« first day (219 days earlier)      last day (4594 days later) » 

00:38
0
Q: Is there a name for the process of conversion, where a contranym is merged at the expense of the original?

Tom HThe example I cite is the term "clinical death". In the UK and in the US, the authoritative medical usage, and hence "clinical" context define death unambiguously to be irreversible cessation of life.(UK guidelines, US guidelines) And further that time of death is taken as that point at which th...

 
6 hours later…
07:07
Is it correct to say "I might fall asleep"?
 
1 hour later…
08:11
i've had this in my head all morning so i hereby ask it:
0
Q: Are there languages which contrasting unvoiced aspirated, unaspirated, and ejective stops?

hippietrailIn English there are just two series of stops, voiced (b, d, g) and unvoiced (p, t, k). The latter are generally aspirated (though it depends on phonological context). In many common languages of Europe and Asia the unvoiced consonants are not aspirated, this is a common difficulty for English s...

@Gigili: It is perfectly good english to say "I might fall asleep"
08:27
@Gigili Yes, of course.
08:38
0
Q: Are there languages which contrasting unvoiced aspirated, unaspirated, and ejective stops?

hippietrailIn English there are just two series of stops, voiced (b, d, g) and unvoiced (p, t, k). The latter are generally aspirated (though it depends on phonological context). In many common languages of Europe and Asia the unvoiced consonants are not aspirated, this is a common difficulty for English s...

Duplicate!
 
10 hours later…
18:19
Thank you @DavidWallace.
18:47
Tom often avoids difficult questions and …….
What should be there?
So does David?
So is David?
Does it need "too" at the end?
So is David?
So does David.
You usually don't need too if you already have so.
@Gigili The word you use should echo the verb you want to implicitly repeat, which is avoids here.
As for time and tense, they should be exactly the same as in avoids, so 3rd person present singular.
Umm, there's no answer like that.
As for which verb to use: if the verb you are echoing is an auxiliary or modal verb, you repeat the exact same verb; if not, you use a form of do.
a) so dose Bob too
b) so dose Bob
c) so is Bob too
d) so is Bob
So "Tom is a nut, and so is David".
"Tom will be in Paris, and so will David.
18:52
Maybe "dose" is a typo?
@Cerberus Aha, got it. Thank you.
"Tom likes cats, and so does David."
Because like is neither an auxiliary verb nor a modal verb nor the copula be.
@Gigili Yes, typo.
What about this:
> 3. Did you know …….. in the dark?
a)Where you to go
b)Where you are going
c)Where you go
d)Where to go
I guess (c) is the correct answer, right?
C is perhaps possible in certain situations, but d is probably what they are looking for.
They mean different things.
D means "did you know where you were supposed to go in the dark?".
C would require a very unusual context.
Another, probably very common, option would be "did you know where you were going?".
Right, makes sense.
19:56
Thank you Cerb.
That helped a lot.
20:11
In any case, you know my point of view on your leaving this website: just don't.
20:24
I'm too sensitive, I can't stand it.
That's masochism!
21:07
@Gigili Treat bad people like the rain.
Sometimes it happens, sometimes it doesn't; but you can't change it, so it is best to ignore it or take cover.
21:19
But what if they're supported by other people? I felt alone.
21:30
@Gigili The rain consists of many drops.
2
@Cerberus Very true, are you able to do it yourself?
@Gigili Usually, yes.
At least I stop and go do something else or talk to someone else when it threatens to affect me emotionally.
If it's you against a million people?
And I think it is often partly my fault too anyway.
Even though it doesn't feel that way.
@Gigili The rain contains a millions drops.
I don't curse each drop individually.
Too deep for me, I need time to understand it.
21:41
Good.
@Cerberus It's a lie!
@DavidWallace Sorry, I know.
@Cerberus You're right, I know you are. But it'd be difficult to follow your advice.
I figures perhaps reality can be changed by words.
Hello David.
21:44
@Gigili I understand.
'Ello.
@Cerberus The pen is mightier than the sword.
@DavidWallace So you like cats now?
Horrible creatures; they make me sneeze, and we all know what they do on my lawn.
Yup.
And I can't think of any context where 3C would be correct. The tenses don't seem to be properly sequenced.
21:48
Wow, finally someone agrees with me.
Who?
You hate cats too, Giggles?
I hate cats and dogs.
Cats are just so nasty and self-centred. If they were people, they wouldn't be deserving of my time.
Egoistic people are often the most fun.
21:50
Yeah, if you're, like 12!
I tolerate dogs, but I get annoyed with inconsiderate dog owners who do things like let them run round children's playgrounds.
in English Language and Usage, Feb 29 at 23:36, by David Wallace
I just landed in the wrong room. Cats make me sneeze and poo on my lawn.
22:13
Is that even possible? Someone is trying hard to offend you and you ignore him while he/she keep insulting you.
Yes, this is one way to make him/her look ridiculous.
One way to really look stupid is to continue insulting someone who's obviously ignoring you.
That's true.
I ignored my nemesis a few days ago.
It was in a conversation with him and one other person.
I brought up the subject with number 3, and nemesis started to comment, but I just ignored anything he said.
He may or may not have noticed, but it was very satisfying.
22:28
How was is satisfying when he haven't even noticed?
Sometimes I feel awful while doing something like that, because I hate it if someone do the same to me.
23:09
@Gigili It is about being in control.
I can do what I want.
That's good.
@Gigili If someone is really a bully, he won't care.
If he is just someone who is generally OK but with whom I have fought, then I would never do that.
I would either take some time off, or talk it out, or say "let's forget about it" and be at least civil, even if I am still annoyed at that moment.

« first day (219 days earlier)      last day (4594 days later) »