I see you understand my point. IF it matters, such as the tools of one's profession, real professionals use the correct terms.
When I was in Basic training, one of the biggest "sins" was incorrect (by Army standards) terms. Different services have different degrees and sometimes different names for the same things. I've seen Marine training where even when speaking to an NCO the private was required to call them sir.
Call an Army Drill Sgt "sir" and after a sarcastic comment, you WILL be doing extra work.
If you use civilian speak, you're doing pushups, at the least. Call your rifle a gun, and be prepared for a long, very tiring day.
one of our problems today is people being too literal when they shouldn't be and not literal enough when they ought to be. A little while back a judge issues a ruling in which he compared an AR15 with a Swiss Army Knife. To me, and everyone else who read it (and had more than two brain cells) his point was simple and clear, and explained adequately in context. Those two items are similar in the sense that they are multi use tools and are common everywhere. That was his point.
However, the twittering yammerheads in the media could only focus on the "stupidity of comparing a gun to a knife" and berating the judge for that, in the process questioning both his personal intelligence and his decision. All because THEY weren't smart enough to understand what he meant.
I'm not perfectly precise all the time, I do use slang, and sometimes bad slang for some things, often, but not where it matters.
When I was in Basic training, one of the biggest "sins" was incorrect (by Army standards) terms. Different services have different degrees and sometimes different names for the same things. I've seen Marine training where even when speaking to an NCO the private was required to call them sir.
Call an Army Drill Sgt "sir" and after a sarcastic comment, you WILL be doing extra work.
If you use civilian speak, you're doing pushups, at the least. Call your rifle a gun, and be prepared for a long, very tiring day.
one of our problems today is people being too literal when they shouldn't be and not literal enough when they ought to be. A little while back a judge issues a ruling in which he compared an AR15 with a Swiss Army Knife. To me, and everyone else who read it (and had more than two brain cells) his point was simple and clear, and explained adequately in context. Those two items are similar in the sense that they are multi use tools and are common everywhere. That was his point.
However, the twittering yammerheads in the media could only focus on the "stupidity of comparing a gun to a knife" and berating the judge for that, in the process questioning both his personal intelligence and his decision. All because THEY weren't smart enough to understand what he meant.
I'm not perfectly precise all the time, I do use slang, and sometimes bad slang for some things, often, but not where it matters.