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Date:      Thu, 19 Jan 1995 01:11:47 +0000 (GMT)
From:      Paul Richards <paul@isl.cf.ac.uk>
To:        bakul@netcom.com (Bakul Shah)
Cc:        terry@cs.weber.edu, freebsd-hackers@freefall.cdrom.com
Subject:   Re: Internationalization (was Re: CVS stuff)
Message-ID:  <199501190111.BAA02956@isl.cf.ac.uk>
In-Reply-To: <199501181857.KAA24197@netcom5.netcom.com> from "Bakul Shah" at Jan 18, 95 10:57:40 am

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In reply to Bakul Shah who said
> 
> You speak of English bias of mailing lists and Usenet but
> the English bias of Unix etc. is much more pervasive.  How
> would one translate `cat', `sh', `uucp' etc. to other
> languages?  Without English language background these words
> make _no_ sense.  But it would be equally nonsensical to

Hmm, interesting viewpoint :-)

A cat is a small furry animal that has an annoying habit of sleeping on
clothes that have just been ironed and you were hoping to wear out that
night.

`sh` is likely an abbreviation of what you generally say when you find the
afore mentioned cat lying on your clothes.

`uucp` obviously slipped into unix by mistake since it's clearly not
English.

-- 
  Paul Richards, FreeBSD core team member. 
  Phone: +44 1222 874000 x6646 (work), +44 1222 457651 (home)
  Dept. Mechanical Engineering, University of Wales, College Cardiff.
  Internet: paul@FreeBSD.org,  JANET(UK): RICHARDSDP@CARDIFF.AC.UK



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