NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Jargon, terminology , words' meanings, etc.
From: Bill Lionheart
Date: 2018 Dec 3, 21:43 +0000
From: Bill Lionheart
Date: 2018 Dec 3, 21:43 +0000
The primary (British English) definition of fix is to make stationary. I am fairly sure the connotation of repairing something (other than something like a bone which is repaired by immobilisation, as in mend) is relatively recently appeared in the UK and was perhaps already common in north America before it migrated. Certainly as a child growing up in Berkshire and Oxfordshire in the 60s and 70s if you said fix when you meant mend you would sound a bit American. I don't have the OED to hand but I am fairly sure the dates of examples will confirm my claim (although on the other hand my memory is thoroughly fallible!) So in navigation fixing your position probably had no connotation of repair and was entirely about it being at a fixed time. But of course it might help some people to remember it! Now when I learnt Navigation as a child (by the way back then a kid was definitely a young goat and not a human!) we used a + for DR a triangle for an EP and a circle with a dot in for a fix (I expect most navigators still do), but what do you call all these approximate positions? Now I think about it as an an adult mathematicians they are all estimates of position at a time with varying uncertainty. From a statistical point of view we would regard them as estimates of a random variable from observations. Perhaps I am destined to call them different things depending on what hat I wear (and how cocked it is). Bill Lionheart On Mon, 3 Dec 2018 at 21:02, Frank Reedwrote: > > Tony, you wrote: > "It just occured to me: the "fix" word in CN context means "to repair a DR position". " > > Heh. That's clever! From the point of view of historical origin in English, it's probably not quite right, but at least it's a good mnemonic --a way to "fix" the meaning of the word in your memory. > > See how I used "fix" there? This is another meaning of the word in English, distinct from "repair". If I set or or settle or stabilize something, I can say that I have "fixed" it. This is not the same meaning as to repair, but it's very close to the navigational meaning. The word "fix" has been in English for the better part of a millennium. It was probably one of the earliest borrowing from Norman French in the decades after 1066. Since it's an old word and a short word, it has developed quite a few related meanings. > > There's a nice dictionary entry for the word "fix" at merriam-webster.com. The navigational sense of "fix" is part of definition 3 of the verb in their listing. Fixing the date of an event (def. 3a) is very similar to our navigation sense of fixing our position at sea. In fact, they give this as a distinct meaning (def. 3b): > " to make an accurate determination of: DISCOVER > // fixing our location on the chart ". > And separately, the noun "fix" is defined and includes the navigation sense as a top-level meaning: > " the position (as of a ship) determined by bearings, observations, or radio > also : a determination of one's position " > > Sometimes new students do puzzle over the word "fix" wondering why they call it that. But it's not really an obscure usage. It's common English, but a secondary sense of the word. Comparing with "fixing" the date of an event is probably a good way to make it clear. I haven't tried this but I will the next time someone asks. I'll also suggest your idea of "fixing" being like "repairing" the DR since that would certainly help some students. > > Frank Reed > >