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Pooh-Bah
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(1)(Br) Glossary for the LNWR Society--More generally, at any junction the most important through line is the main line and any line off it a branch.... www.lnwrs.org.uk/Glossary/glossarybr.php(2) Golf glossary: Information From Answers.comGolf glossary This is a list of common golfing terms. ... Through line: When putting, the imaginary path that a ball would travel on should the putted ball www.answers.com/topic/golf-glossary (3) Glossary--....THROUGH-LINE: Unifying element of a scene, act or play. ... www.redbirdstudio.com/AWOL/terms.htmlI'm not sure the Democrats are much better....but their historic through-line is better--Jim Webb, apostate from GOP to Dems-- TIME Mag, quoted by Joe Klein This third sense is a new one on me and I can't find it in the usu dictionaries. Either it's very obscure or very new. Anyone know for sure Thanks all
Last edited by dalehileman; 06/27/06 08:59 PM.
dalehileman
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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It's an old familiar to me, Dale - I can recall for example talking to Sir Peter Hall's son about this term as one his father used quite a lot, to describe the 'long arc' of story underlying the mechanics of specific plot details in a drama. I believe the term was pioneered by Konstantin Stanislavski, sometimes also referred to as the "Superobjective".
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old hand
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old hand
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Don't know how common it is outside of specialist circles but it makes sense to me, I assume it is something akin to a thread or unifying thematic or narrative force in a work/scene/play. The author Michael Connelly seems to know it: "Maybe the pursuit that is engendered by the crime or if it's a bad-guy story—the crime that is going to be committed—is the all-encompassing through line." Interview
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Yep, a quick check on my Stan-the-man memory seems to check out ~ a google takes me here for example, and I have no doubt there's heaps more - so I expect Micheal Connelly would be familiar with it from the drama context. I would tend to write it as one word or as a hyphenated pair rather than two separate words, fwiw.
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old hand
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old hand
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> I would tend to write it as one word or as a hyphenated pair rather than two separate words, fwiw.
And I would tend to agree. That was the decision of the transcriber in the above quote.
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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i checked the link first, and i am glad i did--i was going to say the only reference i could think of was a rail/subway line.
sometimes called the main line in Northeast (maybe even in all of US) --most notably in Pennsy, where the main line helps define not just the railway, but the upper crust of society!
LIRR has several through lines, the original line (port washington line) and the Jamaica line -(to babylon) and many branches. some lines terminate in jamaica, some in hunters point, some at atlantic avenue, but the through line continues to Penn station. (which is also the terminal for the LIRR.
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Mav--wonderful to see you! [blowing kisses e]
Interesting--for the common thread def. I'd write through-line; for the train I'd put through line.
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Pooh-Bah
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Pooh-Bah
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Thanks all. But if it was used by Stanislavski, then it can't be very new. However, how do we explain why the term isn't found in the usu dicts
Not even Merriam New Explorer with 330,000 terms
Could the reason be, that the expr is considered literal rather than idiomatic
Last edited by dalehileman; 06/26/06 02:30 PM.
dalehileman
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Carpal Tunnel
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> why the term isn't found in the usu dicts
perhaps because it's a phrase?
formerly known as etaoin...
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Hiya J - thanks for the welcome on a (probably) fleeting visit - frantic at work, dead puter at home! Yes, I suspect I'd do the same as you: perhaps because the phrasal form "~ line" is familiar? eg, "the up line, the down line..."
I think you hit the mark about a phrase, eta. otoh, I have seen it written (drama context) as a single word... but mebbe that's a kind of term of art case.
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