Glossary entry

English term or phrase:

Protect yourself for the most probable disassters of 2012

English answer:

Incorrect? No.

Added to glossary by George Rabel
Sep 23, 2015 21:23
8 yrs ago
3 viewers *
English term

Protect yourself for the most probable disassters of 2012

English Marketing Business/Commerce (general) US English
Browsing through a Loerzer's Archives magazine from 2012 I found an image of an ad for an insurance company. The copy reads as follows:

PROTECT YOURSELF FOR THE MOST PROBABLE DISASTERS OF 2012

I'd would have written "from" rather than "for."

My question is: Is the use of "for," exactly as used in this example, incorrect?

Discussion

Cilian O'Tuama Oct 1, 2015:
Send me a stamped, addressed envelope with the cigars, to my work address, and we'll see. ;-)
George Rabel (asker) Sep 30, 2015:
Cilian, I got this reply: Dear George,

Thank you for contacting the ProZ.com support center.

Except in cases of abuse, ProZ.com policy is that before an answer can be ungraded, both the asker and the answerer who originally received the points must agree to ungrade that answer. If you can obtain approval from the answerer you originally selected (by asking the selected answerer to submit a support request specifying the KudoZ question to be un-graded and stating s/he agrees with this action), I will be happy to change the grade for you.

Hope this helps!

Please let me know if you need anything else.

Best regards,

M. Paula Durrosier
ProZ.com Staff
George Rabel (asker) Sep 30, 2015:
I guess Nancy Lynn is not around... ...so I opened a support ticket to get my error corrected. Sorry Cilian, I gave the cigars to the Pope : )
Cilian O'Tuama Sep 28, 2015:
@George - You'll need my consent. :-) But here you have it. Please send the cigars to my work address.
George Rabel (asker) Sep 28, 2015:
Charles, Cilian I meant to award the KudoZ to Charles, but I made a mistake. I contacted the moderator this morning with a request to correct the error. I apologize

Responses

+2
31 mins
English term (edited): protect yourself for the most probable disasters of 2012
Selected

Incorrect? No.

Protect yourself ...
for the future,
for the rest of your life,
for the most probable disasters...

I think it's fine, just has a different meaning.
Peer comment(s):

agree Eckhard Boehle
10 hrs
agree Shera Lyn Parpia
14 hrs
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
+6
29 mins

it's correct

There's a difference between protecting yourself from something and protecting yourself for something. An insurance policy can't protect you from disasters. Having an insurance policy doesn't have any effect on the probability of them happening to you. It can only protect you from their consequences, or mitigate the damage they may do you if they do happen to you. So it can provide you with protection for them, protection for, not from, the eventuality of them happening to you. Similarly you could speak of protecting yourself for a conflict, when you can't prevent it from happening; it means taking measures in advance to ensure that the damage it can do to you is minimised: putting on armour, for example. Protecting yourself from a conflict is different; it implies avoiding it, preventing it from happening to you at all.

Certainly you can also prepare yourself for disasters, but that's not the same thing. Preparing yourself might be simply adjusting yourself mentally to the prospect, for example. It doesn't necessarily involve taking steps to protect yourself.

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Note added at 35 mins (2015-09-23 21:59:11 GMT)
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You can protect yourself from disasters, in the sense of doing things that make it less likely they will happen to you. You can protect yourself from burglary by locking your home, having a burglar alarm, etc. But taking out insurance doesn't protect you from burglary; it protects you for burglary by protecting you from its consequences.
Note from asker:
Outstanding explanation, Charles. Your reasoning is flawless. Thank you
Muchas hracias
Peer comment(s):

agree Cilian O'Tuama : Not only not incorrect.
28 mins
No, though the double negative does answer George's precise question: "is it incorrect?" Thanks, Cilian.
agree Teresa Reinhardt
8 hrs
Thanks, Teresa :)
agree Eckhard Boehle
10 hrs
Thank you, Eckhard!
agree Shera Lyn Parpia
11 hrs
Thanks, Shera Lyn :)
agree Eleanor Bridgwood (X)
16 hrs
Thanks, Eleanor :)
agree Phong Le
16 hrs
Thank you, Phong Le :)
Something went wrong...
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