Oh boy, not this again.

Yep.Oh boy, not this again.
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Need to save this for future use.Oh boy, not this again.
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Maybe. As such, it's one of those points of view I struggle with making sense of.I think it's one of those things where people can have a difference of opinion but no one can be wrong.
Why...?Maybe. As such, it's one of those points of view I struggle with making sense of.
Humans do lots of things I don't understand.Why...?
The Human Race has been personifying inanimate objects since the dawn of the written word.
It's just something that people do.
I guess that's a decent point. I mean, as an example, in the TV series My Mother The Car; Yes the car was a character.Why...?
The Human Race has been personifying inanimate objects since the dawn of the written word.
It's just something that people do.
What's a nother?I guess that's a decent point. I mean, as an example, in the TV series My Nother The Car; Yes the car was a character.![]()
I once had a story idea where Geordi be would tied to the ship's systems via his VISOR.Oh boy, not this again.
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In the present day, I would agree. Historically, it's been a Western civilisation thing. There are exceptions, of course.^ In The Hunt for Red October (the novel, not the film), Tom Clancy says that using the female pronoun for ships is an American thing. I'm guessing this is true, as Clancy was always very thorough in his research.
(he also says that the Russians refer to their ships in the male form, and the intelligence community refers to ships from any nation as "it".)
There is a certain deliberateness to how the sets are dressed and utilized that fully embraces the Enterprise as both a character unto herself and as a mirror reflecting the people who inhabit her.
We get it.Trekcore agrees as well:
Amazing.Trekcore agrees as well:
Good! (FinallyWe get it.
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