It's literally identical to the use of calling all plastic bags with a zip type closing mechanism "ziploc" or all plastic food storage, tupperwear etc. no difference at all.
Wrong about bacon and wrong about lego.
It's literally identical to the use of calling all plastic bags with a zip type closing mechanism "ziploc" or all plastic food storage, tupperwear etc. no difference at all.
Wrong about bacon and wrong about lego.
It's a concept that is unsurprisingly hard for a Brabenite to understand. It's only been happening to popular products since the beginning of trademarks being invented.
Hey. I, mostly, resemble that remark...Partly that.
and partly 'legos' doesn't make any sense to anyone that's not a 5 year old midwestern hick in a trailer.
It still doesn't make grammatical sense to say legos.It's a concept that is unsurprisingly hard for a Brabenite to understand. It's only been happening to popular products since the beginning of trademarks being invented.
This guy has won the forums - taking fdev to the Advertising Standards because he doesn't like the way the game's ads look https://forums.frontier.co.uk/threa...ghting-is-still-messed-up.590109/post-9619286
What a waste of fdevs time when they could be getting on with fixing the game ...
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It still doesn't make grammatical sense to say legos.
Anyone who says it should be banned from ever being able to buy it.
They can stick to Athlon-uk's Rego...
...sorry, Regos.
It still doesn't make grammatical sense to say legos.
Anyone who says it should be banned from ever being able to buy it.
They can stick to Athlon-uk's Rego...
...sorry, Regos.
if i have a bunch of sharpie markers. The technically correct way to describe that is just as i did, sharpie markers. But calling them sharpies is far more common. And calling them sharpies even when they're not made by sharpie is common if they fit the look of sharpies.
that's what you have with lego - exactly. Whether it's right or wrong just depends on how common the usage ends up being in language. Corporations dont get to dictate such things. The speakers do.
Power to the pie hole?if i have a bunch of sharpie markers. The technically correct way to describe that is just as i did, sharpie markers. But calling them sharpies is far more common. And calling them sharpies even when they're not made by sharpie is common if they fit the look of sharpies.
that's what you have with lego - exactly. Whether it's right or wrong just depends on how common the usage ends up being in language. Corporations dont get to dictate such things. The speakers do.
This guy has won the forums - taking fdev to the Advertising Standards because he doesn't like the way the game's ads look https://forums.frontier.co.uk/threa...ghting-is-still-messed-up.590109/post-9619286
What a waste of fdevs time when they could be getting on with fixing the game ...
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Not a snowballs chance in Hell the ASA would uphold the complaint unless they prove that FDEV were intentionally misleading, which they obviously were not.Wouldn't fixing the game resolve the ASA complaint? or are we not considering the visual look and feel not living up to the promo material as a thing that needs to be fixed?
I'm not sure how they're mutually exclusive.
Lego wants you to think that calling their stuff legos is grammatically incorrect because of trademark concerns. Like the name tupperwear and other brand names that became synonymous with the item type ... once a term becomes common-use the brand loses their trademark to it. They have to protect it and fight it to keep it.
Trying to hate on legos at the language level has nothing to do with them not being legos ...it's just a means of trying to convince society to not use their brand name to reference the general product that they're defacto known for representing.
They wont fool people though with their marketing brainwashing. It's a losing battle to villainize legos.
To be fair, this stems entirely from watching old History Today sketches on Youtube. (Back when David Baddiel was funny)You win the most random insult ever lmao!
To be fair, this stems entirely from watching old History Today sketches on Youtube. (Back when David Baddiel was funny)
Based on recent events, given that there are more than one Watchdogs game, shouldn't they be called Watchdogseses despite what the publishers want?I wonder if the developers of Watchdogs 1 were reported to the ASA or literally every other game released in the last 30 years.
I think we're safe
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I wonder if they opted out of the email every time someone posts?
It's literally identical to the use of calling all plastic bags with a zip type closing mechanism "ziploc" or all plastic food storage, tupperwear etc. no difference at all.
if i have a bunch of sharpie markers. The technically correct way to describe that is just as i did, sharpie markers. But calling them sharpies is far more common. And calling them sharpies even when they're not made by sharpie is common if they fit the look of sharpies.
that's what you have with lego - exactly. Whether it's right or wrong just depends on how common the usage ends up being in language. Corporations dont get to dictate such things. The speakers do.
About as far back as your mum?Christ how far did you have to go back for that?