<div dir="ltr"><div><div>While you can go the route of changing master to main or something similar, you're up for a circlejerk you can not win. If you change technically established terms each time someone gets offended, this will never end.<br></div>As a comparison, when studying in europe, you do your Master-Degree. In Germany, when you finish your apprenticeship as carpenter and do the next level, to actually lead with more responsibility, you do something which is called "Meister" which is the German word for master.<br><br></div>Master isn't racist, and has never been in this context. If you just go on with this, you'll allow random people to connotate any word the way they like and how they see fit. You'll weaponize every word.<br></div><br><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">Am Mo., 22. Juni 2020 um 22:00 Uhr schrieb antlists via llvm-dev <<a href="mailto:llvm-dev@lists.llvm.org">llvm-dev@lists.llvm.org</a>>:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex">On 21/06/2020 11:20, Renato Golin via llvm-dev wrote:<br>
> Words have many meanings in one single language. But English is not<br>
> just one language. To begin with, it's spoken natively in many<br>
> countries and totally different words and sometimes grammar are used.<br>
> But there's also the "international" English, which the rest of the<br>
> world uses, especially in computer science. Lots of those words had no<br>
> other meaning to me before I moved into an English speaking country.<br>
<br>
You may be correct in that MODERN "English worldwide" has diverged into <br>
a bunch of "similar but not the same" languages, but you're also <br>
accidentally correct that, even in England, English is a not-complete <br>
merger of about five or six different languages! That's to say nothing <br>
of the other languages spoken elsewhere in the British Isles. Oh and I'm <br>
not talking about modern immigrant languages of the last 200 years or so!<br>
<br>
American is a different language to English, "real" English is the <br>
language of the Saxons in the south of Britain. They don't speak English <br>
in Scotland - they speak a (very similar) language called Scots. Unless <br>
of course we rename our versions "Saxon", but that'll probably piss off <br>
the Scots-speaking Anglish in the north, and the Saxons in Saxony ...<br>
<br>
Maybe I'm more sensitive than most, probably am, but I wish the <br>
Americans would have decency and national pride to do want plenty of <br>
other countries have done - NOT call their own language "English". <br>
"American" would be perfect - the Australians call theirs "Strine" (a <br>
contraction of Australian), Canadians call it Canadian English, I don't <br>
know where it is but there's Pidgin ... let's face it - MOST other <br>
countries have renamed their language to some degree or other.<br>
<br>
Cheers,<br>
Wol<br>
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</blockquote></div>