Tell me more ×
English Language & Usage Stack Exchange is a question and answer site for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts. It's 100% free, no registration required.

Consider the following items:

  • the warning track around a baseball outfield
  • the red stripe near the end of the a roll of receipt paper
  • the margin bell on a typewriter
  • the rumble strips when a highway becomes a street

They all seem to be of a class: things that give you a warning that something is about to change, that you're almost done. I'm looking for an expression or word for this.

(I was thinking "canary in the coal mine", but that is for emergencies, disasters, that kind of thing -- I want something for the routine changes of life.)

share|improve this question
2  
Generically they can be called *ALERTS – Chad Jul 29 '11 at 18:39
1  
What about the word you used already, warning? – simchona Jul 29 '11 at 18:42
1  
I have heard these referred to as "terminal signals" or "marginal signals," I think. If I can find a reference, I'll post an answer. – KitFox Jul 29 '11 at 18:44
These could be considered a type of instructions at the point of need; some might be called expiration warnings (paper, medication) or transition notifications. – aedia λ Jul 29 '11 at 20:08
1  
Dammit! Someone was selling an old-style packet of Rizla cigarette papers on Ebay. Although all the papers had been long-smoked, the seller proudly announced that it still had the original "only 5 leaves left" notification slip. But I can't link to it because someone's already snapped up this collector's piece bargain! :) – FumbleFingers Jul 29 '11 at 21:10
show 3 more comments

5 Answers

The word warning you used in your title has the following meanings:

  1. An intimation, threat, or sign of impending danger or evil.
  2. a. Advice to beware. b. Counsel to desist from a specified undesirable course of action.
  3. A cautionary or deterrent example.
  4. Something, such as a signal, that warns.

I think that the second definition or the fourth capture your contextual meanings.

share|improve this answer
I was looking for an expression that meant those warnings as distinct from other kinds of warnings. See Kit's suggestions. – Malvolio Jul 29 '11 at 18:54

You might be interested in words like cue, sign, notice, signal. They seem imply less danger than warning or alert.

share|improve this answer

I'd like to suggest transition marker.

share|improve this answer

You could further categorise each of the previous words into sub classes: visual and auditory. Such as the auditory alert of an alarm. Or the sensory effects created by the bumps in the road or the visual signs of solid vs. broken lane markings.

share|improve this answer
1  
Hey, get me a name for the categories and we'll start looking at the sub-categories! Actually, the categorization that interests me are the passive, built-in ones like rumble strips and the end-of-roll tinting, and more active ones like the margin bell and somebody waving a flag. I do not consider markings at the actual limit (like lane markings) or ones that are wholly static, so that your experience doesn't change as you approach the limit (like lane markings again) to be in this category at all. – Malvolio Jul 30 '11 at 14:26

I was immediately thinking of the word 'precursor'. This would have to be used in context though I guess.

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.