Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I don't think that we're disagreeing about the meaning of the word "completed". It's just that I think it's possible to completely glaze 1/2 of a pot or completely fill 1/3 of a tray.
I'd argue that we are entirely disagreeing about the meaning of the word "completed".
The original question asked "How many glazed pots can you
complete?"
In my understanding of the word "complete" in the above sentence, "complete" means finish completely, 100%. The pot is completely, 100% glazed. The pot is the unit that must be completely glazed. 100% of the unit (pot) must be covered in glaze, for the pot to be considered "complete".
This is the definition of "complete" as I understand it.
In your understanding, "complete" doesn't mean "finish" a unit. If you paint 1/100th of the unit, (the pot), you say, you have "completed" that 1/100th piece. This definition of complete would seem to me to make the word complete quite meaningless because you would always have to specify what fraction of the pot you have accomplished, when you use the word completed. I would not use the word "completed" to mean 1/100th of a pot has been glazed.