On 11/27/2018 9:21 AM, Lieven L. Litaer wrote:
I would expect to be understood if I called the outer surface of my house {Som} “hull”.
Am 26.11.2018 um 17:59 schrieb SuStel:
I'd understand you if you said that in English, too, but it's not the right word.
Unless he lives in an airplane that's standing in his backyard :-)
Not even then. To my ear, only boats and ships (including spaceships, because a century of science-fiction using nautical terminology for spacecraft have linked the two) have hulls. Not cars, and not airplanes unless they're flying boats. According to Wikipedia, "The hull is the watertight body of a ship or boat." <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hull_(watercraft)> The body of an airplane is the fuselage. Now, I've just does a search for linking the words /airplane/ and /hull,/ and it seems that when you're dealing with insuring the vehicle, the word /hull/ is indeed used. This seems to be special jargon specifically for insurance purposes. Anyway, the point is that I wouldn't stretch the meaning of a word to refer to something kinda-sorta like the word unless I were really desperate. In this case, we're not desperate: we have other options that have been mentioned in this thread. -- SuStel http://trimboli.name