Editing 2339: Pods vs Bubbles

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As the initial surge of cases appeared to decline, in places where such drastic restrictions had been implemented and seemingly had prevented ever higher infection rates, many regions decreased the strictness of these measures. For instance, permitting any two households (neither having signs of symptoms) to meet with each other ''and only each other'', or allowing one person in a multi-occupancy residence to invite just one other person to reassociate with. Further relaxation of rules may have occurred since, with the caveat that even one case of COVID-19 discovered in such a co-isolating group of people should be considered a risk factor to every other member (however the local jurisdiction deals with that).
 
As the initial surge of cases appeared to decline, in places where such drastic restrictions had been implemented and seemingly had prevented ever higher infection rates, many regions decreased the strictness of these measures. For instance, permitting any two households (neither having signs of symptoms) to meet with each other ''and only each other'', or allowing one person in a multi-occupancy residence to invite just one other person to reassociate with. Further relaxation of rules may have occurred since, with the caveat that even one case of COVID-19 discovered in such a co-isolating group of people should be considered a risk factor to every other member (however the local jurisdiction deals with that).
  
A common term for the larger social unit, not to overlap with any other expanded social unit, is a 'bubble', perhaps to imply that you can only have membership of one bounded bubble at a time (unlike an {{w|Euler diagram}}). The term ‘build your bubble’ was coined by Dr Ingham (University of Otago, New Zealand) as a way of encouraging people with disabilities to create safe ‘bubbles’ with care givers during lockdown.  Another common term is 'pod', representing the closed nature of a pod. There is probably as much variation across the world about what podding ''or'' bubbling practically means as there is between any two instances of those podded ''vs.'' those bubbled. Some sports leagues have resumed play in these structures, [https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/29256449/everything-know-nba-22-team-restart-walt-disney-world with the media] [https://nhl.nbcsports.com/2020/07/28/bubble-hockey-begins-nhl-playoff-teams-adjust-to-quarantine/ using the] [https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/30/sports/basketball/sports-bubble-nba-mlb.html bubble terminology], both in the United States and [https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2020/jun/23/ashley-giles-warns-england-players-isolation-bubble-will-be-no-holiday-camp across the wider world], as players and [https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/53338148 commentators alike] resume some degree even of international competition (so long as they [https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/53456667 follow the 'bubble' rules]).
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A common term for the larger social unit, not to overlap with any other expanded social unit, is a 'bubble', perhaps to imply that you can only have membership of one bounded bubble at a time (unlike an {{w|Euler diagram}}). The term ‘build your bubble’ was coined by the rather cute Dr Ingham (University of Otago, New Zealand) as a way of encouraging people with disabilities to create safe ‘bubbles’ with care givers during lockdown.  Another common term is 'pod', representing the closed nature of a pod. There is probably as much variation across the world about what podding ''or'' bubbling practically means as there is between any two instances of those podded ''vs.'' those bubbled. Some sports leagues have resumed play in these structures, [https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/29256449/everything-know-nba-22-team-restart-walt-disney-world with the media] [https://nhl.nbcsports.com/2020/07/28/bubble-hockey-begins-nhl-playoff-teams-adjust-to-quarantine/ using the] [https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/30/sports/basketball/sports-bubble-nba-mlb.html bubble terminology], both in the United States and [https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2020/jun/23/ashley-giles-warns-england-players-isolation-bubble-will-be-no-holiday-camp across the wider world], as players and [https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/53338148 commentators alike] resume some degree even of international competition (so long as they [https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/53456667 follow the 'bubble' rules]).
  
 
Despite the semantic inconsequentialities of the difference, here Cueball clearly expresses a personal preference that he would probably not like being kept in an enforced social situation with someone who uses the other term.
 
Despite the semantic inconsequentialities of the difference, here Cueball clearly expresses a personal preference that he would probably not like being kept in an enforced social situation with someone who uses the other term.

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