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The ship is feminine

Deckerd

Fleet Arse
Premium Member
Do many Trek episodes refer to a ship as 'she'?

I only ask because I could have sworn that Tigh referred to Galactica as feminine in the final series.
 
No beach to walk on.

It's common for all types of conveyance to be referred to in the feminine is it not?

I am not following you from thread to thread, even it may look that way.
 
It's okay. Your dress is pretty.

I don't think all types of conveyance. Motorcycles tend to be neuter (or 'beast' :D). Cars have pretty much lost gender in modern parlance. There was a big discussion about this some years ago because someone objected to the RN referring to ships as 'she'; something about it being outdated and not relevant in modern times or something. Not sure what the outcome was. I just have no recollection of this kind of terminology being used in Trek.

I'm sure Tigh said "her back's broken, she won't be jumping again" but I might have misheard.
 
US/British tradition is to refer to ships in the feminine (which makes me uncomfortable when the ship has a man's name, like the USS Ronald Reagan).

I believe Russian tradition is to refer to ships in the masculine.

To answer your question, in the TOS episode "The Naked Time," Kirk muses on his affection for the Enterprise and says out loud, "Now I know why they call it... she."

I don't recall in Galactica specifically, but there's no reason why they'd break from Western tradition. Didn't someone say "She'll never jump again!" in the finale?
 
Why can't Ronald Reagan be a woman?

Yeah, ships are traditionally feminine. So are countries, and occasionally land masses. And the ocean.

It's a poetic usage rather than grammatical, the ship is a sailor's wife, mother, and lover, metaphorically.

The usage isn't outdated any more than Oscar Wilde is outdated. It's a poetic appellation, not a scientific designation.
 
Kirk definitely referred to his Enterprise as 'she', even calls her a woman if I'm not mistaken in This Side of Paradise. Can anyone confirm?

X
 
The Fatherland?

That's German. In English it's The Motherland.

Notice that a great many British colonies have feminine names. America is a feminine form of Amerigo, then you've got Georgia, Virginia, Carolina, Jamaica, Australia, and others. Great Britain herself is usually referred to as feminine.
 
Great Britain herself is usually referred to as feminine.

Indeed. Old war posters often depicted Britain as a mother lion or bear with the commonwealth countries as her cubs.

It's certainly not meant in any kind of derogatory way, that is to be sure, even if the occasional ultra-feminist type thinks it is. It's a term of endearment and adoration, not the objectification of women as property or any such bullshit.
 
Kirk definitely referred to his Enterprise as 'she', even calls her a woman if I'm not mistaken in This Side of Paradise. Can anyone confirm?

X

And of course, in the classic "Futurama" episode...

"Alas, my ship, whom I love like a woman (oh, lord...) is... DISABLED."
 
Britain's female form was Britannia (as in "Rule Britannia").

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Britannia

America has both Lady Liberty and Columbia. And of course, Uncle Sam, Yankee Doodle, Johnny Rebel, Billy Yank, etc...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_personification

britannialion.jpg
flaggwakeupamerica.jpg
tripleentente.jpg

billyyankbook.jpg
johnnyrebelbook.jpg


Some countries consider themselves female and others consider themselves male. Germany is "the Fatherland", and thus, male. Though, Germany has Germania.

In other languages, it depends. Sometimes it's feminine as in "l'Amérique" or "la France" and sometimes it's male as in "le Mexique" or "le Japon".

Ships being feminine is a choice in English. One of those rare non-gendered objects given a gender in the genderless English language. "Un barco" and "un navire" are masculine, while "una nave" is feminine. "Ein Schiff" is gender neutral (das/ein).
 
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In I, MUDD Kirk refers to the Enterprise as a lovely lady (or beautiful lady) a couple of times.
 
In the Scotty episode 'Relics' on TNG:

Picard: What do you think of the Enterprise-D?

Scotty: She's a beauty...
 
I always found it odd on ST:Voyager that the ship was always just called Voyager never she or even he..I wonder if it had to do with Janeway being the Captain.
 
Do many Trek episodes refer to a ship as 'she'?

I only ask because I could have sworn that Tigh referred to Galactica as feminine in the final series.

Trek often followed nautical tradition and referred to vessels as "she."

Kirk definitely referred to his Enterprise as 'she', even calls her a woman if I'm not mistaken in This Side of Paradise. Can anyone confirm?

X

He calls her a "female" in "The Corbomite Maneuver."

From the episode:
Kirk: I've already got a female to worry about... her name's the Enterprise.
You can see it in these selected Kirk and McCoy clips (@4:14) from the episode: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qYxnLC9P-o
 
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