I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff.
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I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
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I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
@sundogplanets I've largely used "semi", "semi-truck", "tractor trailer", and "18-wheeler" interchangeably

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I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
@sundogplanets local terminology in western ne:
truck = pickup truck
diesel = semi, tractor trailereverything in between is either a grain truck or a flatbed
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I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
I once tried to describe the piece of SpaceX Crew Dragon Trunk debris that was first discovered as being "about the shape and size of a semi-truck hood" for a BBC podcast, and all the very British people interviewing me were like... "Excuse me, a what?" To which I responded "Uhhhh is that a lorry?" and then they later cut in me saying "lorry" in a different tone of voice with my initial description, which I don't think even makes sense... Pretty funny if you know that whole story though.
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@drahardja I'm trying to ask about the whole thing as a unit, front driving bit + trailer
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@sundogplanets local terminology in western ne:
truck = pickup truck
diesel = semi, tractor trailereverything in between is either a grain truck or a flatbed
@sundogplanets
but a semi/tractor trailer hauling grain is still a diesel -
I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
@sundogplanets being british ‘lorry’ is pretty much a catch all, but in my mind it’s a single unit not tractor + trailer
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I once tried to describe the piece of SpaceX Crew Dragon Trunk debris that was first discovered as being "about the shape and size of a semi-truck hood" for a BBC podcast, and all the very British people interviewing me were like... "Excuse me, a what?" To which I responded "Uhhhh is that a lorry?" and then they later cut in me saying "lorry" in a different tone of voice with my initial description, which I don't think even makes sense... Pretty funny if you know that whole story though.
@sundogplanets are folks still saying, "A Large Boulder the Size of a Small Boulder"?
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I once tried to describe the piece of SpaceX Crew Dragon Trunk debris that was first discovered as being "about the shape and size of a semi-truck hood" for a BBC podcast, and all the very British people interviewing me were like... "Excuse me, a what?" To which I responded "Uhhhh is that a lorry?" and then they later cut in me saying "lorry" in a different tone of voice with my initial description, which I don't think even makes sense... Pretty funny if you know that whole story though.
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@sundogplanets being british ‘lorry’ is pretty much a catch all, but in my mind it’s a single unit not tractor + trailer
@paperposts @sundogplanets If I understand things correctly, the British call the big tractor+trailer combinations an 'artic', short for articulated.
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I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
@sundogplanets Also “18-wheeler” and “big rig”.
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I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
@sundogplanets I would recognize them all but I’ll also add “18 Wheeler” and “big rig”. Only just now noticing this thing has so many names.
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@teadrinker Where I grew up, we pronounced it sem-eye.
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@paperposts @sundogplanets If I understand things correctly, the British call the big tractor+trailer combinations an 'artic', short for articulated.
@roadskater @sundogplanets correct, well at least we did. also drivers would call the front end of that the ‘tractor’. lots of variations lorrys based on size/weight
smallish -3.5 tonne often a ‘truck’ or even van.
the US ‘truck’ is always a ‘pickup’
lorry also ‘box truck/box van’ but bigger than the 3.5 tonne type (more like the big moving trucks)
even remember’wagon’ but much more colloquial -
I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
@sundogplanets
Here in UK, the common term is an articulated lorry (or sometimes articulated truck), ‘artic’ for short. Most people probably don’t distinguish a separate term for the two parts, but ‘tractor’ and ‘trailer’ can be used. The front part is definitely not commonly called a truck, that term usually means an SUV-sized vehicle which Americans call a pickup. At least that’s my usage, others may vary. -
I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
In Australia, I say semi, or semi trailer. Usually just semi. Sem-ee, not sem-I. The front part I call a prime mover.
That hood in your other toot is usually a bonnet here, but you'd get away with hood.


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I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
@sundogplanets Maybe focus on the trailer part? Shipping containers are (I think) fairly globally standardized, though I’ve no idea if terms are.
Or are the satellites closer in size to the pulling vehicle than to the trailer / container?
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And definitely don't say it wouldn't fit in the boot!
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I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
@sundogplanets semi trailer, prime mover, B double, road train.
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I apparently really like to use trucks (both pickup and the bigger types) as comparison points for satellite stuff. And all the local terminology variations for trucks are silly.
Which of the following would you recognize as a term to describe a large vehicle that has a detachable front part that drives and which can pull a large trailer (or 2 or 3)
@sundogplanets 18-wheeler's another fairly common one 'round these parts.
I know what a lorry is but I don't expect to hear anyone say it in an American accent.
(I recently read an old UK Transformers comic where President Reagan refers to Optimus Prime as a "lorry" and was delighted by how glaringly out-of-place it was.)