• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

Engaged?

It wouldn't matter much, since you are determined to tell me what I meant, even though I didn't.

Now, considering your performance where you insisted that you had special knowledge of my motives for making a statement, despite me telling you that you where totally wrong about my motives, and explaining my real motives in detail, I find that very rich.
Regardless, I wasn’t trying to tell you what you meant I was pointing out what you said. The two things are not necessarily the same.
 
And language can't evolve?

Of course it can, and has.

Many things have changed historically. Marriage itself has evolved in tradition, connotation and form. And it will continue to do so, in spite of your protesting.

Where have I "protested" against marriage evolving?

Engagement no longer comes with baggage - across cultures it seems to simply mean 'intends to marry'. Flavour it, dress it up, add and remove traditions...beyond all that, fundamentally, the term means 'intends to marry'. Nobody says you can't have more meaning. But to assume the term carries that meaning beyond history is ridiculous.

When the term no longer comes with baggage, has it not lost all its original meaning? However, engagement does come with some baggage: While no longer a legal issue, there is still a lot of the social baggage.

Brides still wear white to symbolise virginity. I don't think that's a common meaning anymore, and many brides probably don't even consider it. The veil also had historical meaning. Now neither has that meaning - it is carried on with a view of being traditional, with the meaning essentially ignored or forgotten entirely.

You touch on the essential here: While white being a symbol of virginity is ignored, it isn't forgotten. We all know what white means at a wedding (woe unto the female guest who shows up in white), we just don't care anymore.

Engagement no longer has meanings in most social circles. It has been reduced to a mere word denoting an intention.

If expressed, yes. Otherwise, it is one social standard being imposed on another.

So your 'historically speaking' definition has zero merit to it. Give it up. Tell us what you think 'engagement' means today. The unfortunate thing is that you've persisted in this game for four pages, and the meaning accepted by most people has already been described. Anything you've got to add will either contradict that, risking you looking ignorant, or agree with it, making you dishonest.

I disagree: There are still a lot of historical meanings to engagement - the ring(s), the ceremony, the proclaiming of being engaged.

To be fair, it remains an insulting comment regardless of visibility. It means, a) that my gift was given with an intention to mark NC as 'mine', and b) that whenever one sees jewellery such as a pendant on a girl, that person is described as taken.

So I really have to ask, Claus; when you see a girl wearing jewellery, do you automatically assume somebody 'owns' her?

That depends on what jewellery it is.

For the third time:

I really have no idea how you can possibly get from my posts that I think it extends beyond Denmark. Could you provide quotes, please? In fact, could you go through this thread and provide quotes in the cases where you repeatedly misunderstood me?
 
If you take the time to read the thread, you will find that I have pointed several times to definitions, usage and such.

Then you wouldn't mind repeating them. You've had several requests now, meaning we simply can't find them.

Whoa...was I the only one talking about visible symbols?

You introduced the word 'visible'. Nobody else brought that descriptor into it.

It may be confusing to you, but it isn't to them. Why are you so intent on them being engaged?

This is so sad: because the word 'engaged' means 'intent to marry'. If you intend to marry, you are engaged. End of story.

I see you have not bothered to click on the link I gave, where usage and implication of engagement was described.

Historical implications of the term, sure. I covered that. If somebody says they're engaged today, I don't assume anything other than the fact they are working on getting married. As I said, meanings evolve.

You may think that. But it doesn't change the fact that I did specifically say that I consider any "marking of one's territory" is distasteful, oppressive and demeaning. So, you were wrong to say otherwise.

I never said otherwise. I said that offering a gift is not equivalent to marking one's territory. Try not to lie again, Claus. Your argument won't survive much more of it.

No, it has not been shown to be false. I have not seen any evidence that engagement in Denmark means something else in other places, e.g. UK or the US. Danes just don't do it, that's all.

The fact that most people on this thread have given a definition which conflicts with yours is evidence enough to discredit it. Face it; the one universal denotation to engagement is that it implies getting married. It would be honest for those who don't like the term to admit that they prefer not to use it. I have no issue with that. To say they're not engaged is a direct contradiction of its meaning, however, akin to two people who are no longer living together and have intention to work again at a marriage deny they are separated or divorced.

But those were not the only reasons why you gave it to her.

Excuse me for losing it for a second, but who the **** are you to attribute intentions to my actions? Yes; the only reasons for my purchasing her a gift for giving on the night of our engagement was that I wanted to give her something nice that would make her happy.

Again, do you see all jewellery on a girl as signs of ownership?

Not as long as people like yourself find it imperative to declare people engaged, even though they don't want to be, they don't want to be seen as being such, and that there are no legal implications of being engaged.

Language doesn't change to suit the user of it, Claus. It is a social text. I can't change it, you can't change it - it can only evolve with time. People can refuse to use the term, which is fine by me. But to say they are intending to be married and are not engaged contradicts the definition.

In fact, you are imposing your own social values on them. Why is that so important to you that they have to be pronounced engaged?

Social values? What values? That they intend to marry? That's not a value - it's a fact. Engagement = intension to marry. It doesn't get simpler.

No, it's not just "language". It is also very much about social values. Somehow, you think that yours trump theirs.
[

Claus, values have nothing to do with the denotative meaning of 'engagement'. You really don't know what a value is, do you? By your use of the term I can only come to that conclusion.

It wouldn't matter much, since you are determined to tell me what I meant, even though I didn't.

So you didn't mean that engagement carries a ceremonial, symbolic-heavy connotation outside of Denmark? You didn't mean that engagement isn't the defined period between deciding to get married and marriage itself? You didn't mean that offering a gift, such as a pendant or a ring, is a man imposing a symbol of ownership on his girlfriend?

Athon
 
Where have I "protested" against marriage evolving?

Don't play daft. I'm discussing engagement evolving as a term.

When the term no longer comes with baggage, has it not lost all its original meaning?

No.

However, engagement does come with some baggage: While no longer a legal issue, there is still a lot of the social baggage.

Not always.

You touch on the essential here: While white being a symbol of virginity is ignored, it isn't forgotten. We all know what white means at a wedding (woe unto the female guest who shows up in white), we just don't care anymore.

And when the meaning is no longer known? Why do women carry a bouquet of flowers? Why a veil? Why is there a best man, and why is he called that? I honestly don't know, although I'm sure I could look it up. Most people, I venture, wouldn't know where they come from, either. Yet they still do them.

Practice does not automatically carry connotation and baggage. The term 'engagement' isn't even the more traditional term. Nobody uses 'betrothed' anymore. The term has evolved.

If expressed, yes. Otherwise, it is one social standard being imposed on another.

So, again, do you feel that a couple should keep their intentions secret until the day? If not, then it's an expression of intent to marry. Ergo, engagement.

I disagree: There are still a lot of historical meanings to engagement - the ring(s), the ceremony, the proclaiming of being engaged.

Rings? A lot of people don't exchange gifts and are still engaged. Ceremony? See rings. Proclamation? Well, again, unless you want to keep the intention secret, I can't see how you can't inform people of the intention.

That depends on what jewellery it is.

Seriously? You see a girl wearing a pendant, and you automatically think a guy 'owns' her?

I really have no idea how you can possibly get from my posts that I think it extends beyond Denmark. Could you provide quotes, please? In fact, could you go through this thread and provide quotes in the cases where you repeatedly misunderstood me?

Ok, fine. You caught me out. I misunderstood. I now concede that in spite of what people have said, you evidentally don't know one way or another whether engagement has additional meaning and implication outside of Denmark. The fact that your opening post itself suggested that you felt otherwise is my mistake.

I now see that you don't know how others perceive engagement. So, consider yourself now informed - in other countries, engagement does not automatically carry connotation of any sort, and with few exceptions means literally 'intends on marrying'.

Wow, that was easy. I should have listened earlier.

Athon
 
Then you wouldn't mind repeating them. You've had several requests now, meaning we simply can't find them.

You in particular have, but rejected them out of hand. That is, of course, your perogative, but it doesn't mean that I haven't provided them.

You introduced the word 'visible'. Nobody else brought that descriptor into it.

That wasn't the question: Was I the only one talking about visible symbols? No, I wasn't.

This is so sad: because the word 'engaged' means 'intent to marry'. If you intend to marry, you are engaged. End of story.

Is it? Most people intend to marry, even if they haven't a significant other. They aren't engaged.

Historical implications of the term, sure. I covered that. If somebody says they're engaged today, I don't assume anything other than the fact they are working on getting married. As I said, meanings evolve.

That is your perception of what "engaged" means. You cannot, however, ignore that other people put much more into it.

I never said otherwise. I said that offering a gift is not equivalent to marking one's territory. Try not to lie again, Claus. Your argument won't survive much more of it.

I do not lie. You said:

Claus is also conveniently ignoring the fact that the of bestowing a ring at an engagement is a tradition women drive rather than men. How this is therefore a 'marking of territory', complete with the connotation of cave-man territorial pissings, is beyond me.

I did not ignore that, nor did I say anything about "marking of territory" was solely masculine.

The fact that most people on this thread have given a definition which conflicts with yours is evidence enough to discredit it. Face it; the one universal denotation to engagement is that it implies getting married. It would be honest for those who don't like the term to admit that they prefer not to use it. I have no issue with that. To say they're not engaged is a direct contradiction of its meaning, however, akin to two people who are no longer living together and have intention to work again at a marriage deny they are separated or divorced.

But that's precisely what people who don't like the term do: They prefer not to use it about themselves.

Excuse me for losing it for a second, but who the **** are you to attribute intentions to my actions? Yes; the only reasons for my purchasing her a gift for giving on the night of our engagement was that I wanted to give her something nice that would make her happy.

Fortunately, I don't need to attribute intentions to your actions. I can simply go with what you said:

Myself and NC haven't had (and won't have) an engagement party. I bought her a small opal pendant as a gift, not because tradition demanded it but rather I felt I wanted to mark the moment with something special.

It meant a little more than just to make her happy. You wanted to mark the moment.

You follow with this:

However, we are engaged in every sense of the word.

In whose sense? Your own, or those who attach a lot more meaning and ceremony to "engagement"?

Again, do you see all jewellery on a girl as signs of ownership?

I did answer that: It depends on the jewellery. So no, not "all".

Language doesn't change to suit the user of it, Claus. It is a social text. I can't change it, you can't change it - it can only evolve with time. People can refuse to use the term, which is fine by me. But to say they are intending to be married and are not engaged contradicts the definition.
...
Social values? What values? That they intend to marry? That's not a value - it's a fact. Engagement = intension to marry. It doesn't get simpler.

But you are imposing your own values of what "engagement" is.

Claus, values have nothing to do with the denotative meaning of 'engagement'. You really don't know what a value is, do you? By your use of the term I can only come to that conclusion.

You cannot possibly ignore that some people have some values about what constitutes "engagement", while others have other values. That's what this thread is all about!

So you didn't mean that engagement carries a ceremonial, symbolic-heavy connotation outside of Denmark? You didn't mean that engagement isn't the defined period between deciding to get married and marriage itself? You didn't mean that offering a gift, such as a pendant or a ring, is a man imposing a symbol of ownership on his girlfriend?

I asked if other countries had the same situation as Denmark does.

Don't play daft. I'm discussing engagement evolving as a term.

I'm not playing daft, I go with what you say:

athon said:
Marriage itself has evolved in tradition, connotation and form. And it will continue to do so, in spite of your protesting.

I have not "protested" the evolving of marriage in any way, shape or form. Nor, for that matter, have I "protested" the evolving of engagement.

No.

Not always.

Why not? In which cases?

And when the meaning is no longer known? Why do women carry a bouquet of flowers? Why a veil? Why is there a best man, and why is he called that? I honestly don't know, although I'm sure I could look it up. Most people, I venture, wouldn't know where they come from, either. Yet they still do them.

Sure, because some meanings are forgotten. I pointed to Pentecost earlier as a custom that is a mystery to most Danes, yet we still celebrate it.

Practice does not automatically carry connotation and baggage. The term 'engagement' isn't even the more traditional term. Nobody uses 'betrothed' anymore. The term has evolved.

It sure has.

So, again, do you feel that a couple should keep their intentions secret until the day? If not, then it's an expression of intent to marry. Ergo, engagement.

That's your simplified version, yes. But then, you ignore the social baggage that comes with it for other people.

Rings? A lot of people don't exchange gifts and are still engaged. Ceremony? See rings. Proclamation? Well, again, unless you want to keep the intention secret, I can't see how you can't inform people of the intention.

There is a difference between accouncing your marriage and announcing your engagement.

Seriously? You see a girl wearing a pendant, and you automatically think a guy 'owns' her?

No, read what I said. It depends on the jewellery.

Ok, fine. You caught me out. I misunderstood. I now concede that in spite of what people have said, you evidentally don't know one way or another whether engagement has additional meaning and implication outside of Denmark. The fact that your opening post itself suggested that you felt otherwise is my mistake.

I now see that you don't know how others perceive engagement. So, consider yourself now informed - in other countries, engagement does not automatically carry connotation of any sort, and with few exceptions means literally 'intends on marrying'.

Wow, that was easy. I should have listened earlier.

Athon

That is not what I meant, and you know it. You have misunderstood me so many times in this thread, that I think it is time you explain what parts of which posts of mine made you come to such erroneously conclusions. I have asked you to do this before, but you have refused, and do so again.

You are clearly not interested in what I say, but what you want me to say.

I agree with what Teek said in post #103: It is a private matter, and it is no business of yours or anyone else to slap a sticker on people that means something to you, but not to them, just because you feel it is appropriate.
 
If you take the time to read the thread, you will find that I have pointed several times to definitions, usage and such.

Excellent. Then it will be a very simple matter for you to post the definition again.

If you are feeling in a helpful mood you could even explain how it differs to the dictionary definition of "To pledge or promise, especially to marry".

But there is none of the legal implications, nor ceremony, that marriage has.

Again, engagement does not carry the legal implications that marriage does.

Twice you make reference to legal implications so I can only ask again "So what?"

Unless you mean that the definition of "engaged" that you are using also has some legal basis this comment is irrelevant.

Whoa...was I the only one talking about visible symbols?

Firstly, your claim was that "We were talking about visible pendants." It is potentially misleading to change the wording to refer to symbols rather than pendants - this is the second time you have done this, if you continue to do so I may have to revise my opinion on whether this is accidental or not.

Yes, you were the only one talking about visible pendants.
 
That wasn't the question: Was I the only one talking about visible symbols? No, I wasn't.

For the third time, your claim was that "We were talking about visible pendants." It is potentially misleading to change the wording to refer to symbols rather than pendants.

It is becoming increasingly difficult to believe that you keep making the same mistake by accident when it has been pointed out to you so often. If you were to do so again, I would have to conclude you were doing it on purpose, possibly because you are unable to defend your original claim.
 
The depth of the examination presented here greatly exceeds that warrented by the topic.

If you decide to get married, but have not yet completed the act itself, you are engaged.Public or private, you are engaged. If you decide that you want to get married to the girl that you met at the bus stop and the JoP is only 23 steps away, for those 23 steps, you are engaged.
 
The depth of the examination presented here greatly exceeds that warrented by the topic.

If you decide to get married, but have not yet completed the act itself, you are engaged.Public or private, you are engaged. If you decide that you want to get married to the girl that you met at the bus stop and the JoP is only 23 steps away, for those 23 steps, you are engaged.

Well this seems to be the difficulty we are having. Apparently CFL thinks that you are not engaged unless you do something else as well.

Problem is he appears unable to express what this other thing is. The closest we have got is that some sort of pronouncement is required, so if you told someone where you were going after 10 steps then you would be married for the remaining 13. Apparently, or possibly not.

Maybe he will post a definition to clear it up?
 
Excellent. Then it will be a very simple matter for you to post the definition again.

If you are feeling in a helpful mood you could even explain how it differs to the dictionary definition of "To pledge or promise, especially to marry".

I refer you, once again, to the historical explanation.

Twice you make reference to legal implications so I can only ask again "So what?"

Unless you mean that the definition of "engaged" that you are using also has some legal basis this comment is irrelevant.

I am talking about the differences between marriage and engagement.

Firstly, your claim was that "We were talking about visible pendants." It is potentially misleading to change the wording to refer to symbols rather than pendants - this is the second time you have done this, if you continue to do so I may have to revise my opinion on whether this is accidental or not.

Yes, you were the only one talking about visible pendants.

Wrong:

So every pendant you see on a girl represents ownership? If no, then it's not a very effective symbol. If yes, you're either lying or one sad guy.


For the third time, your claim was that "We were talking about visible pendants." It is potentially misleading to change the wording to refer to symbols rather than pendants.

It is becoming increasingly difficult to believe that you keep making the same mistake by accident when it has been pointed out to you so often. If you were to do so again, I would have to conclude you were doing it on purpose, possibly because you are unable to defend your original claim.

It is becoming increasingly difficult to believe that you have read this thread.
 
The depth of the examination presented here greatly exceeds that warrented by the topic.

If you decide to get married, but have not yet completed the act itself, you are engaged.Public or private, you are engaged. If you decide that you want to get married to the girl that you met at the bus stop and the JoP is only 23 steps away, for those 23 steps, you are engaged.

That poses a problem: Namely, with a social convention that is impossible to escape. Even though a couple makes a point out of not wanting to go through the whole "engagement" hullabaloo, they can't, because no matter what they do, people will see them as "engaged", with the various social values that come with different groups of people.

A social convention is something we should all be aware of, especially how it influences people's lives and choices.

Inescapable social conventions is something we should be very aware of, especially as skeptics: Consider the situation where the social convention of Christmas imposes a belief in God, baby Jesus and the three wise men.

That wouldn't be good, would it?

Well this seems to be the difficulty we are having. Apparently CFL thinks that you are not engaged unless you do something else as well.

Problem is he appears unable to express what this other thing is. The closest we have got is that some sort of pronouncement is required, so if you told someone where you were going after 10 steps then you would be married for the remaining 13. Apparently, or possibly not.

Maybe he will post a definition to clear it up?

No, I don't have a problem expressing myself. I have been pretty clear, and so have the others who also don't think engagement is a necessity to getting married.

Maybe you will extend the same questions to those as well?
 
Even though a couple makes a point out of not wanting to go through the whole "engagement" hullabaloo

What hullabaloo? Engagement (in context) referrs to the period between agreeing to get married and the marriage ceremony itself. Whether it's marked by a 'hullabaloo' is up to the couple in question.
 
Serious question; if they were to tick a box on a legal form that had 'single', 'engaged', 'married', 'divorced', what would they tick?

What a ridiculous question! I've never seen that option on a legal form, have you? And why would it be? The statuses: "Single", "Married and "Divorced" do have legal significance. "Engaged" does not.

Additionally, even if they didn't celebrate it with a party, did they tell people they were getting married? Did they deny they were engaged if so?

Another utterly ridiculous question. If a couple told people they were going to marry, underwhat circumstances would they be required to affirm or deny that they were "engaged". You must know some very strange people - the sort who, on learning that a couple are to marry, immediately set out to corner them and demand to know if they are engaged or not. What nonsense.
 
What hullabaloo? Engagement (in context) referrs to the period between agreeing to get married and the marriage ceremony itself. Whether it's marked by a 'hullabaloo' is up to the couple in question.

If it were only so. There might very well be pressure from family and friends to mark the occasion, with some sort of celebration.
 
My engagement "hullabaloo" consisted of myself and my other half agreeing that we would get married to eachother, telling our families that we has decided this and going to buy a ring, because I don't often buy myself jewellery and this was an excuse to get a ring I had seen that I really liked (which has no diamonds in it and cost <£70). If I hadn't seen this particular ring, I probably wouldn't have bothered.

How exactly does this differ from your "not getting engaged" version of what happens in the period after deciding to get married, but before the actual wedding, other than the fact that we decided to use the word "engaged" rather than just telling people we were going to get married?
 
Another utterly ridiculous question. If a couple told people they were going to marry, underwhat circumstances would they be required to affirm or deny that they were "engaged". You must know some very strange people - the sort who, on learning that a couple are to marry, immediately set out to corner them and demand to know if they are engaged or not. What nonsense.

What's more:

What right does anyone have to ask such a question?

Why should anyone be required to either confirm or deny that they are engaged?

It certainly isn't about imposing one's own social values on others. Oh, no.... :rolleyes:
 

Back
Top Bottom