TimW wrote: ↑19 Jul 2022, 07:52
chrisc90 wrote: ↑18 Jul 2022, 23:36
I've never ever heard the word 'mechanize' to describe a person (mechanic) that fixes something.
Imagine saying, " i'm taking my car to the mechanic so he can mechanize it" Sounds totally stupid. You would say your taking it to get 'repaired' or get 'fixed'.
For it to be used right in speech, you need to change the context of your sentence and how you are using it.
https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dicti ... h/mechanic
mechanize - is effectively the automation of something.
And yet your car is a mechanized wagon. While mechanic may be mostly used nowadays as someone who repairs or maintains a machine, it can also be someone who builds a machine.
It may not be the everyday use, but the word mechanic is derived from mechanize. You will also not often accuse your doctor of doctoring something, yet the words have the same origin.
In English, the word is mechanise, s not z. USian uses the z.
When one mechanises something, one is using mechanical systems to replace human labour. One mechanises a factory, for example, to enable more cars to be built. The factory doesn't mechanise cars, it builds them. The people in the factory don't mechanise cars, they build them. The output of the factory, the cars, then mechanise the population - the car replaces the human labour of walking/carrying things long distances.
As for doctors, one wouldn't say "I'm going to see a doctor so he can doctor me"
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.