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- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
- Path: sparky!uunet!microsoft!hexnut!frankm
- From: frankm@microsoft.com (Frank R.A.J. Maloney)
- Subject: Re: Fisher...uh...person
- Message-ID: <1993Jan03.003802.28242@microsoft.com>
- Date: 03 Jan 93 00:38:02 GMT
- Organization: Microsoft Windows/DOS Users Ed Group
- References: <1993Jan01.173821.16413@rose.com> <1i296iINNsrl@uwm.edu>
- Lines: 29
-
- In article <1i296iINNsrl@uwm.edu> jgd@csd4.csd.uwm.edu writes:
- >> sandy@halcyon.com (Sandy Fifer) wonders:
- >>
- >> | What's wrong with using fisher, server, sewer, crafter, etc.? These
- >> | words don't sound cumbersome to me.
- >
- >Also be careful who you call a fisher.
- >
- >Fisher: Carnivorous mammal of North America, _martes pennanti_.
- >
- > This is a member of the same genus as the marten (_martes
- > americana_), and the sable (_martes zibellina_).
-
- I'd be careful about the selective use of dictionaries and other
- reference works.
-
- fisher n. 1. a fisherman. 2. any animal that catches fish
- for food. 3. a dark-brown or blackish, somewht fox-like
- marten, Martes pennanti, of northern North America. 4. its
- fur. [ME fischer, OE fiscere, See FISH, -ER^1]
-
- Random House Dictionary of the English Language, First
- Edition
-
- You might want to consider the phrases "Fisher King" and "fisher of
- men". Are these references to mustelidae?
-
- --
- Frank Richard Aloysius Jude Maloney
- "Well, I'm a little muddled." -- Glinda
-