I like jets & rubies (and have used the terms) for a number of reasons. (Don't like gems for same reason about confusion).
In a weird way, it's close enough to "lefts & rights" for me to have no trouble remembering who's who (with rubies starting with "r"), and, (apologies to those who might be offended), because it fits the same syllables for me as "gents & ladies" (which I use for historical dance) or "men & women".
For some reason I just can't get a feel for larks & ravens (I have an idea of why but not worth sharing), and I'm not at all comfortable using bands & bares.
For me, it's whatever will be the easiest for me to remember which side is which, and if my brain is wired to think of "jets" (black color) as more masculine and "rubies" (red color) as more feminine (so easier for me to link them to left & right), that's my mental visual process. (I tried apples & oranges once with a group of kids - it was terrible because I couldn't remember which was which side - I have to have some frame of reference).
I think one of the reasons I have trouble with larks & ravens is because of having learned a foreign language that has a gender for nouns, and I want to make larks the right side and ravens the left, but then the syllable structure doesn't work for me.
My 2 cents.
Patricia
Sent from my iPhone
On 5/28/15 12:30 PM, Ron Blechner via
Callers wrote:
For those interested in gender free contra dance
terms:
1. Do you like or dislike jets / rubies ?
Like. (I'm responding on personal preference alone; I'm aware of
some objections to this, which I don't personally share.)
2. How would gems / rubies compare?
Less good, because the soft "ms" would make the call less clear.
Also, rubies _are_ gems, so this is confusing.
-- Alan