Smart Misnomers - Katherine Roberts
Misnomers (i.e. a name incorrectly or unsuitably applied) can make me amused, creative, irritated or angry, depending on context. They often arise quite innocently because something was named long before its correct nature was known, or because an earlier form of something has since been replaced by something to which the name no longer really applies. Some historical misnomers of this type include tinfoil (now aluminium), pencil lead (now graphite), and MOT test (the UK's Ministry of Transport no longer exists). Moving into the 21st century, we have the smartphone - not just a phone any more, and arguably only as smart as whoever is using it... until we get Artificial Intelligence (AI), of course, another potential misnomer since intelligence surely applies to organic brains and not to a vast store of digital knowledge programmed by soaking up everything those brains have produced? A smartphone these days is also a camera, satnav, bank card, and miniature computer, often