how many people want to acknowledge they're not in a "professional job"?
LadyLorraine Send a noteboard - 30/01/2012 02:25:25 PM
Considering the connotations that go with having/not having a "professional job".
Who is looked on more favorably? Doctors or scrub techs? Veterinarians or dog walkers? I'm not saying there's anything intentional about it, but people probably don't want to think of themselves as "the janitor" versus the "Sanitation Professional".
Who is looked on more favorably? Doctors or scrub techs? Veterinarians or dog walkers? I'm not saying there's anything intentional about it, but people probably don't want to think of themselves as "the janitor" versus the "Sanitation Professional".
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Profession/professional
- 28/01/2012 06:22:40 AM
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I'm not sure I agree with that.
- 28/01/2012 10:59:31 AM
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Your last paragraph is pretty much the difference between what does/doesn't bother me. *NM*
- 28/01/2012 11:33:48 AM
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I don't see much point in trying to preserve the archaic use of the word
- 28/01/2012 01:54:53 PM
558 Views
Ha! That's silly.
- 28/01/2012 03:32:01 PM
520 Views
No it is silly to think you can make a living language stagnant
- 28/01/2012 05:38:27 PM
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That's hyperbole if I ever heard it.
- 28/01/2012 08:29:20 PM
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If you were to ask 100 Americans what their profession was they would tell you what their job was
- 29/01/2012 02:52:22 AM
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Ask 100 Americans "When did you cease raping children?"
- 29/01/2012 03:05:57 AM
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speaking of hyperbole *NM*
- 29/01/2012 03:09:45 AM
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There was no hyperbole in my response. Seems like we found two words you can't define properly.
- 30/01/2012 02:11:43 PM
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how many people want to acknowledge they're not in a "professional job"?
- 30/01/2012 02:25:25 PM
571 Views
look I know those of you who have earned the narrow definition of the word want to preserve it
- 30/01/2012 03:19:30 PM
590 Views
No, most of us just want to preserve the plain English meanings of words.
- 30/01/2012 06:53:22 PM
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That penultimate use is the only acceptable one in a non-professional context
- 28/01/2012 07:18:06 PM
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You're absolutely correct. It's just society trying to make shit jobs sound better.
- 28/01/2012 03:25:48 PM
515 Views
Yeah, it's important to denote which occupations demand extraordinary, society-affecting judgement.
- 28/01/2012 05:19:30 PM
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at this point, though, I think teaching should be professionalized
- 28/01/2012 05:37:46 PM
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that will be hard for them to do
- 28/01/2012 05:44:53 PM
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That is a good point.
- 28/01/2012 08:16:38 PM
476 Views
Nurses have unions, and I would consider them professionals. *NM*
- 03/02/2012 08:52:41 PM
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You need a license, don't you? *NM*
- 28/01/2012 08:15:10 PM
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We have a certification process that any college grad with common sense could pass.
- 28/01/2012 10:36:29 PM
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in my mind teaching is indeed a profession. *NM*
- 28/01/2012 08:25:18 PM
280 Views
and there is the problem
- 29/01/2012 02:59:15 AM
571 Views
A teacher must have a collage degree and not only that but
- 29/01/2012 11:07:51 AM
496 Views
what in the world makes you think that professions have strict codes of conduct?
- 30/01/2012 02:26:55 PM
522 Views
Connotations change. Deal with it. *NM*
- 28/01/2012 10:29:20 PM
398 Views
I find it funny that some of our conservatives are pro-PC all of a sudden.
- 28/01/2012 11:14:06 PM
548 Views
