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EBU

 

 

Recently a bridge player I know referred to some bridge beginners as 'rabbits'. He certainly did not intend in any way to offend anybody. However, it got a swift reaction and several people said it was a terrible word to describe beginners. I have looked up the word in a 'Bridge Players Dictionary'. The book is very old. It is in latin!!! It clearly says that inexperienced players are called rabbits. Does anybody else use this word. I think it does sound offensive.

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It is common enough that I have heard it quite a few times over the years, but not routinely. Although perhaps I hear it less often because they are calling me the rabbit, when I am not around http://www.bridgebase.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/default/ph34r.gif

 

Anyway, I would not be offended (rather, motivated), but I can see how some people would be.

 

For what it's worth, I take the term to have a connotation of a player who has been playing a while but is still bad; not so much as a true beginner (who could be the next Meckstroth for all we know).

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It's in fairly common use, together with synonyms like "bunny". I don't think it's any more or less offensive than "bad player".

 

It's offensive to rabbits, I suppose, in the same way as "old fool" is offensive to old people.

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I generally don't take offense when no offense is intended but I find it difficult to believe that no offense was intended. Did the speaker intend it as a compliment?

 

If someone calls me a bad player I can acknowledge that, compared to some, I surely am. Compared to others, I surely am not. If someone calls me a rabbit, what am I to make of that? I have large ears? A twitchy nose? Mostly I write the guy off as a jerk. And I would acknowledge that I did indeed intend that to be offensive.

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I'm used to the term from cricket where it carries no offence, a rabbit is somebody who can't bat (although presumably can bowl or keep), and the terminology extends to a batsman who's out being "back in the hutch".

 

I'd imagine it's marginally more offensive in bridge as it implies a bad player in general with no redeeming feature. The term "bunny bashing" for making a score by taking the absolute maximum off the less good players while trying to hold your own against the good players is very standard, but as it isn't targeted carries no offence.

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I would say not offensive at all, more a statement of fact. And certainly no more offensive than the EBU calling you a 'two'.

I'm living proof that the 'rabbits' will get over it as my BBO ID was coined many years ago(by others) when I went through an unlucky spell as declarer.

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Bunnies or rabbits are good terms to describe weaker players in general, but I would never target specific players with those terms, more likely using the term in contexts like "that treatment may work against bunnies, but that isn't something that's going to hold up against good players".
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Just out of curiosity, how did the rabbit respond?

 

Player A referred to player B as a rabbit and player B said/did?

I can think of a number of possible retorts, some perhaps clever, none suitable for print here.

Which, of course, is why one should not start this name calling in the first place.

 

 

The context was not given. I am assuming these guys were not old buddies. If they are, they can do as they please. But random player A at the club should not be publicly giving his assessment of random player B, no matter if he thinks B is a rabbit, a grizzly, or an elk.

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I wonder if there's a relationship with the Rueful Rabbit? If the term goes way back, maybe Mollo chose the rabbit for this character based on the old slang.

 

When people talk behind other people's backs, they're bound to use colorful language; that's how people gossip and tell stories. As long as you don't call someone a rabbit to their face, I don't think it's too terrible.

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As far as I know this term comes from the chess world where, for example, certain openings are known as "bunny-killers" because they are such a good way for better players to get weaker players into positions where they can be outplayed. There was also a famous and classic book, Chess for Tigers, which made extensive use of the term. I have also used the term on occasion relating to bridge (usually with reference to certain styles of play being good against weaker players) but never directly to the opponents! It is pretty much the same as beating your opponents soundly and then telling them they are crap. I know a few players round here that do do that and consider it extremely rude.
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