team sidewinder
Member
This thread needs a bullet to the head to end it .
I was putting in an order for leather working supplies and I was thinking about this thread. Things like lacing fids, skivers, a round knife, thonging chisels, slickers, the difference between a spline, a gusset and a welt and other terms that were almost like a foreign language to me when I first started working with leather, made me think of how each interest or hobby had it's own terminology and how it's necessary to learn the language in order to communicate with others with the same interest. If there's a newbie then it's only proper to try to help with teaching the proper terminology in order to communicate properly with those with the same interest. Be that cars, guns, hunting, leatherworking or whatever. So, if somebody says clip when they mean magazine or quater panel when the mean fender or awl when they mean fid then I'll point it out to them. Not to be a jerk but to help them with the proper terminology.I do agree with correctly educating people on proper terminology. Case in point, my Mosin can utilize clips to load the magazine.
Effective communicatiion is when both parties understand the intent. Obviously you understood what he meant so he effectively communicated with you. I would just use the correct terminology myself and get on with life.
Who cares?
Folks that have a grasp on correct firearm terminology and the English language, that's who.
check with Cheaper than dirt they still sell CLIPS, I guess Gander Mountain does not.. thats good to know...I work at Gander Mountain in the hunting dept and more than half of the people looking at handguns ask how many CLIPS it comes with. It didn't bother me at first but now its starting to annoy me. next time someone asks how many CLIPS it comes with,I should say none, but it does come with two MAGAZINES. I don't have the time to educate people on magazine vs clip. Would any of you feel frustrated at this or am I just over thinking it? btw, sorry for posting in M&P forum, this is where I always go. Thanks for reading.
Isn't that what they used to call "blue jack"?I hate it when my wife calls that skim white see-through liquid 'milk'.