullshit.Isn't the media teaching is that the gender is the construct, and it doesn't exist?
Wasn't expecting more moderator John lore in this thread.No, it is not correct. He has a gender, it's literally on his profile.
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The gender of objects in French changes based on the word you chose to describe it.In many other languages, it is as far I know similar. The word "ship" is, in fact, feminine, in many other languages as well, with some exceptions.
Technically, the terms are masculine and feminine, the language is not saying that a chair is female, only feminine. And it has very little to do with the perception of the thing most of the time (though it may have an influence on the perception of it afterwards). Otherwise, pirate in Latin (pirata) would be masculine instead of feminine.A car is male, an automobile is female.
A fork is female, but a utensil is male.
I admit I didn't know it was the case in French.For boats, I can't actually think of any word we use for them that makes them female:
Vessel (vaisseau) is male,
Boat (bateau) is male,
Ship (navire) is male.
And most authors would therefore refer to boat as male, unless it's given a Feminine name and then addressed as such.
Find and replace would be your friend… if it wasn’t so common!I've been working on my pirate story a bit, and I just realized that I've spent the entire thing (which admittedly isn't much) calling all the ships "it." "He turned the ship's wheel and turned it to starboard." I really don't want to have to go back and replace every instance of "it" with "she" or "her." Is this the kind of thing you, as a reader, would care about, or even notice?
Sink him, he’s a spoilSplort.Russians will call a ship, "He"/"Him".
… and linguists.Only dumbass Leftists/American Democrats agree with that bullshit.