Re: How did the Spelling Police miss this one?

Steven Cole (elenstev@mesatop.com)
23 Apr 2003 22:26:23 -0600


On Wed, 2003-04-23 at 21:39, Johannes Ruscheinski wrote:
> Also sprach Steven Cole:
> >...
> > The fix.canon script used was this:
> >
> > #!/bin/sh
> > find . -name "*" | xargs grep -l cannonicalize | awk '{print "ex - ",$1," -c \"%s/cannonicalize/canonicalize/g|x\""}' | sh
> > ...
> Hi Steve,
>
> As far as I know there is no such words as "canonicalize" in the English
> language. The proper word seems to be "canonize". Since I'm not a native
> speaker please take my comment with a grain of salt.

Strictly speaking, you are probably right. According to this:
http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=canonize
sense #2 would qualify "canonize". I took the position that the only
person who could "canonize" anything is an elderly Polish fellow living
in Rome. But I've been wrong before.

The tortured variant "canonicalize" has seen enough usage to warrant
this related entry here:
http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/0%2c%2csid9_gci841392%2c00.html

As far as "no such words" go, a descriptive grammar is generally more
useful for human languages than a prescriptive grammar. Healthy human
languages allow for growth. See Tao Te Ching 76. (late night rambling)

Steven "verbalizing in his native language, where nouns and adjectives can be verbed" Cole

-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/