Zoe wrote:
That's nonsense. "anti-American" does not carry the same use of the word as "American".
I see. So what you're saying is that the "American" in "anti-American" is a different word entirely than the "American" in "pro-American" or "American values." Wow. I had no idea! :)
It would be helpful if I were given sysop status. I need to be able to access the text of protected pages and need to learn how the sysop system works. I am working on an implementation of the wikipedia3 software at
http://www.internet-encyclopedia.info
I could also do some work as a sysop on wikipedia itself.
Thank you,
Fred Bauder
I think this discussion is getting pretty far afield, but...
Sheldon Rampton wrote:
That's nonsense. "anti-American" does not carry the same use of the word as "American".
I see. So what you're saying is that the "American" in "anti-American" is a different word entirely than the "American" in "pro-American" or "American values." Wow. I had no idea! :)
I think Sheldon is right here. "American dream" is another example of this use of the word. When people say "Americans" they aren't usually speaking dryly of "citizens of the United States" -- there's a connotation as well, of the things (good or bad) that Americans are known for.
In some contexts, this is indispensible.
Suppose we're writing an article about war protests. Suppose we want to say "Due to X, Y, and Z, some of the protestors were said to be anti-American, especially in the more conservative press." This sentence can't be rewritten as "said to be anti-US" without losing something.
--Jimbo
Of course you did. You're just trying to throw semantics around to prove an untenable point. Zoe Sheldon Rampton sheldon.rampton@verizon.net wrote:Zoe wrote:
That's nonsense. "anti-American" does not carry the same use of the word as "American".
I see. So what you're saying is that the "American" in "anti-American" is a different word entirely than the "American" in "pro-American" or "American values." Wow. I had no idea! :)