Dax named him that.I thought he was called bones because he boned a lot.
Dax named him that.I thought he was called bones because he boned a lot.
A good deal of phrases we use in every day speech, in English, are throwbacks to things we generally don't know the roots of. Has your room ever been a shambles? Why did you just call it a medieval meat market?
How many things we say, for instance, that are directly pulled from Shakespeare and most of us don't know it, and the rest in general speech use it without awareness. We're still speaking Elizabethan english, mostly oblivious to the context the phrases were used in, but that's fine, they still work anyway:
"one fell swoop", "wild goose chase", "in my heart of hearts", "laughing stock", "fancy free", "green eyed monster", "good riddance", "as luck would have it", "for goodness' sake", "wear my heart upon my sleeve", "break the ice" "be-all and the end-all", "give the devil his due", "love is blind"
anyway, that's the "foregone conclusion" and I "refuse to budge an inch" "in my mind's eye"
so McCoy being called Bones for various reasons, does not seem out of context to me. Seems like we're making much ado about nothing![]()
You had a humour bypass?Whatever point you're making...you didn't.
Dax was an ignorant Trill, how dare she know not the real meaning of the name????Dax named him that.
i've wondered for some time how long she would have remained just "number one" if the first pilot had become a series?No. They just called her Number One because she was the exec. That's all it ever was.
i've wondered for some time how long she would have remained just "number one" if the first pilot had become a series?
what would have been done when she was formally introduced to someone? or a situation like court msrtial where her full rank and name was used? at some point roddenberry or a writer would of had to of created a actual name for her.
There is in Star Trek (2009).
"All I got left is my bones."
I can testify that, when writing a Pike-era novel, avoiding her name got to be very cumbersome, particularly in prose. Which is another reason I lobbied for giving her a name in the LEGACIES books. Trying to avoid mentioning her name over the course of an entire trilogy was going to be an ongoing headache . . .![]()
A good deal of phrases we use in every day speech, in English, are throwbacks to things we generally don't know the roots of. Has your room ever been a shambles? Why did you just call it a medieval meat market?
How many things we say, for instance, that are directly pulled from Shakespeare and most of us don't know it, and the rest in general speech use it without awareness. We're still speaking Elizabethan english, mostly oblivious to the context the phrases were used in, but that's fine, they still work anyway:
"one fell swoop", "wild goose chase", "in my heart of hearts", "laughing stock", "fancy free", "green eyed monster", "good riddance", "as luck would have it", "for goodness' sake", "wear my heart upon my sleeve", "break the ice" "be-all and the end-all", "give the devil his due", "love is blind"
anyway, that's the "foregone conclusion" and I "refuse to budge an inch" "in my mind's eye"
so McCoy being called Bones for various reasons, does not seem out of context to me. Seems like we're making much ado about nothing![]()
(can't help it, my mind has always had to come up from the sewer, to get to the gutter)
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or this classic from Taming of the ShrewI have always remember this one the best...
Iago:
"I am one, sir, that comes to tell you your daughter and the Moor are now making the beast with two backs."
(can't help it, my mind has always had to come up from the sewer, to get to the gutter)
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Climb the steps, Jim....
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I can testify that, when writing a Pike-era novel, avoiding her name got to be very cumbersome, particularly in prose.
Because she's part of the crew?So why was it ever done at all?
So why was it ever done at all?
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