+http://starwars.wikicities.com/wiki/Tal ... readnought
He knows he can no longer defend the term "Super Star Destroyer" as anything but slang. However, he still refuses to admit that the Executor is a Star Dreadnaught, insisting that it's a large Star Destroyer. I'm confident that I can smash his main argument and most of his points. However, there are a few points I'm not sure of, that I would like some help with. I want to give him as complete a smackdown as possible, one with minimal "wiggle room" for him to carry on with.
A lot of his argument is based on the idea that because "Super Star Destroyer" or "Star Destroyer" is often used when referring to the Executor by Imperial officers then ITW is wrong and must be thrown out. He thinks it should be completely dismissed, instead of using the method that takes the most evidence into account and tries to rationalize everything.McEwok (Arkady Hodge) wrote:Then there's the description of the term "Super Star Destroyer" as "Rebel slang". This is demonstrably inaccurate and pejorative. The term is used both in dialogue among Imperial officers (Darksaber, Ch. 20, hardback p. 141) and in narrative sections told from their POVs (HttE, Ch. 1, paperback p. 7). Moreover, we find simple "Star Destroyer" applied to Executor-class ships not only by the Recon-X astromech (SoL, p. 320) but also by Sorannan (TT, p. 312), and implicitly, Thrawn (HttE, p. 51 "other Star Destroyers" is an implied semantic contrast with the earlier reference to Ex in the same dialogue). These are neither Rebels nor are they using slang idioms: this mitigates against the superficially narrow usage implied by the text here, and raises further eyebrows about the accuracy of this section of ItW
I have an idea for a rebuttal, but I want you guys to tell me if it's good: My rebuttal would be that military officers and other people who should know better DO use slang/inaccurate/misleading terms when referring to ships or vehicles, and that he has no evidence for his claim "nor are they using slang idioms." In real life, there's the F-117 "stealth fighter," "supercarriers," "BUFF" (B-52), "through-deck cruiser," etc. Also, just because SSD is "Rebel slang" doesn't mean that Imperials and other non-Rebels can't use it. The ITW statement could simply have been referring to the origin of the slang term.
The Shield of Lies quote is a little harder to dismiss, since it's a military IFF:
McEwok (Arkady Hodge) says that IFFs don't use slang (is this correct, or do they ever use informal, but familiar terms?). If they don't, then the only rebuttal that I can think of concerns the Armadia-class thrustships. "Thrustship" doesn't refer to the ship's size or role. According to CUSWE, it's a Yevethan starship that uses thrust propulsion rather than ion drives. Can anyone who has read (or more importantly, owns) the BFC novels tell me if this is an informal or slang term the NR comes up for the unusual Yevethan ships? If it is, then I can point out that this display was using slang terms, and cannot be trusted to give official designations for all the ships it listed.Taggar flew a steady line as he read the reports from R2-R on his cockpit display.
IDENTIFIED: ARAMADIA-CLASS THRUSTSHIP
IDENTIFIED: ARAMADIA-CLASS THRUSTSHIP
IDENTIFIED: VICTORY-CLASS STAR DESTROYER
IDENTIFIED: ARAMADIA-CLASS THRUSTSHIP
IDENTIFIED: IMPERIAL-CLASS STAR DESTROYER
IDENTIFIED: EXECUTOR-CLASS STAR DESTROYER
The list grew longer as N'zoth grew larger ahead.