User talk:2602:306:25AC:97D9:5859:450A:EFB6:311A

Suggestion:

Often spacecraft, aircraft, or trains, especially those of particular fame or notoriety, can be, or have been, referred to using the feminine personal pronoun, in contemporary parlance. Examples: USS Akron (ZRS-4) and USS Macon (ZRS-5) were airships, which are aircraft by Wikipedia definition (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircraft) and referred to as "she" and "her" here in Wikipedia. Other examples include the B-17 Memphis Belle, B-29's Bockscar and Enola Gay, Malaysia Airlines' Flight 370, etc. Among aviators, aircraft have also been often referred to as "ships" in any case. Spacecraft such as Space Shuttles Challenger and Columbia, have also been so treated in NASA and the media, as well as trains such as The Empire Builder, The Flying Scotsman, the Sunset Limited, and the like.

I recommend considering these conditions as addenda, however I am going to leave that up to the original editor, out of common courtesy, and also since I feel I am walking on eggshells here at the moment. :(

Thanks!

Brian Daly