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#16 | ||
Wizard
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Quote:
The Urban Dictionary has a few definitions including a unit of weight for fat people but the one that applies to your concerns is: Quote:
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#17 |
Philosopher
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People already use the word ton for things that can't be weighed, they might say "ton of jokes" (dictionary.com uses that example). They might say ton of money, even it is a digital transfer of funds. You also could talk about a ton of mosquitoes; they can be weighed, but a swarm of mosquitoes isn't likely to weigh a ton.
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#18 |
monkey on the fringe
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My goodness; there's a ton of posts about the use of the word "ton".
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#19 |
Basculocolpic
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I tried to illustrate my thinking by using examples using the expression "tons of...", I'm more interested in what other kind of idioms that will become obsolete because of the shift to digital. In an analog world we use concrete things, in the digital it is more abstract, hence the need for new idioms. Don't get hung up on tons.
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#20 | |
Wizard
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#21 |
Are you gonna eat that?
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i get fancy with it, i use variations of "metric crap ton".
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#22 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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How did "yadda yadda" become popular again in the American lexicon? Being used on an episode of Seinfeld. "Beam me up" came from a short-lived sci-fi show that almost no one saw during its original run. "Tune in" came from years of entire nations using dial-controlled radios and TV sets. Generation X was coined from a popular book. Etc. Today, if things had been different, we could just as easily have been saying "I have tanks worth of books" for years (maybe Mark Spitz would have started that), and wondering why people today don't use "tons." But the one thing that is clear is that the idiom doesn't necessarily have to make real sense; it only has to be understood by those who hear you use it. So the shift to digital may give us new idioms--in fact, I'd argue that "digital" has in itself become a new idiom, as it and its doppleganger, "analog," have become synonymous for "new" and "old"--but we'll probably get new idioms from other sources as well. |
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#23 |
Wizard
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But as people pointed out in the comments in the "old people icons" article, digital is inherently abstract (1s and 0s), so there are very few new idioms to replace the old ones. Hence the old ones stick around long after they have real meaning.
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#24 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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And the thing about new idioms is... they eventually become old idioms. |
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#25 | |
Wizard
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#26 | |
Award-Winning Participant
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I see no reason why that must be associated with a strip of ribbon in a DTB. So 'bookmark' will be correct and valid as long as we call those things we read 'books.' Second, there are already less physically-derived alternates for both the terms you mention. Some browsers have "favorties" instead of"bookmarks" though this would make little sense in actually marking your place in a book. "Place holder" would work well, also, I think. And "folders" are also called "directories." There would be no reason to change that term unless the underlying file system management itself changed. I'll also point out that we happily use idioms today that derive from things that are long obsolete. The phone dial, as was mentioned. We also whip things into shape, though few of us have ever driven a horse or abused a slave, and we still go the whole nine-yards, even though no one can seem to agree on what that nine-yards originally referred to. That being said, just a few days ago, before seeing this thread or that "old folks icons" link, I stared at my computer screen wondering why a 3.5" floppy persisted as a save icon. ApK Last edited by ApK; 06-22-2012 at 11:09 AM. |
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#27 |
Sith Wannabe
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We also say our phones ring, when they haven't done that in about as long. Most phones these days play music when they receive a call.
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#28 | |
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ApK |
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#29 | |
Wizard
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#30 | |
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