calling all sewists!
#23
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: MO
Posts: 1,057
LOL Now, I would never have read it that way til you pointed it out! Now, I probably always will! ... Shift+R improves the quality of this image. CTRL+F5 reloads the whole page.
#24
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Dallas area, Texas, USA
Posts: 3,050
Yes to this most succinct expressing of it. It's not a new concept. In 1968 I took a college course on the subject of "transformational - generative grammar" (What can I say - I needed the credits!). The gist of it was that if language didn't evolve we'd all be saying "ugh" and pointing. Almost nobody can even make sense of our own language as it was written/spoken a few hundred years ago. Shakespeare, for example, is obscure without lots of footnotes. Chaucer has to be translated. Ordinary people in their days had no trouble understanding them.
I like the word "sewist" because no matter how well I understand from context that "sewer" is not necessarily a waste conduit, it often distracts me with that silly thought. It got started at a time when "sewer" was more likely to be a spoken word than a written one. With widespread increase in written communications on this subject, such as this forum, it's not surprising that an alternative word that makes better sense when reading is starting to take hold. Maybe 20 years from now people will snort if you type "sewer" when you mean "sewist".
I like the word "sewist" because no matter how well I understand from context that "sewer" is not necessarily a waste conduit, it often distracts me with that silly thought. It got started at a time when "sewer" was more likely to be a spoken word than a written one. With widespread increase in written communications on this subject, such as this forum, it's not surprising that an alternative word that makes better sense when reading is starting to take hold. Maybe 20 years from now people will snort if you type "sewer" when you mean "sewist".
#29
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Jacksonville, FL
Posts: 1,389
Not all sewers are seamstresses, some are seamsters? (guys?) I just figured sewist was being used to be gender neutral.
But, let's pitch all those names aside and call ourselves wha we really are ... Fiber Artists! LOL
(What we really are addicts and enablers!)
But, let's pitch all those names aside and call ourselves wha we really are ... Fiber Artists! LOL
(What we really are addicts and enablers!)
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