@eris @fiore @vaartis >I thought in English text "Gentoo/Linux" would mean "Gentoo or Linux". Learn something new every day.
Yes there are 2 meanings - "either of" or "parts of a whole".
You can also use + interchangeably as a joiner instead.
>But anyways, the word "Linux" has evolved to mean "any UNIX-like software distribution with a Linux kernel" nowadays
No it has not and that definition is self-referencing too.
Linux has always been the name of a specific proprietary kernel, although it is a popular error to refer to GNU as "Linux".
Such cancerous error has proliferated so deep that people write "Linux kernel", as they've been mislead to think that Linux is much more than a kernel and there's a minor part of Linux that is a kernel.
>trying to fight it feels like pointless prescriptivism ngl
Trying to fight lies and degeneracy may seem pointless where there is a massive glut of it, but every time someone sees the GNU and realizes that the OS is GNU and was written solely to grant the user freedom, freedom wins.
>I will still use "Linux" to refer to all Linux distros
Provided you are referring to distributions of the kernel, Linux, that is correct.
That is not correct if you are referring to distributions of GNU/Linux or LiGNUx and even more so when it comes to GNU-based distributions that work with multiple kernels like Debian and Gentoo.
>I'll use the terms the projects use themselves
Just because a project has chosen an incorrect name (to lie) doesn't mean it is legitimate to repeat such lie.
>Same as I'll say Make not GNU Make, M4 not GNU M4
I always name the GNU to spread the GNU/Freedom and advise which software you should run;
https://www.gnu.org/software/