It was only in 1969 (nice) that fungi officially became its own separate kingdom.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    331 day ago

    I think an issue here is that taxonomic and colloquial definitions don’t always agree.

    Spiders are colloquially bugs, but they’re not taxonomically “true bugs” (which is itself a colloquialism for Hemiptera). Tomatos are colloquially vegetables but taxonomically fruits…but afaik vegetable is a purely colloquial term anyway.

    And as someone else in the thread mentioned, colloquial berries are not always taxonomic berries.

    So…colloquially, “plants” sorta means, “macroscopic multicellular living non-animal thing,” but taxonomically it’s something else.

    • @Aeri
      link
      512 hours ago

      And literally anything is a fish if you try hard enough

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      624 hours ago

      If you’re talking about tomatoes, the difference is the context, and it isn’t a choice between colloquial vs scientific taxonomy, but between culinary/nutritional vs botany/taxonomy (and). You can talk about either in a colloquial context or a formal context, though generally there isn’t much reason to talk about botany in a colloquial setting.

      From a nutritional perspective, mushrooms are generally considered vegetables, too.

      afaik vegetable is a purely colloquial term anyway.

      I thought you were wrong but I looked it up and I appear to have been mistaken. It makes “tomatoes are fruits, not vegetables” sound nonsensical, as it implies that “vegetable” is a different taxonomical option, when really it’s just a word for objects with a particular collection of traits that are relevant in a different context. What we should he saying is “While tomatoes are not fruit in the food pyramid, taxonomically, they are.” Doesn’t really roll off the tongue, though. Maybe “Tomatoes are vegetables AND fruits!” would solve that?

      • TeoTwawki
        link
        English
        1313 hours ago

        but what about berry club? which things count as berries now?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      61 day ago

      Similarly, “a planet” can be understood in technical or colloquial context which changes the meaning. It can have a specific meaning or a vague flexible meaning, just like with berries.

      BTW raspberries are my favorite berries… sort of. Watermelons are pretty good too.

      • @CheeseNoodle
        link
        English
        26 hours ago

        Actually planet doesn’t have any hard set definition, we kind of just do it case by case because its damn near impossible to come up with a rigid definition that doesn’t suddenly classify some planets as moons or some moons as planets or create weird situations in which an object can switch between the two.

        • wanderer
          link
          English
          24 hours ago

          The International Astronomical Union (IAU) defined in August 2006 that, in the Solar System, a planet is a celestial body that:

          1. is in orbit around the Sun,
          2. has sufficient mass to assume hydrostatic equilibrium (a nearly round shape), and
          3. has “cleared the neighbourhood” around its orbit.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IAU_definition_of_planet