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An editor wants to change "Despite two engines its speed would have been low" to "Despite two engines its speed would have been slow". This not a big deal, the words are essentially identical in this context, but the change is just roiling the phrase to no purpose, plus "its speed would have been slow" doesn't scan quite as well ("it would have been slow" would be OK though). Still, no big deal. But I liked it better before, but whatever.
The thing is, though, the editor feels really really strongly about this -- " Get it right, fucking moron" in the edit summary, so not much liking that I've reverted, but the editor reverted again, so now we have a
really lame edit war I guess.
Things are even odder, because it was the editor who desired the change to "Despite two engines its speed would have been low"! At the time I opted for "slow" because the English idiom allows for both possibilities and "slow" emphasises the sluggishness this behemoth would likely have shown, had it ever been built. But I have no firm objection against "low".--
MWAK (
talk)
07:01, 6 March 2013 (UTC)reply
Oh, right, I got it backwards -- the editor is insisting on changing "slow" to "low". The editor is making the case that "slow" is semantically completely wrong and utterly inappropriate rather than just preferable, and that "slow" can only mean "low acceleration", and that only a "fucking moron" could hold otherwise. Whatever. I have to open this thread to protect myself, since it's an edit war. The editor is certainly invited to make his case cogently here. Convince us on the merits, hopefully without insults and obscenities.
Herostratus (
talk)
07:26, 6 March 2013 (UTC)reply
Well, he already tried to make peace with me on my talk page, thinking I were you. So perhaps it isn't a war any more.--
MWAK (
talk)
09:24, 6 March 2013 (UTC)reply
The correct options would be either "Despite two engines its speed would have been low", or "Despite two engines it would have been slow", or "It would have been slow, despite having two engines", or anything else like that. In any case "speed is slow/fast" is wrong and it would be correct to say that "it is slow/fast". If you want to have the word "speed" in there, then it should say "speed is low/high".
GMRE (
talk)
15:51, 19 July 2014 (UTC)reply
No, it means that the Westwall is often incorrectly called the "Siegfried Line". So often in fact that arguably it is the mandatory Wikipedia title of the article. The real Siegfried Line however, was a First World War German defensive line in France.--
MWAK (
talk)
17:42, 19 July 2014 (UTC)reply