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Date: | Thu, 18 Apr 2002 23:55:48 -0400 |
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Steve Schwartz replies to me:
>>... If you were to say "American composer Aaron Rabushka and
>>representatives from 32 other countries will travel to Geneva next
>>month for what will be an historical meeting of composers," you might
>>be inclined to think they were going to discuss music history rather
>>than that the meeting is without precedent.
>
>You might, but would you? I wouldn't say either "historical" or "historic"
>in that context, simply because it's ambiguous and depends almost entirely
>on context, rather than on dictionary meaning.
But, of course, there was an assumption my statement was meant to be
taken "as is." Ambiguity exists because in order to make the point, I
deliberately used the incorrect modifier "historical." The astute reader
would see immediately that "historic" was the intended meaning.
>I might refer to "historic" (with your distinction) an event on the level
>of the Yalta Conference. Most artistic convocations don't merit that
>designation.
Agreed.
>On the other hand, I wouldn't call it "historical" either, because
>"historical" in your distinction (ie, belonging to history) doesn't
>really add anything useful to the context at all. It's advertising cant.
See above.
>If the conference were on music history, I would say "a conference on
>music history" or "a music-history conference." Wouldn't you?
Absolutely.
John Dalmas
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