Look what I had found. She is a Valiant class and has sister ship name Reliant.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Defiant_(YT-804)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Defiant_(YT-804)
That's too much of a coincidence. I think someone in the naming department is a closet Trek fan.![]()
Perhaps it's not meant to describe the vessel, but the faith the users have in the vessel (as in they rely upon it).It's interesting because the primary definition of "reliant" means dependent on something or someone else, not normally high on a list of military virtues. I assume people take it as short for "self-reliant," but it seems that's a fairly recent thing. I blame Lee Iacocca, myself.
That's too much of a coincidence. I think someone in the naming department is a closet Trek fan.![]()
Perhaps it's not meant to describe the vessel, but the faith the users have in the vessel (as in they rely upon it).It's interesting because the primary definition of "reliant" means dependent on something or someone else, not normally high on a list of military virtues. I assume people take it as short for "self-reliant," but it seems that's a fairly recent thing. I blame Lee Iacocca, myself.
Perhaps ... but the explanation could take into account the history of vessels named HMS Reliance and the possibility of semantic change.Perhaps it's not meant to describe the vessel, but the faith the users have in the vessel (as in they rely upon it).It's interesting because the primary definition of "reliant" means dependent on something or someone else, not normally high on a list of military virtues. I assume people take it as short for "self-reliant," but it seems that's a fairly recent thing. I blame Lee Iacocca, myself.
Perhaps it just sounds good......
It's interesting because the primary definition of "reliant" means dependent on something or someone else, not normally high on a list of military virtues. I assume people take it as short for "self-reliant," but it seems that's a fairly recent thing. I blame Lee Iacocca, myself.
It's interesting because the primary definition of "reliant" means dependent on something or someone else, not normally high on a list of military virtues. I assume people take it as short for "self-reliant," but it seems that's a fairly recent thing. I blame Lee Iacocca, myself.
Apparently one of the non-primary definitions of reliant is "confident", which I can see being high on a list of military virtues.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/reliant
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