Cthulhu D, on 2013-January-04, 00:10, said:
The point is though it's silly to ban describing your leads as 2nd or 4th if you actually lead 2nd and 4th (the Continental style), which is currently banned because the English persist in describing stuff that is 1st, 2nd, 3rd or 4th as 2nd or 4th.
The aim of describing your methods is to be
helpful. It is not silly, it is commonsense to avoid using a name which know means something different in the country in which you are playing.
Suppose you play a Strong Club with 4-card majors. Is that Precision? No, of course not, and if you tell someone in England you play Precision you are misleading them. But in Portugal
all Strong Club systems are called "Precision": over there Precision means you play Strong Club. So what do you want us to do? Tell the Portuguese to change the name? Tell the English to change the name? Or tell people if they use a name which is in common use in a country to use that name as per the common use?
mjj29, on 2013-January-04, 04:53, said:
So, as someone who has been trying to use '2nd and 4th' rather than 'standard leads' in order to be more helpful I'm now in a quandary given this discussion of how that is confusing. Obviously I can say "we lead 4th from an honour and second from bad suits", but is there a more concise term of art I _should_ be using which will be unambiguous to brits, poles and others alike?
Easy: in England, actually throughout the British Isles, use the term 2nd and 4th because it is understood. 4th and 2nd is better and is not misunderstood. But if you play abroad, do not use the term.