Speranza
From today's World Wide Words,
World Wide Words © Michael Quinion 2013
http://www.worldwidewords.org.
"When Thomas Smith, a chemistry PhD
student from Manchester, was given a plastic
lid for his takeaway tea by
the staff at his university
café, he had a novel comeback. “I can’t take
that,”
he said. “I’m a plasticarian.”
Quinion notes about the
suffix, -arian:
"it’s rare in asserting opposition
rather than
acceptance."
and provides an earlier quote:
"Becoming a
plasticarian will affect my life and my diet..."
Quinion compares
'plasticarian' to:
humanitarian
libertarian
vegetarian
and
as he notes, it is rare to have '-arian' IMPLICATING opposition (or
rejection) rather than support. But since now, after T. Smith, everybody
(that's a hyperbole) seems to be using 'plasticarian', it may do to play
with
the three other items in terms of 'opposition':
"I'm a
humanitarian: I avoid humans". (alla "I'm a plasticarian: I avoid
plastics")
"I'm a libertarian: I avoid liberty" -- cfr. the Statue of
Liberty in
Regent Street, London (Sir Arthur Lasenby Liberty (13 August
1843 – 11 May
1917)).
"I'm a vegetarian; I avoid
vegetals."
THE PEDANTIC Manchester TEA provider:
"When Thomas
Smith, a chemistry PhD
student from Manchester, was given a plastic
lid
for his takeaway tea by the staff at his university
café, he had a novel
comeback. “I can’t take that,”
he said. “I’m a plasticarian.”
THOMAS
SMITH: I can't take that [plastic lid]. I'm a plasticarian.
STAFF: You
mean an anti-plasticarian. Strictly.
THOMAS SMITH. Hmpf.
Cheers,
Speranza
Saturday, June 15, 2013
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