I never use the term Petronella for that move.  It's always "spin to the right" 
or twirl to the right" For me. Petronella is the name of a Chestnut that the 
move comes from as most all of you know.   Callers used to say "as in the dance 
Peronella..." but through the evolutionary process is no longer mentioned.  The 
move has taken on the name of the dance.   That said, if's my personal 
preference not to use that name for the move.  It does bug me a little when 
other callers use it as the name for the move, but not enough to say anything 
or lose any sleep over it. 

Rich

> 
> On Fri, Nov 23, 2012 at 3:10 PM, Maia McCormick <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> So I had my first introduction to contradance through my school, taught by
>> student callers who had been taught by student callers before them, etc. I
>> was first taught to call a Petronella as... a Petronella. And then as I
>> started going to more outside dances and started reading up on the practice
>> of calling, I heard the move more and more just called as "balance the ring
>> and spin to the right" or "balance the ring and spin to swap."
>> 
>> So, esteemed caller-folk, I ask you: how do* you* call a Petronella Turn?
>> By name, or with some other turn of phrase? Do you have any sense how
>> widespread either of these conventions are? Why not just call a Petronella
>> a Petronella? If you call it by description rather than by name, do you
>> generally put the entire call together (e.g. "BALance the RING and SPIN to
>> the RIGHT") or break it up ("BALance the RING... and SPIN to the RIGHT" so
>> that "spin to the right" ends up coming on beats 3 & 4, just before the
>> actual spinning occurs)? Any thoughts are welcome!
>> 
>> Cheers,
>> Maia
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