But that's the whole problem & the biggest reason to define them(?)is that the terms are so subjective that they could mean pretty much anything
If those terms already had a definition, we wouldn't discussing about defining them.
I'd be the first to ignore anything described with such words, but just look at the compressor's thread, everyone kept debating about something that was only phrased using subjective words, leading nowhere.
The majority is most people. If a lot of people think that fat means spectrally rich, and some people think it means saturated, then it means spectrally rich, and the rest will use the proper term if they want to be understood.I'll also remind you that since it's sound we're talking about, the "majority" you wish to represnt includes anyone who can hear
Who writes dictionaries?are some kind of obscure group you think is some sort of authority on those completely subjective terms.
Again, since you learnt to speak & write, you did comply to an authority above you, that taught you what every word means. While languages slowly evolve, you wouldn't go to a store, ask for an apple, then complain because you were sold an apple while your own interpretation of an apple is an orange. People agreed on "apple" to refer to that fruit, and no one will question that.
I don't know why you think that sujective means no possible definition. Hot, cold, beautiful, sad, they're all subjective and yet they have definitions. Does it mean that sad=col=beautiful=hot, because they're all subjective terms? No, so a subjective term can still have a definition, describing enough for 'cold' not to mean 'sad'. Hot/cold may be subjective in quantity, but they're about temperature, that's already a definition.
If "fat" is generally used talking about spectral richness, then it doesn't matter if for a few people it means something else, if they want to be understood, they will adapt. I adapted to english, I'm not using french terms all over the place, because they wouldn't be understood by most. Fat will still remain somewhat subjective, but at least everyone will know it's about spectral richness, and not saturation, low-end or whatever.
being the first one (& I found nothing else) would be enough to be authoritativeit's impossible to make an authoritative glossary
What's good in debating about anything described by subjective terms?it would do way more harm than good
The OP could as well have started "what compressor is the most awesome", followed by pages of useless debate.