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canucklady | 3 years ago

They also depend on toilets that are cleaned by janitors, should we call them "sanitation engineers"?

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raydev|3 years ago

Sure, why not?

The key is that if it requires some sort of certification, as Canada claims it does, then it should be a modifier/adjective on the title like "certified janitor" or "licensed engineer".

Just claiming an existing single common noun as an exclusive term belonging to your organization is clearly an untenable position. If you have to keep reminding everyone that they're infringing on your trademark all the time by using a common word, you've already lost.

entropyie|3 years ago

Agreed. In Ireland the term would be "Chartered Engineer". Pretty clear I would say.

jbn|3 years ago

only if they are to be prosecuted in case of toilet malfunction!

A long time ago in Paris the street sweepers were euphemistically called "surface engineering technicians" (paraphrasing from the French "technicien de surface", but I think this is close enough)...

michaelteter|3 years ago

Take away the software, and how do the professional engineers work? No CAD. No structural analysis. No fluid dynamics simulations.

I think that's a bit harder to replace than it is to clean a dirty toilet. Presumably the professional engineers can clean their own toilet if absolutely necessary.

Nicksil|3 years ago

>Take away the software, and how do the professional engineers work? No CAD. No structural analysis. No fluid dynamics simulations.

Engineering was a thing before software.