i don't get why you'd say you served "in" a ship not "on" a ship. that's just weird.
And in the Bay Area, if you say you're going to the city, it means San Francisco, even though there are lots of other large cities in the area.
When I moved from Seattle to New York, I quickly discovered that if I mentioned "Washington," people assumed I meant D.C., not that state above Oregon . . ..
I had to train myself to say "Washington State," not just "Washngton." Even though nobody in the Northwest calls it that.
True story: Back when Tor was publishing the CONAN novels, we used to consult lists of old naval vessels in seach of adjectives. CONAN THE TRIUMPHANT, CONAN THE DEFIANT, CONAN THE INVINCIBLE, etc.
Sady, I don't think we ever got to CONAN THE ENTERPRISING . . ..
You sometimes hear the HMS Victory referred to as 'the Victory'
^I can understand wondering why there are different usages, but being irritated by the fact that there's a difference seems odd to me.
I could swear Sisko called it Defiant not The Defiant. I guess I'll have to go watch some episodes...The Enterprise.
The Defiant.
Voyager.
Made me cringe early on in ENT when they said "on Enterprise", but it's probably just habit: we're used to hearing the "the", so it sounds weird without; "The Voyager" would sound weird for the same reason.
Oh, I think about those oddities from time to time. One that gets me is, why do we "go to school/work/the store" but just "go home?" It's like "home" is treated as a direction (a la "go up," "go back," "go left") or a relative position indicator (like "go there" or "come over") rather than a location. We also find it in "take me home" or "May I see you home?"
Lyrically, I suppose is the issue, or rhythm perhaps. Theres a missing word and it sound wrong.
Janeway was the captain of the Federation starship Voyager.
Janeway was the captain of Federation starship Voyager.
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