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"Quibbly"? What a lovely word; I shall petition for this to be in the next
OED...
Actually, the US term, "parking brake" is much better. I remember thinking
this at the time. I mean, are you slowing down or stopping your hand? I
don't think so. It's a brake for when you are parked, and "parked brake" is
an awkward phrase.
Common usage doesn't always pick the clearest language...
I could claim ironic use of the phrase "for good reason", but I think I just
let my fingers run away with a cliche. It's "handbrake" for a reason, but
not a good one.
I guess US stuntmen don't pull handbrake turns; and pulling a "parkingbrake
turn" doesn't sound so good (I believe they do "bootlegger turns", which
sounds even better).
Cheers,
Sean M.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Darren Barefoot [mailto:Darren -dot- Barefoot -at- capeclear -dot- com]
> Sent: 28 August 2001 10:36
> To: Sean MacRae
> Subject: RE: Respect
>
>
> Well, to get quibbly, "hand brake" is not a great name for
> that device,
> given that most automobile terms describe the particular
> function of an item
> with the adjective: steering wheel, rear view mirror, brake
> lights, etc.
> "Hand brake" doesn't really give me any information about its purpose.
> You're right about the French, though. DB.
>
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A landmark hotel, one of America's most beautiful cities, and
three and a half days of immersion in the state of the art:
IPCC 01, Oct. 24-27 in Santa Fe. http://ieeepcs.org/2001/
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