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I disagree with
this reversion of
my edits.
MOS:JOBTITLES does indeed say that a job title should be capitalised "when a title is used to refer to a specific and obvious person as a substitute for their name, e.g. the Queen", but in this case:
The title is not being used as a substitute for their names. Would it carry the same meaning if we simply replaced "The Captain" with "Zaharie Ahmad Shah"? I think not - in this context we are talking about the position, not the specific person.
We are not referring to a "specific and obvious person" - if "Captain" was a specific and obvious person there would be no need to qualify that term by appending "of Flight 370".
Dondervogel and Mitch Ames have it exactly right; not only is that the long-standing consensus at Wikipedia, it is the normal, grammatically correct capitalisation in English, distinguishing correctly between proper names and common nouns.
Shem (
talk)
17:54, 24 May 2015 (UTC)reply
Consider these two sentences: "The British press reported that the Queen visited a children's hospital today." and "The Malaysian press reported that the captain communicated with ATC after departure." It is completely obvious to any reader of the first sentence, even if it stands on its own, that "the Queen" refers to HRH Elizabeth II, but, in the second sentence, it is not obvious to many people who "the captain" refers to; even if the context of a missing passenger plane is added, many people would not know his name. And "the captain" is not being used as a substitute for his name; it is just a common noun. There is no reason to capitalize "captain" or "first officer".
Christhe spelleryack04:58, 25 May 2015 (UTC)reply
There was only one captain and one first officer on the flight, thus the use of "the Captain" and "the First Officer" refer specifically to Captain Shah and First Officer Hamid, respectively. For the same reason that "the Queen" is a proper noun in a work of the British press, "the Captain" is a proper noun when used in this article...it depends on the context. There are many queens in the world and "the queen" only becomes a proper noun when it is in a context that it clearly refers to one person. Likewise, there is only one captain and one first officer on this flight and thus "the Captain" is clearly used as a substitute for Captain Shah.
In my opinion, this discussion highlights the need for the wording of
MOS:JOBTITLE to be changed to provide more examples. As for this article, I've changed the the occurrences of "the Captain" to "Captain Shah" (full name after first occurrence) and "The First Officer of Flight 370" to "First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid". That should be a suitable compromise to avoid a lengthy discussion about such a minor issue.
AHeneen (
talk)
02:37, 26 May 2015 (UTC)reply
While I acknowledge your attempt at compromise, the new text is contrary to
MOS:SURNAME. Although the use of "Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah" the first time is OK, subsequent mentions should be simply "Shah" (and similarly for Hamid). Given that - for the purposes of the timeline - it is the position that is relevant not the individual person, I still think that all instances after the first should be "the captain" and "the first officer" (uncapitalised). "Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah" and "First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid" (capitalised titles) are OK for the first instance only.
Mitch Ames (
talk)
13:35, 27 May 2015 (UTC)reply
I've
reverted most instances back to "the captain" and "the first officer", for the reasons I've stated previously, but I've kept the first instance as Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah, First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid. I've also
added refs to those first instances, because the "Factual Information ..." reference doesn't include their names, only their positions.
Mitch Ames (
talk)
05:50, 6 June 2015 (UTC)reply
The wrong area may have been targeted - unreliable source
Re
the statement that "the wrong area may have been targeted" - I suggest that
we need a better source for this statement. The current source is simply quoting the survey company that has thus far failed to find the plane. The survey company (Fugro) are not experts in the behaviour of planes, nor did they pick the search area. If they don't find the plane, of course they're going to say it's not there, thus we were looking in the wrong place (at someone else's request) - the alternative is "it's there and we missed it".
106.68.147.202 (
talk)
12:39, 22 July 2016 (UTC)reply
Maybe the wording should be changed to something like, "Fugro, the survey company hired to search for the plane, believe that the wrong area may have been targeted."? --
Millionsandbillions (
talk)
18:21, 27 July 2016 (UTC)reply
I don't think this is something that should be mentioned on the article right now. First, this is a timeline article and basically the entire article pertains to discrete events, not general discussion of a topic. The conclusion is based on statements of a few members of the Fugro team, but it is not clear that they were speaking casually about the search or makings some type of official statement on behalf of the company. I think this type of commentary is better left out of the timeline for now. The search of the priority area will be over very soon and the timeline entry for the end of this search phase can mention commentary/criticism about whether the right area has been searched, the probability that the plane was in the search area but missed, etc. If there are no objections, I will remove the sentence "Fugro, the survey company hired to search for the plane, believe that the wrong area may have been targeted." (the Times of India article is from 21 July, so it's not correct to include it in the 22 July event)
AHeneen (
talk)
04:29, 30 July 2016 (UTC)reply
The conclusion is based on statements of a few members of the Fugro team, but it is not clear that they were speaking casually about the search or makings some type of official statement on behalf of the company. —
Paul Kennedy is a senior person at Fugro, and according to
Reuters "Fugro project director Paul Kennedy told Reuters", not "some unnamed journalist overheard him speculating privately". The Reuters article also includes a quote from Fugro's Managing Director
Steve Duffield. I think we can reasonably take it that they were speaking on behalf of the company.
However, I do agree that the whole statement should probably be removed from the article (at least for now), especially given that the ATSB has, according to Reuters, "consistently defended the defined search zone" and "did not immediately respond to questions over whether it was assessing the controlled glide theory".
106.68.147.202 (
talk)
06:31, 30 July 2016 (UTC)reply
SAR begin 05:30 MYT versus 06:32 MYT
When did the search an rescue operation start? The
timeline here says 06:32 MYT in the first text paragraph and in the timeline table, but 05:30 MYT in the text below. The
MH 350 article says 05:30 MYT. Search articles for ARCC (Kuala Lumpur Aeronautical Rescue Coordination Centre). Which of both is accurate, and by which source? Or have I got something wrong? --
Großkatze (
talk)
23:38, 13 November 2021 (UTC)reply
Did mh 370 really disappear?
No MH370 didnt dissappear it crashed pilot done it mh370s transponder was turned off and civ radar couldnt see mh370 and the Malaysiaon atc thought the Singapore? Atc had taken over mh370 diverted off its flight plan military radar tracked it and thought it was normal
95.149.181.85 (
talk)
10:23, 20 January 2024 (UTC)reply