On Jul 2, 2008, at 5:05 PM, Joe Attardi wrote: > 2. "Kick" --> "Evict" ? > I don't understand the objection to the term "Kick". It's very > commonly > used for this exact type of scenario: > The misbehaving student was kicked out of class. > Bob was in the Army until he got kicked out. > See: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/kick, definition 31: > "kick out, Informal. > a. To oust or eject: They have been kicked out of the country club. " > > Kick is much clearer than Evict... what is the motivation for this > change?
If you are going to use "kick", then please use it correctly, i.e. "kick out". As to the use of "kick out" versus other choices, such as eject or evict, as the definition states, it is an informal term. Whereas the later are more formal and concise. -Mardy _______________________________________________ sipx-dev mailing list [email protected] List Archive: http://list.sipfoundry.org/archive/sipx-dev Unsubscribe: http://list.sipfoundry.org/mailman/listinfo/sipx-dev
