Talk:Crush: Difference between revisions

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:As a general rule it's a good idea to follow {{w|Wikipedia:Article titles#Use nouns|Wikipedia's style}}. In it, it says to use nouns instead of verbs, which we do for stuff like [[whistle]] (not "whistling"), [[punch]] (not "punching"), [[combat]] (not "fighting"). It also says sometimes the noun corresponding to a verb is just the verb's gerund. So with all of that, I think "Crushing" would indeed by the right way to name this. On the other hand, we have [[P:TITLE|our own policies]], which says to use the infinitive instead of the gerund. Maybe we should instead change the policy? &mdash; '''{''[[User:Espyo|Espyo]]''<sup>[[User talk:Espyo|T]]</sup>}''' 12:00, August 11, 2024 (EDT)
:As a general rule it's a good idea to follow {{w|Wikipedia:Article titles#Use nouns|Wikipedia's style}}. In it, it says to use nouns instead of verbs, which we do for stuff like [[whistle]] (not "whistling"), [[punch]] (not "punching"), [[combat]] (not "fighting"). It also says sometimes the noun corresponding to a verb is just the verb's gerund. So with all of that, I think "Crushing" would indeed by the right way to name this. On the other hand, we have [[P:TITLE|our own policies]], which says to use the infinitive instead of the gerund. Maybe we should instead change the policy? &mdash; '''{''[[User:Espyo|Espyo]]''<sup>[[User talk:Espyo|T]]</sup>}''' 12:00, August 11, 2024 (EDT)
::I think Crushing would be better after viewing the Wikipedia page; the noun here indeed does appear to be the verb's gerund. You would rarely ever use the word crush unless you're using a present-tense verb of the term, but crushing would be a gerund that would sum up the actual hazard. Wikipedia lists the example of [[Wikipedia:Swimming|Swimming]], which seems to be in the exact same situation as Crush/Crushing, yet has the ''-ing''.<br>I mean, I'm not going to stroll in here and tell you to change the policies, you're the bureaucrat haha, but I do think it would be better. Wikipedia says to use the gerund and the title of the section is plainly and simply "Use nouns", which sums it up at least in part. I think having [[whistle]] rather than "whistling" makes at least some sense as whistle is also a noun for the device used to whistle, but "crush" is not a noun in this context and therefore I believe the gerund should be used. I think [[combat]] is a special occasion as it essentially means "fighting" without being a gerund, and then [[punch]] is also a noun as well as a verb in the same sense that whistle is.<br>Sorry, that was quite scatterbrained and out-of-order. I do think the policies should be changed, as Wikipedia says to use nouns basically whenever possible, so I think they should mention gerunds taking precedence over infinitives. Additionally, I have personal preference; I personally think Crushing sounds much better than Crush; as I said earlier, I'd most definitely say "Crushing is a hazard" rather than "Crush is a hazard". Even the beginning of the article says the former which I prefer, so I do think it should be renamed to Crushing. <span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif">[[User:Deeb1324354657|<span style="color:#1e02f5">Deeb1324354657</span>]] ([[User_talk:Deeb1324354657|<span style="color:#1e02f5">talk</span>]])</span> 12:40, August 11, 2024 (EDT)

Revision as of 11:40, August 11, 2024

Different name

A different name for the page could be Physical Force, so that both crushing and stabbing could fall into the same category. The preceding unsigned comment was added by 76.93.54.135 • (talk) • (contribs)

Hm, that's not specific enough. It could make players think this also applies to getting knocked back by shaking, for instance, or apply to a punch, or something. — {EspyoT} 14:55, December 1, 2021 (EST)

Different different name

Maybe this would be inconsistent with some other pages, but would it be considerable to think about renaming this page to Crushing? I feel like Crush doesn't sum it up as a hazard and made me originally think it had some relation to the Crush Nugget (but that's probably just me). Like, in a conversation, you'd say "Crushing is a hazard", not "Crush is a hazard", at least in my mind. Would this be something to ruminate on? Deeb1324354657 (talk) 00:30, August 9, 2024 (EDT)

As a general rule it's a good idea to follow Wikipedia's style. In it, it says to use nouns instead of verbs, which we do for stuff like whistle (not "whistling"), punch (not "punching"), combat (not "fighting"). It also says sometimes the noun corresponding to a verb is just the verb's gerund. So with all of that, I think "Crushing" would indeed by the right way to name this. On the other hand, we have our own policies, which says to use the infinitive instead of the gerund. Maybe we should instead change the policy? — {EspyoT} 12:00, August 11, 2024 (EDT)
I think Crushing would be better after viewing the Wikipedia page; the noun here indeed does appear to be the verb's gerund. You would rarely ever use the word crush unless you're using a present-tense verb of the term, but crushing would be a gerund that would sum up the actual hazard. Wikipedia lists the example of Swimming, which seems to be in the exact same situation as Crush/Crushing, yet has the -ing.
I mean, I'm not going to stroll in here and tell you to change the policies, you're the bureaucrat haha, but I do think it would be better. Wikipedia says to use the gerund and the title of the section is plainly and simply "Use nouns", which sums it up at least in part. I think having whistle rather than "whistling" makes at least some sense as whistle is also a noun for the device used to whistle, but "crush" is not a noun in this context and therefore I believe the gerund should be used. I think combat is a special occasion as it essentially means "fighting" without being a gerund, and then punch is also a noun as well as a verb in the same sense that whistle is.
Sorry, that was quite scatterbrained and out-of-order. I do think the policies should be changed, as Wikipedia says to use nouns basically whenever possible, so I think they should mention gerunds taking precedence over infinitives. Additionally, I have personal preference; I personally think Crushing sounds much better than Crush; as I said earlier, I'd most definitely say "Crushing is a hazard" rather than "Crush is a hazard". Even the beginning of the article says the former which I prefer, so I do think it should be renamed to Crushing. Deeb1324354657 (talk) 12:40, August 11, 2024 (EDT)