Talk:Pumpkaboo (Pokémon): Difference between revisions
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:2) Your main claim appears to be that only adjectives can modify nouns. {{wp|Adjective#Other noun modifiers|Wikipedia would disagree}}: "''In many languages, including English, it is possible for nouns to modify other nouns''". Examples include "work pants" and "chicken soup". Therefore, you are wrong that it ''cannot'' be grammatical just because "Size" is not an adjective. | :2) Your main claim appears to be that only adjectives can modify nouns. {{wp|Adjective#Other noun modifiers|Wikipedia would disagree}}: "''In many languages, including English, it is possible for nouns to modify other nouns''". Examples include "work pants" and "chicken soup". Therefore, you are wrong that it ''cannot'' be grammatical just because "Size" is not an adjective. | ||
:Chicken soup is soup of a chicken (to be very loose), Super Size Pumpkaboo is Pumpkaboo of a Super Size. I see absolutely no problem with this construction. IMO it is much cleaner than "Pumpkaboo in Super Size". [[User:Tiddlywinks|Tiddlywinks]] ([[User talk:Tiddlywinks|talk]]) 19:13, 10 May 2014 (UTC) | :Chicken soup is soup of a chicken (to be very loose), Super Size Pumpkaboo is Pumpkaboo of a Super Size. I see absolutely no problem with this construction. IMO it is much cleaner than "Pumpkaboo in Super Size". [[User:Tiddlywinks|Tiddlywinks]] ([[User talk:Tiddlywinks|talk]]) 19:13, 10 May 2014 (UTC) | ||
# If Size is followed by a verb or other parts of speech, then it will be certain that Super modifies Size. In English, there isn't such a rule to dictate that words are grouped up first by this. If such a rule is to exist, "Hot chicken soup" will mean the soup is made of a hot chicken but not a soup made of a chicken and the soup is hot. If Super Size Pumpkaboo is semantically Adjective + Noun + Noun while hot chicken soup is as well, this rule will not make sense when compared. | |||
# The article in Wikipedia you just quoted only agrees with very a limited usage on two nouns being stacked together. Particularly, {{tt|this|In plain English, the modifier often indicates origin (Virginia reel), purpose (work clothes), or semantic patient (man eater), however, it may generally indicate almost any semantic relationship.}} only tells of an observable phenomenon that is described as "often" and "may". None of the three usages apply to Super Size Pumpkaboo and all came from certain historical reasons{{tt|*|Speculations: For origins, it could be because of the difficulty in creating adjectives from name of places when names not from Germanic or Romantic origins are added into English. For purposes, it is very probable that it came with an apostrophe-s, like soldier's armour, at the beginning and somehow people disliked the gentive writing, there was an instance people made King's Road become Kings Road. For semantic patients, it is possible that when English was still old, objects in the accusative case are spelt differently. That holds true even today for our personal pronouns (it'd be a me-hater instead of an I-hater if it happens to be).}}. Besides, the article doesn't say anything about stacking another adjective in front of the two nouns. If two nouns added together becomes an atomic noun-unit, for which the article in Wikipedia describes, then adding an adjective should modify the whole unit instead of just the first word of, to quote your words, the "noun phrase". You'd not want to interpret a "fierce man eater" as an eater who only eats "fierce men". Instead, you'd want to believe it is a man eater and it is fierce. Why should this rule apply here but not there, grammatically? -[[User:Iosue|Iosue]] ([[User talk:Iosue|talk]]) 20:26, 10 May 2014 (UTC) |
Revision as of 20:26, 10 May 2014
How do we distinguish the size on the field?
I think this is worthy of trivia, and maybe even in the section of Biology. -Iosue (talk) 07:56, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
- They look bigger/smaller. It's easiest to tell the Super-Sized ones cause they actually have a slightly altered cry and float higher. ★Jo the Marten★ ಠ_ಠ♥ 08:03, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
I suppose there are some objective methods to tell by comparing the circle around the Pokémon. By this point, I can only distinguish between a Super Size from a non-Super Size. -Iosue (talk) 08:06, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
Pumpkaboo in Super Size Forme? Super-sized Pumpkaboo? Super Size Pumpkaboo?
This Super Size Pumpkaboo really isn't that grammatic. I don't know, it's not very nice to open up a topic to discuss this but well... So, what are the respective arguments for the naming of this?
- Pumpkaboo in Super Size - Same as Coke in Large Size or Combo B in Extra Large Size
- Pumpkaboo in Super Size Forme - So we treat "Super Size" as a special name for its forme. Consistently, we should say something like Floette in Red Flower Forme if needs be
- Super-sized Pumpkaboo - Super Size is converted into an adjective and put in front of the noun
- Super Size Pumpkaboo - Simply stack the nouns like you don't care about grammar. We will have some Sandy Cloak Wormadam, Blade Forme Aegislash or La Reine Trim Furfrou
- Pumpkaboo (Super Size) - Just avoid everything by conveniently putting up brackets
I don't know about stacking up two to three consecutive nouns in English. I don't recall other European languages that allow it (except terms like King William the Conqueror, where King, William and the Conqueror are all representing the same object; Super, Size and Pumpkaboo don't seem to be the same case). If this is really how English works, why do we need adjectives in the first place? -Iosue (talk) 17:20, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
Supplimentary: Spiky-eared Pichu is named Spiky-eared Pichu instead of "Spiky Ear Pichu" or "Spike Ear Pichu". There comes a reason we convert the words into an adjective before putting in front of a noun. -Iosue (talk) 17:24, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
- "Super Size Pumpkaboo" is fine and probably best. "Super-sized" could suggest it underwent a super-sizing process, which does not seem to be the case. Tiddlywinks (talk) 17:33, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
And the argument that supports this claim? I don't know but Spiky-eared Pichu doesn't seem to have undergone some spiky-earing process. Besides, what is a "super-sizing process"? To enlarge? Then we have better terms like "Enlarged Pumpkaboo", which suggests an action of enlargement, because "enlarge" is a valid verb. But "super-size" doesn't seem like a meaningful verb for me. -Iosue (talk) 17:39, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
- I'd just like to point out that the overwhelmingly widespread general usage for forms in the Pokémon fandom is exactly the same as the examples you gave in your objection to Super Size Pumpkaboo. See, for example, the captions under the main template images for Wormadam or Cherrim. See also the form name formatting on Veekun (which abbreviates to "Super Pumpkaboo") or Smogon (which uses both "Super Size Gourgeist" and "Gourgeist-H" in its analysis). Like it or not, part of being an encyclopedia is cataloging how things are normally used, even if that's not technically grammatically correct. (Side note: Spiky-eared Pichu is named that because "Spiky-eared Pichu" is the canonical name of the form, not because anybody in the fandom decided to "convert" it into an adjective. "Spiky Ear" or "Spike Ear" are just plain non-canonical.) Pumpkinking0192 (talk) 17:42, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
- Supersize, as a verb. It's definitely got a meaning plenty familiar to many. The issue (as I understood it at least) wasn't about using a different word like "enlarged", anyway, it was just about "Super Size".
- "Best" means the other options are worse... Super-sized because of the verb connotation, "in..." because they're clunky, and parentheses because they should be reserved for parentheticals (i.e., information that can be skipped).
- I'm not really sure why "Super Size Pumpkaboo" is necessarily ungrammatical, anyway. It's fine as far as I'm concerned. Whether this is because of other things like Sandy Cloak Wormadam as Pumpkinking mentions or my own (personal) more general English sense I don't really know or care for the moment. The short of it is, I just don't see/feel anything wrong with it. Tiddlywinks (talk) 17:59, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
Well, the canon only suggests "Super Size" and "Pumpkaboo". It did not suggest the exact term "Super Size Pumpkaboo". The Spiky-eared Pichu is canonical and grammatical, which is probably because there became a need to put them together in a single sentence. If there haven't been a chance for both terms to appear in a single sentence in the canonical material, it becomes our job to put the terms in a comprehensive way, which Veekun and Smogon have independently attempted. If they are free to manipulate the canonical material, why would Bulbapedia be otherwise? If we are free to do so, we are free to work on Super Size and Pumpkaboo independently regardless of how they do. As far as I am concerned, "Super Size Pumpkaboo" is not grammatical becaues Size is not an adjective, while Super is. "Super Size Pumpkaboo" can only mean two things grammatically: A "Size Pumpkaboo" that is described as "Super" or a "Super Size" which is also a "Pumpkaboo"*. I don't think either way is grammatically meaningful. This particular convention can lead to many other possibilities when used widely. The Sandy Cloak Wormadam and the La Reine Trim Furfrou are simply illustrations. -Iosue (talk) 18:19, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
- 1) In "Super Size", "Super" modifies "Size" forming a noun phrase which modifies "Pumpkaboo". Your construction of "Size" alone modifying "Pumpkaboo" is very odd at best. (As a native English speaker, I do not know how anyone would make that assumption.)
- 2) Your main claim appears to be that only adjectives can modify nouns. Wikipedia would disagree: "In many languages, including English, it is possible for nouns to modify other nouns". Examples include "work pants" and "chicken soup". Therefore, you are wrong that it cannot be grammatical just because "Size" is not an adjective.
- Chicken soup is soup of a chicken (to be very loose), Super Size Pumpkaboo is Pumpkaboo of a Super Size. I see absolutely no problem with this construction. IMO it is much cleaner than "Pumpkaboo in Super Size". Tiddlywinks (talk) 19:13, 10 May 2014 (UTC)
- If Size is followed by a verb or other parts of speech, then it will be certain that Super modifies Size. In English, there isn't such a rule to dictate that words are grouped up first by this. If such a rule is to exist, "Hot chicken soup" will mean the soup is made of a hot chicken but not a soup made of a chicken and the soup is hot. If Super Size Pumpkaboo is semantically Adjective + Noun + Noun while hot chicken soup is as well, this rule will not make sense when compared.
- The article in Wikipedia you just quoted only agrees with very a limited usage on two nouns being stacked together. Particularly, this only tells of an observable phenomenon that is described as "often" and "may". None of the three usages apply to Super Size Pumpkaboo and all came from certain historical reasons*. Besides, the article doesn't say anything about stacking another adjective in front of the two nouns. If two nouns added together becomes an atomic noun-unit, for which the article in Wikipedia describes, then adding an adjective should modify the whole unit instead of just the first word of, to quote your words, the "noun phrase". You'd not want to interpret a "fierce man eater" as an eater who only eats "fierce men". Instead, you'd want to believe it is a man eater and it is fierce. Why should this rule apply here but not there, grammatically? -Iosue (talk) 20:26, 10 May 2014 (UTC)