The term is based on the shape of the collar not the form on the collar. The uniforms are a turtleneck with a black collar.There is both a V present in your photos and a V present on the front neck sector of Kirk's sweater.
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The term is based on the shape of the collar not the form on the collar. The uniforms are a turtleneck with a black collar.There is both a V present in your photos and a V present on the front neck sector of Kirk's sweater.
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It just has to cover part of the neck.I thought a turtleneck had to fold over once.
Wouldn't "tunic" be a more appropriate term?
The term is based on the shape of the collar not the form on the collar. The uniforms are a turtleneck with a black collar.
We're nerds or is that geeks?Then allow me to be the first to quote Johnny Carson in this thread. "I did not know that." I thought a mock turtleneck was the partial and a turtleneck was the full deal with rollover.
Back to the subject of the OP, if we assume that the black undershirt as seen worn by McCoy in The Man Trap (scene where McCoy naps after being drugged(?) by "Nancy") is standard issue Starfleet (something the Abrams films seem to have run with), then the OP is not entirely wrong, and the colored portion of the uniform is in fact an extremely shallow V-neck. However, I think the costume itself normally features the colored tunic with a black collar attached, which would then not be a V neck since the black collar is not V'd.
...how did we get on this subject again?
The neck of the shirt is not in the shape of a V. That's the determining factor. It the black part was shaped like a U or a T it would still be a turtleneck.The term is based on the shape of the collar not the form on the collar. The uniforms are a turtleneck with a black collar.
Geoff, let us be reasonable with this thing.
Is there or is there not a V on the neck region of Kirk's sweater?
We see the shirt ripped
Not in America.We see the shirt ripped
Sweater.
Not in America.
I see a V neck sweater - a V shape around the top of the sweater. You do not. We will agree to disagree!
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Back to the subject of the OP, if we assume that the black undershirt as seen worn by McCoy in The Man Trap (scene where McCoy naps after being drugged(?) by "Nancy") is standard issue Starfleet (something the Abrams films seem to have run with), then the OP is not entirely wrong, and the colored portion of the uniform is in fact an extremely shallow V-neck. However, I think the costume itself normally features the colored tunic with a black collar attached, which would then not be a V neck since the black collar is not V'd.?
Spock and Tormolen wear the undershirt in "The Naked Time", too, but I thought when Spock put his regular uniform shirt on over top of it, it had the black collar as per usual. I don't think the undershirt ever formed the black part of the collar in original TOS. Unfortunately, the Trekcore screencaps of this scene are inconclusive, and I don't really feel like digging the DVD out right now to check.
This is one of the strangest threads I've read in quite a long time. A very long debate on fashion semantics.
And Plastic kneecaps?
But for the sake of realism they could have at least worn a plastic kneecap or elbow pads for protection reasons.
Lazarus could certainly have benefited from both...he was the kid who kept falling off his bike....Or maybe just a bicycle helmet?
A V-neck is defined as the open part of the collar being a V shape. As such the TOS tunics are not V-necks because the open part of the collar is round.Yes, but the top of the collar is what determines if it's a "V-neck"
I disagree.
There is a clear V shape around his neck.
However, we must not get aggravated over this triviality. I do not want to cause a kerfuffle over such minor things.
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