Firefighters, police and EMTs rushed to bridge. Photo by Rodney French.
Alive, around 7 a.m., according to Northeast Fire Alert.
We usually speak of bodies being recovered, but living people being rescued. I'm glad the story has a happy ending, but the headline doesn't sound like it fits.
Technically, a body was recovered.
"rescue" - living person "recovery" - dead person's remains
Those are the terms used in search and rescue.
I didn't say it was a dead body. Living people have bodies too, bub.
I'm just explaining the terminology that's used by the people who do search and rescue. Bub.
"Live Body Recovered"?
Would love to hear the story of how they got into the water.
Glad they were rescued. It was really cold out there today.
Addendum:
Agree, correct terminology in this case is, "Person rescued". (Or "girl", "boy, "man", "woman", "child", "yoot", etc).
In this situation the words "body", and "recovered" aren't quite right.
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Comments
A minor quibble
We usually speak of bodies being recovered, but living people being rescued. I'm glad the story has a happy ending, but the headline doesn't sound like it fits.
An even more minor quibble
Technically, a body was recovered.
Not if the person lived
"rescue" - living person
"recovery" - dead person's remains
Those are the terms used in search and rescue.
Semantic
I didn't say it was a dead body. Living people have bodies too, bub.
Terminology
I'm just explaining the terminology that's used by the people who do search and rescue. Bub.
Quibble-proof?
"Live Body Recovered"?
Story?
Would love to hear the story of how they got into the water.
Glad they were rescued. It was really cold out there today.
Addendum:
Agree, correct terminology in this case is, "Person rescued". (Or "girl", "boy, "man", "woman", "child", "yoot", etc).
In this situation the words "body", and "recovered" aren't quite right.