Sir?!
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Sir?!
I was just watching DS9: "Behind the Enemy Lines" and in the scene where Dax holds the little speech with the Phaser bank thingy the entire crew present in the room addresses her as Sir and this wasn't the first time crewmen have addressed female officers as Sir in DS9. Isn't this a bit weird? Terry Farrell certainly doesn't look like a man, even though she is pretty tall.

- Kamakazie Sith
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Re: Sir?!
Maybe because she is a trill it is her preference.Sir Sirius wrote:I was just watching DS9: "Behind the Enemy Lines" and in the scene where Dax holds the little speech with the Phaser bank thingy the entire crew present in the room addresses her as Sir and this wasn't the first time crewmen have addressed female officers as Sir in DS9. Isn't this a bit weird? Terry Farrell certainly doesn't look like a man, even though she is pretty tall.
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This is not uncommon. In the US military it is considered proper to refer to all COs as Sir. It is not beyond the stretch of imagination that titles in the military as used in Trek have some of their gender removed and its a simple title.
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Saavik was a man in the first draft and the line never was fixed in the script when Kirstie Alley was cast and the character was rewritten as a woman.Sharp-kun wrote:A more interesting question is why "Mr Savvik"?
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Ahh. I've wondered about that for years and never bothered to find out whyIceberg wrote:Saavik was a man in the first draft and the line never was fixed in the script when Kirstie Alley was cast and the character was rewritten as a woman.Sharp-kun wrote:A more interesting question is why "Mr Savvik"?
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I asked about that in the Mess and Chardok and Wicked Pilot disagreed with you, so it's not done in the Army or the Air Force, that still leaves the Navy open.Alyeska wrote:This is not uncommon. In the US military it is considered proper to refer to all COs as Sir.
"Sir" is a gender specific word, it sounds awfully bizarre and even demeaning in a way for Starfleet to use it like that. I sure as hell wouldn't like to be called ma'am.Alyeska wrote:It is not beyond the stretch of imagination that titles in the military as used in Trek have some of their gender removed and its a simple title.

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Need I remind you of the male skirts in TNG?Sir Sirius wrote:Sir" is a gender specific word, it sounds awfully bizarre and even demeaning in a way for Starfleet to use it like that. I sure as hell wouldn't like to be called ma'am.
"If the facts are on your side, pound on the facts. If the law is on your side, pound on the law. If neither is on your side, pound on the table."
"The captain claimed our people violated a 4,000 year old treaty forbidding us to develop hyperspace technology. Extermination of our planet was the consequence. The subject did not survive interrogation."
"The captain claimed our people violated a 4,000 year old treaty forbidding us to develop hyperspace technology. Extermination of our planet was the consequence. The subject did not survive interrogation."
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No its not, I got my ass beat in boot camp for that.Alyeska wrote:This is not uncommon. In the US military it is considered proper to refer to all COs as Sir.
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Not in the Navy.Sir Sirius wrote:I asked about that in the Mess and Chardok and Wicked Pilot disagreed with you, so it's not done in the Army or the Air Force, that still leaves the Navy open.Alyeska wrote:This is not uncommon. In the US military it is considered proper to refer to all COs as Sir.
بيرني كان سيفوز
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in omnibus requiem quaesivi, et nusquam inveni nisi in angulo cum libro
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ipsa scientia potestas est
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ipsa scientia potestas est
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Well, at least a couple of Sci-fi authors, in some of their stories, have all officers referred to as sir, whatever the sex. There are advantages to the concept of calling all officers sir.TrailerParkJawa wrote:Females officers are not referred to as Sir in any of the US armed forces.
I think they did it in TNG and DS9 to somehow prove they've moved beyond recognition of gender.
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When I was at a Naval Academy summer seminar, one of my friends got his ass chewed off for accidently referring to a woman as "sir".Ender wrote:No its not, I got my ass beat in boot camp for that.Alyeska wrote:This is not uncommon. In the US military it is considered proper to refer to all COs as Sir.
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It was, IIRC, standard practice in the US armed forces to refer to all superior officers as sir, regardless of gender until sometime in the 40s. At any rate, afer 400 years, there's no reason why the word "sir" couldn't shift to a gender-neutral pronoun. Ttechnically, in modern English, "he" is neutral when the gender of the antecedent is unspecified (though most people misuse "they" in that situation) so it's not unprecedented to have a masculine pronoun do double duty in English.

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I'm aware of one in Encounter at Farpoint when they are evacuating the battle section to the saucer (you'd think the children would at least be restricted to the saucer anyway...)Einhander Sn0m4n wrote: Pics please?
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Re: Sir?!
True - Sisko called him Old Man after all.Kamakazie Sith wrote:Maybe because she is a trill it is her preference.Sir Sirius wrote:I was just watching DS9: "Behind the Enemy Lines" and in the scene where Dax holds the little speech with the Phaser bank thingy the entire crew present in the room addresses her as Sir and this wasn't the first time crewmen have addressed female officers as Sir in DS9. Isn't this a bit weird? Terry Farrell certainly doesn't look like a man, even though she is pretty tall.
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I am watching the TNG episode right now where the rogue Borg show up. When Admiral Nachaya (a woman) orders Picard to kill the Borg during any future opportunities, Picard says "yes, sir!"
Let's face it, StarFleet had one term for all senior officers (sir). B & B decided to just change it to Ma'am for Voyager.
Let's face it, StarFleet had one term for all senior officers (sir). B & B decided to just change it to Ma'am for Voyager.

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So using 'they' in such a manner is grammatically incorrect? Or improper or what?RedImperator wrote:It was, IIRC, standard practice in the US armed forces to refer to all superior officers as sir, regardless of gender until sometime in the 40s. At any rate, afer 400 years, there's no reason why the word "sir" couldn't shift to a gender-neutral pronoun. Ttechnically, in modern English, "he" is neutral when the gender of the antecedent is unspecified (though most people misuse "they" in that situation) so it's not unprecedented to have a masculine pronoun do double duty in English.

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It's grammatically incorrect when it's used as a singular pronoun. Under no circumstances is "they" (or "them" or "their", for that matter) singular, and it drives me fucking batty when they're used as neuter singular pronouns. If you MUST be gender senitive, use "he or she", "him or her", and "his or hers". They're ugly kludges, but at least they work.Stofsk wrote:So using 'they' in such a manner is grammatically incorrect? Or improper or what?RedImperator wrote:It was, IIRC, standard practice in the US armed forces to refer to all superior officers as sir, regardless of gender until sometime in the 40s. At any rate, afer 400 years, there's no reason why the word "sir" couldn't shift to a gender-neutral pronoun. Ttechnically, in modern English, "he" is neutral when the gender of the antecedent is unspecified (though most people misuse "they" in that situation) so it's not unprecedented to have a masculine pronoun do double duty in English.

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How do you feel about artificial (but somewhat common) constructions like 'sie' or 'hir' (she or he, his or her, respectively)?RedImperator wrote:It's grammatically incorrect when it's used as a singular pronoun. Under no circumstances is "they" (or "them" or "their", for that matter) singular, and it drives me fucking batty when they're used as neuter singular pronouns. If you MUST be gender senitive, use "he or she", "him or her", and "his or hers". They're ugly kludges, but at least they work.
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