Monday, February 14, 2011

'Push' or 'press'?

The other night I went to the Crystal Jade restaurant at Holland Village (Singapore). As I got to the top of the stairs I saw a sign on the glass door saying 'PUSH' with a mini handprint next to it. I was just about to push the door, when it started to slide to the side. This confused me greatly and I mentioned it to my friends once I walked in and found their table. One response was, "Aiyah, it means 'push the button to open the door.'"

The glass door at the entrance was one of those semi-automatic sliding doors that only open when you touch the sensor (I can't remember there really was a button) on them, so that they don't keep opening and closing every time someone walks by. It just so happened that someone had touched the sensor for me from inside when they saw me walking towards the door.

Now it's perfectly alright to say 'push the button', but the problem with seeing a sign that says 'PUSH' on a door, is that one would immediately assume from the context that it means pushing the entire door. I suppose what I was expecting to see was 'PRESS' or 'PRESS TO OPEN' or 'TOUCH TO OPEN'.

For me it was another one of those examples that I want to offer to linguists who largely ignore the contexts in which language is used. But my first thought was that the restaurant ought to change the sign before someone breaks the door trying to get in by pushing on it.

1 comment:

  1. my gawd, in singapore STILL?? i thought these signs only existed in china.

    so what are your plans after india and nepal?

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