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Re: Draft, draught, drawPosted by R. Berg on April 04, 2001 In Reply to: Re: Draft, draught, draw posted by Insight on April 04, 2001
: : : : : Why is it called a "breeze" in the summer, but a "draft" in the winter. : : : Same here in the UK. A 'breeze' is a pleasant summer wind; a 'draft' is an unwanted flow of air at any season. : : "Draft" (alt. spelling: "draught"), "drag," and "draw" come from the same Anglo-Saxon root. To draw is to pull. Draft horses pull a wagon; a bartender drawing a glass of beer pulls it from the tap; a draftsman pulls a pen across the paper; a military draft pulls citizens into government service. An indoor air current between two leaky windows on opposite sides of a room is a draft because the air is pulled (by differential pressure) out at one leak and in at the other. Nevertheless, people indoors do sometimes say "There's a breeze in here." : A draft becomes a breeze only in upper class homes with very large rooms which are more representative of outdoor conditions: perhaps? Sorry, I wouldn't know about conditions in upper-class homes. |