Covid-19, Co-Actors, and Cigars
What Do You Call the Person Who Exposes You to Covid-19?
Sometimes, a cigar is just a cigar.”
–Sigmund Freud.
I literally don’t understand 90% of the scientific terms on the resumé of my 21 year-old, premed son.
In the course of doing volunteer contact tracing for Santa Clara county (Bay Area), he’s had to learn even more terminology.
So, when he used the term “co-actor” in connection with a housemate who’d recently been exposed to Covid-19, I assumed he was simply using medical jargon.
Nope.
The housemate was in play rehearsals, and one of her castmates (“co-actors”) had gotten sick.
Thankfully, the housemate (“co-resident??”) tested negative a few days later.
“Rising Sophomores,” etc.
Unbeknownst to me, higher education has minted a new adjective for the gap between academic years — as in, “after sophomore year, but before junior year.”
Such a student is now referred to as a “rising junior.”
Whatever.
To me, that term suggests a blue blood scion rising in the family business (Law firm? Investment banking?).
Alternatively, it begs the question: Is a college student on the verge of flunking out a falling sophomore/junior/senior??
See also, If “Colloboration” is Good, Why Are “Colloborators” Bad?
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