pne: A picture of a plush toy, halfway between a duck and a platypus, with a green body and a yellow bill and feet. (Default)
Philip Newton ([personal profile] pne) wrote2011-04-29 07:47 pm

Cc D. ee

In an attempt to understand the notation “Cc D. ee” on my blood donor pass (well, in one of them, but that’s a rant for another day; the other one has “CcD.ee”), I headed towards Wikipedia and found the article “Rh blood group system”; however, the notation there differed from what I saw.

Fortunately, the German article “Rhesusfaktor”, which was interwiki-linked from the English one, contained the same notation I found. And with the addition of the Wiener notation, I think I was able to convert: CcDdee = R1r = D+ C+ E- c+ e+ = DCe/dce.

And according to the English article, that group comprises about 32.7% of a sample taken of the UK population in 1948, and according to the German article, about 35.0% of the population of Germany (a plurality; the next most populous group is just over half that, with 18.5% - the situation seems to be similar with the UK sample).

So in other words: I have bog standard blood. Absolutely middle-of-the-road. And by my AB0 type (0+), that makes me one of 35% in Germany, nearly the largest group (only A+ is slightly larger, with 37%—interestingly enough, in the UK, the percentages are exactly reversed). So again, bog standard.

yvi: Kaylee half-smiling, looking very pretty (Default)

[personal profile] yvi 2011-04-29 05:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Which just means that more people are in need of your blood :) Almost universal donor!

Me, I'm one of the <10% B+ people.
yvi: Kaylee half-smiling, looking very pretty (Default)

[personal profile] yvi 2011-04-29 06:04 pm (UTC)(link)
That's pretty much what I meant with the "almost universal". 50% wouldn't be quite as big a boost to the ego, would it?

(I, um, kind of wrote a few pages paper on blood group evolution and distribution during my Evolutionary Biology specialisation - the distribution is quite fascinating)
steorra: Restaurant sign that says Palatal (linguistics)

[personal profile] steorra 2011-04-30 12:51 am (UTC)(link)
I don't think "bog standard" is an expression I've seen/heard before. Do you know why "bog"?
steorra: Restaurant sign that says Palatal (linguistics)

[personal profile] steorra 2011-04-30 01:21 pm (UTC)(link)
I finally thought to check the OED, which does have it. This link should give free access to the entry for 3 days.

Basically, the OED indicates that the etymology is uncertain, but that it could be an alteration of "box-standard" with influence from "bog n.4", which is the "toilet" one - although "box-standard" isn't actually attested until later.