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Engaged?

I'm trying to think how the OP could have been worded to have made for a more productive thread instead of turning into a dictionary pissing contest.

Maybe something like "Don't you think the traditions surrounding people's engagements are silly?" would have worked better. I would have gladly railed against lavish engagement parties and gaudy diamond rings.

You know, I fully agree. I suggested the same thing. I'm not one for rings and stuff, and bought the pendant for NC because it was a nice thing to celebrate the occasion with. It makes her happy. As for a party, well we're getting married once the paperwork can be processed, so there's hardly a call for any such thing.

I don't begrudge anybody who wants to have the whole shebang, nor do I care if people want to just quietly tell a few close friends and relatives the situation and keep it all simple.

This argument started with Claus' assumption that engagement required those things, and he assumed this view extended out into the wider community. Had he started with 'does anybody else feel the celebrations often surrounding engagements, as per history, are outdated', I'm sure it would have been a worthwhile discussion.

But the way it was worded was absolutely puzzling to me since every person I've ever asked outside this forum and every dictionary I've checked sees an engagement as an agreement to marry. So, in my case, for one to ask "do people in your country get engaged?" is a very odd question with a very obvious answer. If I knew friends were getting married and asked them "great, when did you get engaged?" and they responded "oh, but we're not engaged" I would look at them as if they had two heads...each.

I'm glad I'm not the only one. I seriously was beginning to feel like my neurons were dissolving.

Apparently the term carries a different connotation elsewhere. Fair enough.

So if I were to ask a typical Dane "what does it mean for a couple to be engaged?" what would the answer be?

Good question. In other words, we're still waiting for Claus's definition of engagement.

Do I get the million if he lies again and vaguely says he's said it already, and neglects to point out exactly where, or repeat it?

Athon
 
Maybe that's why he's so confused about what being engaged means . The only time he ever talks to a woman, he has to switch on his webcam and give her his credit card number first. :D
Kindly post something of relevance to this thread next time. Thanks.
 
Maybe that's why he's so confused about what being engaged means . The only time he ever talks to a woman, he has to switch on his webcam and give her his credit card number first. :D

There's no way he'd do that. He'd think he owned her then. :D

Athon
 
Relevance to this thread?

DD, have you been following this thread? It went irrelevant long back. I'm waiting for it to be AAH'd.

But if you're interested, we could always start a thread asking the question as it should have been asked?

Athon
 
DD, have you been following this thread? It went irrelevant long back. I'm waiting for it to be AAH'd.

But if you're interested, we could always start a thread asking the question as it should have been asked?

Athon
Nope, I have not been following this thread. I just found the comments made by you and Ian, after my post, to be seriously infantile. Perhaps I was wrong. If so, I apologize.
 
Well, the reason why whether dictionaries define words is because the discussion has come to hinge on the definition of 'engaged', and Claus is advancing a definition offered in the COED to support his point. Strange behaviour if he thinks dictionaries don't define words...
 
Well, the reason why whether dictionaries define words is because the discussion has come to hinge on the definition of 'engaged', and Claus is advancing a definition offered in the COED to support his point. Strange behaviour if he thinks dictionaries don't define words...
Claus started this thread in a provocative manner. He presumably did so to get many replies.

Can't really fault him for this as I do the same.

As far as your current love-story with dictionaries goes, more power to you.
 
Claus started this thread in a provocative manner. He presumably did so to get many replies.

Can't really fault him for this as I do the same.

As far as your current love-story with dictionaries goes, more power to you.

So it's ok to be 'provocative' (in that you misrepresent something in order to inflame people into responding), but when people see that the argument has become silly and trivial, it's not ok to be infantile?

Well, you have your way, and I have mine. I think Claus has shown himself once again to be out of touch with reality. Responding with infantile comments seems appropriate when a person shows they are merely arguing because they can't stand the thought they might be wrong.

Athon
 
I must admit to some confusion regarding the word "engagement". Where I live this would be considered the period of time between the acceptance of a marriage proposal and the wedding itself. I've never heard of an engagement as being something that's a formal situation, with parties and gifts and so forth. It's just a period of time, whether it lasts for twenty minutes or a decade. Around here, it would cause confusion if one said they were getting married, but they weren't engaged. I would be like saying you were vacuuming, but you weren't cleaning.

However, I do realise the English language varies from place to place, as do traditions. So I suppose it could be that in certain parts of England "engagement" is a big formal bunch of nonsense. That's not the case around these parts.
 
So it's ok to be 'provocative' (in that you misrepresent something in order to inflame people into responding), but when people see that the argument has become silly and trivial, it's not ok to be infantile?
It is OK to be provocative by putting a deliberate edge on the way you form an OP. Yes.

Infantile comments which attack the poster and not the argument are just that...infantile.
Well, you have your way, and I have mine. I think Claus has shown himself once again to be out of touch with reality. Responding with infantile comments seems appropriate when a person shows they are merely arguing because they can't stand the thought they might be wrong.

Athon
My bolding and my view of your's and Ian's comments exactly.
 
It is OK to be provocative by putting a deliberate edge on the way you form an OP. Yes.

When the 'edge' is a misrepresentation of the topic, such as the assumption that a term has a universal connotation - and a refusal to understand when others demonstrate otherwise - I feel that such provocation leads not to a well rounded, informative argument, but a ridiculous parody of one like we've seen go on for seven pages.

But if you, like Claus, feel that this benefits yourself in some way, feel free.

Infantile comments which attack the poster and not the argument are just that...infantile.

No argument there. I'll admit I can be infantile on occasion, when discussion has been reduced to futile word games and it's obvious that one side has no desire to comprehend anything but their narrow view.

My bolding and my view of your's and Ian's comments exactly.

Our comments from the start, or the infantile ones? The infantile ones aren't arguments - they're mocking the ridiculous farce this argument has become. The arguments we actually proposed aren't for the sake of arguing - they were (at least for me) initially formed out of the desire to see if I really did have it wrong, and that engagement was seen extensively as more than just an agreement of intent. When I failed to see any evidence for this being a widespread phenomena, and nobody could define their view of the nature of engagement beyond 'rings, ceremonies and celebrated announcements' (none of which are necessary to consider one's self engaged, it appears), I felt obliged to point out that it seems Claus might be misrepresenting engagement as having more meaning that most people feel it has.

Claus continues to dodge, obfuscate and lie, playing word games, being pedantic and all the while absolutely convinced that engagement requires ceremony and gifts symbolise ownership...hence he's not serious about really finding out how others feel about the concept of engagement. Why continue to take it seriously?

Athon
 
I did: You pointed to the American Heritage dictionary and went from there.

So unless you are a liar, you will be able to HIGHLIGHT THE BITS IN THE POST YOU QUOTED where I DEMANDED you used that definition.

If you can't then you are admitting you are a liar.

It does "NOT" contain the statement I claimed?

Nope.

Why not? Could you go through the post and explain what each part means?

Nope. How about YOU do the work to support YOUR claim that I made that statement? So far you have not produced anything that contains the statement YOU claimed I made.


Liar - at least try and make it difficult. Here's the relevant posts:

Me - You don't get to choose the dictionary. How about we take a representative sample of, say, 10?
Me - If only someone had suggested using a representative sample - oh wait, I did!
You - No, you didn't.

Failure to acknowledge that I did suggest using a representative sample will be confirmation that you are a liar.

Whoops. Are you giving up on finding 10 dictionaries that agree with you?

Nope, I have offered to take a representative sample, you have not agreed to that. Unless you are now doing so?

Or is it easier for you to repeat your lies than debate honestly?
 
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Once again, why is betrothal or the announcement of same, ridiculous?

So you agree that your "tradition for tradition's sake" argument is bogus.

What then, is your problem with people announcing their betrothal?

Because it has lost all meaning. Nobody expects it to really last for a lifetime. Especially not with the divorce rates.

I seem to understand from previous conversation with him that Claus is not married.

I think that bears on this topic in at least one way.

My personal life is none of your business.

That's exactly right. Claus' argument, which he either vaguely refers to a 'historical' definition or suggests it concerns a ring, a ceremony and an announcement, rests on the fact that engagement = 'hullabaloo'. The very fact so many people have said that the hullabaloo isn't necessary to be engaged (and while there might be pressure from the parents to have a party, that hardly equates some wider meaning to engagement), he ignores.

No, I don't ignore it. I disagree with it. Call it what it is, not what you want it to be.

Claus, you can say I misread your posts all you want. I might even agree I've misunderstood. Yet I keep asking for clarification, which you dodge again and again. Yes, this is indeed ridiculous. If you would just articulate in one post what engagement means, clearly, without obfuscating to some historical and obviously outdated interpretation, we might conclude something. Instead you've continued to embarrass yourself.

Like the drumstick debacle, you not only demonstrate a failure to understand how language operates but you refuse to be educated on it by a number of people.

You have "misunderstood" so many times that it is very hard to believe that it isn't intentional. To say the least.

Exactly. If formal means 'as per custom', does that mean one cannot wed until the man gets down on knee with a ring? Of course not. How ridiculous.

You are quite right. Still, nobody has claimed that. You can get married simply by going to city hall. That's not a "custom", that's simply what is required to get married that way.

I know a lot of arguments come down to a difference in meaning, but this one is just ludicrous. The easiest thing is to go around and ask people if you can intend to marry and not be engaged. I so far haven't gotten anything but blank looks from people, followed by a confused line of questions (namely 'why the hell are you asking such a silly question?). Nobody's saying you have to feel comfortable with any connotations, or that you can't have parties and rings...but to insist that that is the meaning of engagement is laughable.

Why do you feel people should "deny" they are engaged?

Why do you feel you have the right to ask people if they are engaged in the first place?

If they say "No", but then say they plan to get married, do you tell them "Well, you're engaged, whether you like it or not!", even though it clearly means a lot to them that they are not engaged, and not perceived as being engaged?

How is that not imposing your own social values on them?


I'm trying to think how the OP could have been worded to have made for a more productive thread instead of turning into a dictionary pissing contest.

Maybe something like "Don't you think the traditions surrounding people's engagements are silly?" would have worked better. I would have gladly railed against lavish engagement parties and gaudy diamond rings.

If I posted that, I would have been criticized for voicing such a strong opinion. Instead, I chose to simply ask people what the situation was in their own country.

So if I were to ask a typical Dane "what does it mean for a couple to be engaged?" what would the answer be?

Cute but old fashioned.

You know, I fully agree. I suggested the same thing. I'm not one for rings and stuff, and bought the pendant for NC because it was a nice thing to celebrate the occasion with. It makes her happy. As for a party, well we're getting married once the paperwork can be processed, so there's hardly a call for any such thing.

I don't begrudge anybody who wants to have the whole shebang, nor do I care if people want to just quietly tell a few close friends and relatives the situation and keep it all simple.

This argument started with Claus' assumption that engagement required those things, and he assumed this view extended out into the wider community. Had he started with 'does anybody else feel the celebrations often surrounding engagements, as per history, are outdated', I'm sure it would have been a worthwhile discussion.

I did not assume that my view extended out into the wider community. I asked what the situation was in other countries.

Good question. In other words, we're still waiting for Claus's definition of engagement.

No, you are not. You merely dismiss it out of hand, because it does not conform with your own perception.

Do I get the million if he lies again and vaguely says he's said it already, and neglects to point out exactly where, or repeat it?

You can dismiss it out of hand, but that doesn't make me a "liar".

I think Claus has shown himself once again to be out of touch with reality. Responding with infantile comments seems appropriate when a person shows they are merely arguing because they can't stand the thought they might be wrong.

"Wrong"? Since when do the customs in your own country invalidate customs in other countries? There are different customs in different places, but that doesn't mean that those different from yours are wrong.

Claus continues to dodge, obfuscate and lie, playing word games, being pedantic and all the while absolutely convinced that engagement requires ceremony and gifts symbolise ownership...hence he's not serious about really finding out how others feel about the concept of engagement. Why continue to take it seriously?

You can call what I do dodging, obfuscating, playing word games and being pedantic all you like. But don't call me a liar merely because you don't like the evidence I provide.

You, OTOH, have gotten it so wrong so many times that you cannot possibly say that you have merely "misunderstood" me. Especially after you persist after I have explained it to you.
 
No, you are not. You merely dismiss it out of hand, because it does not conform with your own perception.

Then why are you unwilling or unable to produce a concise, simple definition when requested?

If you believe you have posted your definition, then you can resolve all the arguments by, in your next post, reproducing EVERYTHING which makes up the definition you are using.

If you are unable or unwilling to do so, then do not be surprised if people draw conclusions as to why that is.
 
So unless you are a liar, you will be able to HIGHLIGHT THE BITS IN THE POST YOU QUOTED where I DEMANDED you used that definition.

If you can't then you are admitting you are a liar.

It is dishonest to take exasperation with your repeated false claims as an admission of guilt.

Nope.

Nope. How about YOU do the work to support YOUR claim that I made that statement? So far you have not produced anything that contains the statement YOU claimed I made.

Here we go, once again:

It's been mentioned.

What is fascinating is to observe the effort that certain posters make to avoid ever admitting making an error. Certainly not the behaviour you would expect of someone who identifies themselves as a skeptic.

....oh, wait! You were not talking about me? Is that your way out of this?

Failure to acknowledge that I did suggest using a representative sample will be confirmation that you are a liar.

It is dishonest to take exasperation with your repeated false claims as an admission of guilt.

Nope, I have offered to take a representative sample, you have not agreed to that. Unless you are now doing so?

Or is it easier for you to repeat your lies than debate honestly?

Let's get your exact words:

You don't get to choose the dictionary. How about we take a representative sample of, say, 10?

10 indeed. Which you have now abandoned.

Which criteria are you using to select those 10 dictionaries? Why would that be a representative sample?
 
And while we're at it, didn't Claus once argue that dictionaries don't define words?

I don't think so, because the fact that dictionaries don't define words (usage does, although dictionaries can be a useful indicator of usage) is something which I have had to point out to him on several occasions.
 
Kindly post something of relevance to this thread next time. Thanks.

Seriously? You don't think that halfway down the SEVENTH page on a thread where the argument is about what "engaged" means is time for some low humour?

Trust me, it is!

However, I do realise the English language varies from place to place, as do traditions. So I suppose it could be that in certain parts of England "engagement" is a big formal bunch of nonsense. That's not the case around these parts.

No, mate. You're 100% spot on. I think we've conclusively proved already that:

No countries/cultures class "engagement" as anything other than matching your description above - the gap between asking and marrying.

There are some people who think that "engagement" means a party, a ring, and most likely, banns being read at the local church.

This is not a difference of opinion on English usage throughout the world, it's about a minority viewpoint. Those minority viewholders are most welcome to their opinion, but it would be jolly nice if they would simply admit that it is a minority view and that they don't expect anyone to agree with them.

One of the protagonists may be a contrarian.

Pretty sure that's an accurate summary of events so far.

Aye, which is where Pedantry 'R Us enters the conversation, isn't it? ;)

DR

I'd been really wanting to labour that point, but felt that a three-day holiday probably made it less than worthwhile. I see nobody acknowledged it - well, I think I'd be hard done by for mentioning it, so I thought I would/should.

******* A.

I don't think so, because the fact that dictionaries don't define words (usage does, although dictionaries can be a useful indicator of usage) is something which I have had to point out to him on several occasions.

Ha!

Until now, of course!

The official entry for "engagement" (as it relates to marriage only) is:

1. The period between a proposal and acceptance of marriage and the actual marriage.

2. A state where parties agree to act as though they were at 1 above, but never actually intend to marry.

3. A state where parties announce the engagement formally, have a rave-up and make public plans to marry at some unspecified future date.


That'll clear the issue up nicely.

Close the thread now fer crissakes.
 
Why do you feel you have the right to ask people if they are engaged in the first place?

If they say "No", but then say they plan to get married, do you tell them "Well, you're engaged, whether you like it or not!", even though it clearly means a lot to them that they are not engaged, and not perceived as being engaged?
Pretty much. Me and my wife talked about getting married for awhile. We hadn't actually "planned" on it until I asked her to marry me. It went from a "maybe we should/could" to "yes we are". I'd say that when the decision becomes definite, you are engaged. "whether you like it or not!"

:boggled:

Over and out
 

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