tcusta00 said:
While technically correct, I think readers knew what these guys were referring to. Please try to have some patience with us, oh grammatically-correct one: we're not all professional authors, bloggers, or columnists here. At the end of the day this is a still a user-driven community and there are bound to be typos and other errors. :grin:
You're (not your) absolutely right, of course, and even I knew what the posters were saying, but that's not the point.
If it's an outlet, call it an outlet or a receptacle -- anything but a plug, because the name "plug" is already in use for the other thing, the thing that plugs into the outlet. It doesn't take a professional writer to refer to an outlet by the right name, particularly on such a technically-oriented site such as this. I think that the average 4th grader would be able to do as much.
You wouldn't call a shirt, pants, or a bolt a nut would you? You wouldn't say 'up' when you mean 'down'? Then why on earth would you say it's ok to call an electrical outlet a plug? Would you tell the man at the hardware store that you want to buy a duplex "plug" to mount in a hole you've just cut in your wall?
I've studied the origins of language and one of the things I've learned is that we humans label things for a reason, and that reason is so we can communicate with, and understand one another. If someone goes around calling a boat a truck, or a knife a spoon, chances are people will think they're stupid or ignorant, or both.
Worse case, it could be potentially dangerous, or even deadly. Is it safe to touch the metal parts of a plug? Probably, but what if I said 'plug' but I meant 'outlet'? :eek2: