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In Bingley's "browned off" thread (http://wordsmith.org/board/showflat.pl?Cat=&Board=words&Number=71115), Geoff brings up the naming of two particular cars... the Corvette and the Chevette. I always had assumed that they were stylistic modifications to the Corvair and the Chevelle respectively, and were so named - but that was never a *founded* assumption. Anyone care to set me straight?
Also, I used to work for someone who in her previous life had worked for Ford Motor Co. She told the story of the marketing meetings where the new cars were named - thinking that the design would appeal to a young read: testosterone-filled male audience, the Probe was named to connote (ahem) penetration. Backfire alert: The demographic that ended up actually *buying* the Probe tended to be professional females in their 30s.
All of them right after having been abducted by aliens.
TEd
http://www.vettefever.com/index_003.htm
The Corvette was of course named after a small, maneuverable, and lightly armed vessel, which not only made sense because it is a sports car. After all, which man wouldn't want to ride around in something named after a war ship, right? Here's an image of one type of Corvette:
http://www.ku.edu/~kansite/ww_one/naval/images/asar-i-tevfik_as-completed.jpg
the same aliens that were responsible for those marketing meetings (heh, it was an Alien Probe).
-ron
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