bixby, on 2014-January-23, 22:24, said:
... 2S was alerted ... South said, "It's a generic game try." No other explanation was asked for or offered ... After the hand was over, N/S explained that 2S was artificial and had no relation to spades. My partner and I felt that that was not conveyed by the term "generic game try" The Director, however, suggested that the phrase "generic game try" necessarily means "artificial game try."
barmar, on 2014-January-24, 10:13, said:
One of the definitions of "generic" is "not specific". That seems to be a reasonable way to describe a game try that doesn't refer to any particular suit.
Bbradley62, on 2014-January-24, 22:42, said:
I think "generic game try" is a completely sufficient explanation. OP: If you didn't think "generic game try" meant "game try without saying anything about the second-mentioned suit", what did you think it meant?
pran, on 2014-January-25, 03:56, said:
If a call is a (game) try then there must be something particular about the responser's hand that will make him either accept or refuse the try.
IMO, a
generic game try is unspecific about particular requirements. I agree with Barmar and BBradley62. Both the rationale for the convention and the economy of the explanation remind of Fougasse's WWII cartoons "Careless talk costs lives"