The Meaning of “Sewer” in a Pandemic
Homonyms in the Age of Coronavirus
It’s not an encouraging sign that I’m writing this.
Until about six weeks ago, a “sewer” was an underground conduit that carried waste water and sewage.
Now?
It’s someone at home — or perhaps a worker at an idled clothing factory — who uses a sewing machine to create ad hoc face masks, one at a time.
“Sewer” vs. Sewer”
Of course, that’s instead of mass-producing N95 masks by the tens of millions, and getting them into the hands of vulnerable healthcare workers, and after that, the general public.
The other high priority now, at least outside of overwhelmed places like New York City and New Orleans: rolling out (vs. promising) mass coronavirus testing, followed by prompt, accurate results.
P.S.: Runner-up coronavirus homonym: “bat” (as in, “baseball”) and “bat” (the flying mammal — and likely original host of the coronavirus).
See also, “Masks Don’t Work — But, Save Them for Us!” (Huh?!?)“; and “Real Estate Sales During a Pandemic: Hand Sanitizer, $75 Drone Shoots, and “Covid-19 Clauses”.”
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