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rod1949
1st December 2004, 12:22 PM
Why do the Americans call timber lumber?

Grunt
1st December 2004, 12:34 PM
So they can be Lumberjacks and wear high heels

bitingmidge
1st December 2004, 12:34 PM
So they don't confuse timber collecting with "getting wood"?


P
:D :D :D

johnmc
1st December 2004, 12:40 PM
Americans refer to timber as the logs and trees (as in tall timber) and lumber as pieces cut into standard sizes and dried.

craigb
1st December 2004, 12:42 PM
So they don't confuse timber collecting with "getting wood"?



:D :D :D

silentC
1st December 2004, 01:37 PM
Americans refer to timber as the logs and trees (as in tall timber) and lumber as pieces cut into standard sizes and dried.
So how come the guys who cut down the 'tall timber' are called lumberjacks?

lumber (n.)
"timber sawn into rough planks," 1662, Amer.Eng. (Massachusetts), earlier "disused bit of furniture; heavy, useless objects" (1552), probably from lumber (v.), perhaps influenced by Lombard, from the Italian immigrants famous as pawnbrokers and money-lenders in England (see Lombard). The evolution of sense would be because a lumber-house ("pawn shop") naturally accumulates odds and ends of furniture. Lumberjack first attested 1831, Canadian Eng.

jur
1st December 2004, 01:52 PM
Because "timberdicks" sounds silly?

Sturdee
1st December 2004, 04:23 PM
Why do the Americans call timber lumber?

And why do they spell colour as color and write cheque as check and why etc? etc?

May be because they speak American which is similar and based on English but definately NOT English. :eek:


Peter.

oges
2nd December 2004, 08:37 PM
lumber (n.)
"....heavy, useless objects....."

well I got a nickname for some people I know now :rolleyes:

echnidna
2nd December 2004, 08:47 PM
Then again the Aussie Colloq. of lumber is to give someone a good donging.
Does that show up in the Dictionary.
I have got a dictionary, I know I have, I saw it a few years ago, I think.

E. maculata
2nd December 2004, 08:55 PM
I've been lumbered with all this useless wood :rolleyes: .
This seat has great lumber support :cool: .
Great useless lug been lumbering around all morning :mad: .

Trees are wood, sawn wood is timber, isn't that the way we do it in ozstraya ;) ?

I used to operate a "timberjack" & I reckon mostly we call our "Lumberjacks" Loggers or Tree Fellers'.

echnidna
2nd December 2004, 09:05 PM
Going by his avatart Zed looks like a tree feller.

E. maculata
2nd December 2004, 09:19 PM
Ah...Monkeys, wine, & chainsaws, always a winning combination :p

AlexS
2nd December 2004, 09:37 PM
So how come the guys who cut down the 'tall timber' are called lumberjacks?

lumber (n.)
"..... perhaps influenced by Lombard, from the Italian immigrants famous as pawnbrokers and money-lenders in England (see Lombard). The evolution of sense would be because a lumber-house ("pawn shop") naturally accumulates odds and ends of furniture. Lumberjack first attested 1831, Canadian Eng.
Lots
Of
Money
But
A
Real
D!ckhead