Phonedave
Well-Known Member
I’m pretty sure all jargon began as normal words. When adopted by fans, they often take on specific or shorthand meanings.
Of course the idea of sight lines didn’t originate with Disney, but Disney Imagineers talk about it (or, at least they used to) so much that many of us fans came to see we’ll-planned sight lines as vital to good theme park design.
Queue is indeed a “normal” word, but in pros fandom, it’s used to refer to “the designed space where guests wait and are prepared for a ride.”
In my experience, Americans typically use the word “lines” when waiting in “queues” outside theme parks. As in, “I had to wait in line for 30 minutes at the DMV…”
There is lots of jargon that originated within the specified field it is used in
In fact, that is the definition of jargon "Special words or expressions that are used by a particular profession or group and are difficult for others to understand.".
Queue is easy for anybody to understand. Especially for anybody from Europe.
Speil is another one. Anybody with either a Jewish or German background likely knows that one without knowing Disney.
Many people know the term sightlines. They come up exceedingly often at planning board meetings (if you are a homeowner and care about that sort of thing)
Now if I told your that I was rolling out a new product and we would be conducting a FOA you would likely not know what that is unless you have a background in wireline telecommunication. Even if I told you FOA was First Office Application, the average person would have no clue as to what that means (or where it came from), that is jargon.
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