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![]() "Jeff Morris" wrote in message ... Donal wrote: "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message news:4jjEd.47654$F25.38534@okepread07... It was a tidal wave. No, it wasn't. tid•al wave \"tïd-€l-\ n 1 : an unusually high sea wave that sometimes follows an earthquake 2 : an unusual rise of water alongshore due to strong winds © 1995 Zane Publishing, Inc. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary © 1994 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated Chambers says that the use of "tidal wave" to describe is common, but improper. You should get yourself a proper dictionary. That's odd, the online Chambers says: tidal wave noun 1 non-technical a popular name for a tsunami. 2 loosely an unusually large ocean wave. I'm very surprised. I've got the 1993 edition of the Chambers Dictionary. It clearly states that using Tidal Wave to describe a tsunami is "improper". Can dictionary definitions change so quickly??? Bowditch uses similar language, though in "Oceanography and Seamanship" Van Dorn goes so far as to call the phrase the "more-common misnomer." Misnomer or not, it is the common usage and thus it is pedantry to complain. I'm not a pedant. Furthermore, I didn't "complain" - I "corrected". I don't believe that it is pedantic to correct a genuine error. Have you always agreed with Neal's dictionary definitions? Regards Donal -- |
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