
Originally Posted by
cstevens
Nick, it's always possible that my grandfather, Capt. R. S. Stevens jr., USN (ret.) was incorrect, but it's more likely that any error is in my childhood interpretation of his comment. Hs was a career US naval officer, led a fleet of inshore craft on D Day, captained a destroyer in the Mediterranean after the war, and wrote with authority on naval history for various publications. He was also a noted expert on Maserati sports racing cars in later life, and wrote about those as well. I suspect you would have liked him. He would have absolutely despised any notion that words could be changed arbitrarily. There were no "flybridges" on his watch!
But I do think there is something to the idea that language is never precise, never attached to an unmalleable truth. This entire thread, for example, is not really about assigning meaning to words, or the definition of a lug rig. It's about demonstrating social standing within a group. I can hear the knives being sharpened as I write this, so I will add that I mean nothing negative by that statement at all. Social standing is a fundamental drive and it would be antisocial if we did not pursue it. But the truth is that outside of a very small group of enthusiasts and historians (basically us), no one cares about the difference between a lug, gaff, sprit or gunter rig. Or the nuances of traditional, working, small craft designs. To everyone else there's modern boats with pointy sails and tall masts, and old boats with squared-off sails and short masts. If they even bother to note the difference. It's all just trainspotting.
The exchange between the OP and the man selling the lug-rigged dinghy is a perfect example. Toxophilite offered to "help" the guy, but in doing so he questioned the seller's knowledge, social status, and ability to father children. Sending a Wikipedia article link was the crowning insult. There isn't a human on this planet who would accept that sort of help graciously. I'm sometimes tempted to do the same when I see an ad with an obvious error. Retired fishing trollers listed as "trawlers", or "lobster boats" that are merely sedan cruisers that have never been within a thousand miles of a lobster trap, for example. But there's no profit in it so I just file it away as one more step towards the fall of Rome and the end of civilization and move on.