Comment by mcdonje

3 days ago

Ok, fine, probably someone will get confused about anything.

It was made clear to everyone because of the word choice in context. If someone didn't get it then they didn't put two and two together.

I looked up the word in a few different dictionaries and the top entry aligns more with "subsequent" in every one.

You are wrong on this.

You seem quite interested in right versus wrong. I wonder if you will be intellectually honest if/when I reveal errors, mistakes, oversimplifications, and so on?

> I looked up the word in a few different dictionaries and the top entry aligns more with "subsequent" in every one.

Even if you had looked at every dictionary, would you claim such a process resolves ambiguity in general? I hope not.

As you know, there are other entries other than the first in a dictionary. Multiple entries means there are multiple usages: there can be ambiguity. Sometimes usage diminishes or eliminates ambiguity, but not always.

> I looked up the word in a few different dictionaries...

You only took a small sample. How can you offer this as definitive evidence? You can't.

In case you didn't check it or overlooked it, here is the first entry from the Apple Dictionary:

> 1 (of a time or season) coming immediately after the time of writing or speaking: we'll go next year | next week's parade.

Anyhow, my argument does not rely on pointing to a dictionary and saying "I'm right" and "you are wrong". I am saying:

1. Reasonable people see ambiguity (in this specific case and in general)

2. No one person is the arbiter of what is ambiguous for others.

3. Claiming there is a definitive process to resolve ambiguity for everyone is naive.