stopthatgirl7 to World News@lemmy.ml • 2 years agoLondon Cop Who Shot Dead Unarmed Black Man Charged With Murderwww.vice.comexternal-linkmessage-square84fedilinkarrow-up1396arrow-down110file-text
arrow-up1386arrow-down1external-linkLondon Cop Who Shot Dead Unarmed Black Man Charged With Murderwww.vice.comstopthatgirl7 to World News@lemmy.ml • 2 years agomessage-square84fedilinkfile-text
Prosecutors have charged a Metropolitan Police officer with murder after he shot rapper Chris Kaba in London last year.
minus-square@gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkEnglish12•2 years agoThis is absolutely ambiguous diction. “…who shot and killed unarmed black man…” would have been substantially more specific and readable without potential confusion.
minus-square@Strykker@programming.devlinkfedilink1•2 years agoExcept “shot and killed” it self can be ambiguous. What did he kill them with? Did he shoot him then kill him with a knife? Shot dead, means the shooting is what killed the man.
minus-squarePolarlinkfedilink-5•2 years agoIn school you learn to keep titles short. You added a lot of filler words that can ruin the headline on apps that cut them off, or printed media. Shot dead is correct.
minus-square@DarkDreamer13@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink11•edit-22 years ago“fatally shot” is the same amount of words and less confusing
minus-squarenudny ekscentryklinkfedilink7•2 years ago“shot dead” is a phrasel verb, therefore it can (I would argue in this particular context it should) be split: shot (whom?) dead. I shot him dead He shot his wife dead Cop shot unarmed black man dead (including press-specific omitting of articles because English is stupid)
minus-square@gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkEnglish4•edit-22 years agoAnd yet, we wouldn’t be having this discussion if the wording was actually unambiguous. I removed one word and added two. That’s not “a lot of filler words”.
This is absolutely ambiguous diction.
“…who shot and killed unarmed black man…” would have been substantially more specific and readable without potential confusion.
Except “shot and killed” it self can be ambiguous. What did he kill them with? Did he shoot him then kill him with a knife?
Shot dead, means the shooting is what killed the man.
In school you learn to keep titles short. You added a lot of filler words that can ruin the headline on apps that cut them off, or printed media.
Shot dead is correct.
“fatally shot” is the same amount of words and less confusing
“shot dead” is a phrasel verb, therefore it can (I would argue in this particular context it should) be split:
shot (whom?) dead.
I shot him dead
He shot his wife dead
Cop shot unarmed black man dead (including press-specific omitting of articles because English is stupid)
And yet, we wouldn’t be having this discussion if the wording was actually unambiguous.
I removed one word and added two. That’s not “a lot of filler words”.