[Tagging] shop=wedding_office
Noel David Torres Taño
envite at rolamasao.org
Wed Sep 29 04:58:50 BST 2010
On Miércoles 29 Septiembre 2010 04:00:09 Simon Biber escribió:
> Noel David Torres Taño <envite at rolamasao.org> wrote:
> > Bussiness that sell bride dresses only
>
> shop=clothes
> clothes=wedding_dresses
>
> > Bussiness that sell ceremonial dresses (bride and bridmaiden, groom,
> > black tie,
> >
> >New Year, cocktail dresses... men and women, even childs)
>
> shop=clothes
> clothes=ceremonial
>
> > Bussiness that sell decorative wedding stuff (decorations, bouquets,
> > chair
> >
> >covers) but no dresses
>
> shop=boutique
> boutique=wedding
>
> > Bussines that organize weddings in your name (buy wedding stuff, flowers,
> >
> >gifts, contract photographer, musicians, catering, restaurant)
>
> office=wedding_planner
>
> > Bussiness that do more than one of the previous
>
> Let's take "all of the above" as the pathological example.
>
> At the top level it's both an office and a shop.
> The office is a wedding planner office.
> The shop is both a boutique and a clothes shop.
> The boutique is a wedding boutique.
> The clothes include both wedding dresses and ceremonial clothes.
>
> Noting the general consensus that a multi-valued key
> a=b;c
> should be avoided and rewritten as
> a:b=yes
> a:c=yes
>
> I therefore propose:
>
> office=wedding_planner
> shop:boutique=yes
> boutique=wedding
> shop:clothes=yes
> clothes:wedding_dresses=yes
> clothes:ceremonial=yes
>
> This is equivalent mathematically to an expression like
>
> office (wedding planner) + shop (boutique (wedding) + clothes (wedding
> dresses + ceremonial))
>
>
Quite good until here :)
> PS: if you remember that ceremonial clothes includes wedding dresses, you
Bride dresses are quite special, in that shops selling them use to shop only
them, and shops selling cocktail dresses or New Year dresses (talking about
women dresses only) use not to sell bride dresses, so I will keep bride
dresses separated from the other so-called ceremonial. AND I would search
another name for "ceremonial", as a New Year's eve party has nothing to do
with any kind of ceremony but it's probably the time where average women use
their most high-end dresses except for their own weddings. I'm not native
english speaker, but in spanish I would call them "party dresses" (word-by-
word translation). Aboute men, smokings, chaques and fracs can be called
"party dresses" too. "Ceremonial" sounds to me like priest's clothes,
university's year opening clothes and such.
Noel
er Envite
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