Help with question about web page access

Roger Merchberger zmerch at 30below.com
Tue Aug 24 10:36:06 CDT 2004


Rumor has it that Jules Richardson may have mentioned these words:
>On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 22:46, Tony Duell wrote:
>
> > I've just checked the Shorter Oxford Dictionary (this is a 2-volume
> > English dictionary, mine is somewhat old). It doesn't contain Computor or
> > Weldor at all. A 'Welder' is one who welds, a Computer is a person who
> > calculates.
>
>I always thought it came about with the arrival of the comptometer - a
>computer being the person who operates the device. I've never come
>across computor before, but as Tony says maybe it was different on the
>other side of the pond...

Well, at www.miriamwebster.com, I typed in weldor and got:

One entry found for welder.
Main Entry: weld·er
Pronunciation: 'wel-d&r
Function: noun
: one that welds : as a or wel·dor : one whose work is welding b : a 
machine used in welding

=-=-=-=-=-=-=

When I searched for "computor" it didn't actually register anything, but 
gave me a list of possible alternates, which included:

cor·rupt·er also cor·rup·tor  /-'r&p-t&r/ noun

[[ altho in the list, it was corruptor, not corrupter, that was listed ]]

=-=-=-=-=-=-=

But, alas, no Computor, from what I saw at that one website. I do know that 
I've seen it in the distant past (i.e. high school, 20 years ago), but if 
computers came in about the same time that the -or version of spelling was 
on it's way out, I can see why it didn't gain "universal acceptance." ;-)

They want $30USD annually to use MiriamWebsterUnabridged.com, so I didn't 
check there... ;-)

Laterz,
Roger "Merch" Merchberger

--
Roger "Merch" Merchberger   | JC: "Like those people in Celeronville!"
sysadmin, Iceberg Computers | Me: "Don't you mean Silicon Valley???"
zmerch at 30below.com          | JC: "Yea, that's the place!"
                             | JC == Jeremy Christian




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