Hagi said:
Pyro Paul said:
sigh...
Look at the Word professional.
notice, it is comprised of a word and a suffix.
Profession -al
now, as with most all words in the english language, adding '-al' as a suffix will mean 'of' or more accuratly 'pertaining to'
so Professional would litterally mean
Profession of.
and because it is an adj. it would be placed before a noun.
Professional Artist = Profession of someone that does art*
(the ist suffix denotes 'someone that (does)')
so now that we've properly disected 'Professional Artist'
lets look at it.
Profession of someone that does Art
now lets define the word 'Profession'
although there are multiple definitions, Most of which are tied to religion (profess- to announce/declare, ergo profession- is the act of announcement/declaring 'his profession of the end of days could be heard clear across the square')
Profession (when describing work)
a vocation(job) founded upon specialized skill and/or educational training
so a professional artist is:
someone of a job founded upon specialized skill and/or educational training for art.
-or-
someone with specialized/taught in making Art.
contrast to Professional builder:
some one specialized/taught in Building.
to Professional Killer:
some one specialized/taught in Killing.
You see a dictionary is ment to help you quickly understand the basic meaning behind a word so that you can understand them in the context they are probably used... from there you can then clarify the meaning through the context it is found in. As such, a Professional Criminal from your definition would be a person that is capable of making a living off of Crime. Yet in the context of the liturature it is found in, for instance Sherlock Holmes, it would mean a Criminal able to ply is trade and gain enough money off it to live comfortably with out getting caught... a feat of great skill.
Reading all this...
would you really still call Rebecca Black a Professional Artist?
sigh... right back at you...
"someone of a job founded upon specialized skill and/or educational training for art."
Rebecca Black has a job, namely singer. She sings, and she makes money with it. It's her job.
Her job is founded on the specialised skill of singing. Note that specialised does not mean good. It means:
"To pursue a special activity, occupation, or field of study."
"To concentrate on a particular activity or product."
Rebecca Black is pursuing and concentrating on her activity of singing. As such it's a specialised skill.
Singing is an artistic skill. It's part of an artistic medium, music.
As such Rebecca Black has a job founded on a specialised skill for art. Thus she is a professional artist.
Having a profession means you focus yourself on a particular skill in order to make a livelihood from that skill (it in no way or form has to be a difficult or otherwise challenging skill, you have to be just good enough to make a livelihood out of it).
Rebecca Black is specialising in her skill of singing, she's no good at it but that's irrelevant, and she's making a livelihood out of it.
ps. You suddenly, out of nowhere introduce "someone with specialized/taught in making Art." if you want to go by that definition I suggest you explain it. Professional still means you have to have a job. If you have just the skill and no job then it's not professional and you do not have a profession.
seriously?
you don't just take a sentence apart and adlib it back together. you've completely disregarded the basic rules of the english language just so you make it sound like your broken logic is right. And ontop of that, you again Dictionary.com up words with out understanding exactly what they mean to support your statement.
Specialize.
Special-ize
special = distinguished/superior
-ize = form (galvonizd/pulverized/demonized)
Specialized Skill = Superior form of skill
Specialized Defense = Superior form of defense
Specialized Training = Superior form of training
'a job founded upon specialized skill and/or educational training'
is a single cohesive statement.
you can not seperate it
but just because, lets break it down even more so you can't twist it's words.
a job founded upon specialized skill and/or educational training
a job founded upon a Superior Form of Skill and/or educational training
founded = Based/built upon (the settlers founded the city which we now call home)
upon = up on/on.
a job built on superior form of skill and/or educational training.
a job based on superior form of skill and/or educational training.
the only way these statements can be read are as follows:
a job built on superior form of skill
a job built on educational training
a job built on superior form of skill and educational training
a job based on superior form of skill
a job based on superior educational training
a job based on superior form of skill and educational traning
So.
Rebecca Black is a Singer based on her Superior singing skills.
Rebecca Black is a Singer based on her time with her Vocal coach.
are either of these statements true?
no.
Rebecca Black is a singer built on her superior singing skills.
Rebecca Black is a Singer built on her lengthy time with her vocal coach.
are either of these statements true?
no.
Now replace these statements with any other craft under the trade of 'music artist' (song writing, musical insterment playing, dancing, etc)
do any of those answers ring yes?
Not that i can see.
so.
Is Rebecca Black a Professional Music Artist?
No.
If you have just the skill and no job then it's not professional and you do not have a profession.
to this statement specifically.
Would a Professional Killer need to constantly be killing?
Would a Professional Criminal need to constantly be stealing?
Professional denotes that they have the skills required to ply the specific trade that they describe. Not that they are constantly under employ to do things under their profession.
if you want to debate the subtle nuances between Occupation and Profession...
a Profession is any vocation which Pays for your Skill.
an Occupation is any vocation which Pays for your Time.
and yes. i would go so far as to say that Rebecca Black was paid for her time, considering the amount of auto-tunning there is even in her new song, i strongly doubt they paid for her singing skills.