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01:28
Word of the day: lingonberry, cowberry
O_o
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ You must invent a medicine for all the people overusing the "grammar" tag.
These people give me gelastic seizures, although on the dhole they may be perfectly good people.
2
@CowperKettle Joke of the day: What is the difference between CowperKettle and cowberry? Berry per kettle. Example: How many berries per kettle are there? =)
(0:
Hitler started in 1939 and lost. Lingonberry started in 1939 and won. Lingonberry: Easy Does It. (c)
 
2 hours later…
04:07
@CowperKettle It looks very delicious. I have also been thinking of going vegetarian/vegan.
04:25
@JasperLoy Don't forget to take B12 orally or to inject it if you do go vegetarian.
My friend landed in hospital with B12-deficient anemia, and our local doctors were too untrained to recognize the cause.
She was going worse and only got better because she took a B12 test using her own money. She slipped out of the hospital, and took it. The results proved that her B12 was low, and she recovered. Healthcare in Russia can kill you if you don't read up for yourself.
If you have your B12 level monitored, a vegetarian diet is no worse than natural diet.
Could be even better.
I'm reading research papers implying that milk-free diet may help in schizophrenia because milk contains folate receptors, and the patient may get cross-reaction, with antibodies arising and blocking the uptake of folate into the brain.
So interesting. I even found a 1974 paper in which SZ patients got better without milk.
 
5 hours later…
Anonymous
09:15
Word of the day: skepsis
3
09:55
Word of 15:00: hasty pudding
 
3 hours later…
13:17
@THEGreatGatsby There should be no space before the question mark.
@CowperKettle Hey that's cheating! You posted it 40 minutes after the last WOTD
2
@snailboat Example sentence: "Trump questions on Skepsis.SE are so heated"
Huh, that's actually not a joke
It's what the site's name could have been
13:50
Word of the minute: versive seizure (yes, "versive" is an actual word)
> This 22-year-old female presented at the age of 3 years with simple and complex partial seizures. The parents reported versive seizures in both directions that lasted for about 10–20 s.
I think it should be "at an age of 3 years"
 
1 hour later…
15:11
Word of the day for tomorrow: catnap
2
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ ^ aha.
@CowperKettle Nah.
Expression of the day: at the age of
2
Lol.
15:36
Articles is the hardest thing. "At a speed of 10 km/h" but "at the age of 10"
 
1 hour later…
17:06
Sorry guys I am late. It's 26th here. Merry Christmas to all of you.
17:22
Namaste, @Man_From_India ji!
Merry Xmas!
Word of late evening: LOL in NAD (little old lady in no apparent distress)
From this book:
The House of God is a satirical novel by Samuel Shem (a pseudonym used by psychiatrist Stephen Bergman), published in 1978. The novel follows a group of medical interns at a fictionalized version of Beth Israel Hospital over the course of a year in the early 1970s, focusing on the psychological harm and dehumanization caused by their residency training. The book, described by the New York Times as "raunchy, troubling and hilarious", was viewed as scandalous at the time of its publication, but acquired a cult following and ultimately came to be regarded as a touchstone in the evolving discussion...
@JasperLoy MRT is the acronym for Mass Rapid Transit, which is kind of transportation which ferries passwngers inside a city or across two neighboring cities with speed faster than usual bus. It's very convenoent when you want to travel a long distance in a city or across two neighboring cities. I don't take MRT often, but i was just back from taking MRT back and forth a neighboring city.
It looks like a train, but a train usually travels across many cities while MRT at most travels across two cities.
 
2 hours later…
19:24
@userr2684291 That is also cheating, posting word of the day for the next day.
Anonymous
19:43
But Word of the Morrow has such a nice ring to it!
21:25
@JasperLoy I'm just trying to reach for the stars... (:
Mmm, stars.
@userr2684291 You said you have a Macbook Pro you have not opened up. Is it a present from your parents?
No. It was for something I did for my university.
@userr2684291 I have a new username. If you refresh you will see it.
I see it. Congratulations. : )
I guess you will be stuck at userrXXXX forever. =)
21:31
Hahah, I'm afraid so. I'm just... you know in MMORPGs when you have to create your character? That's the hardest part of the game for me.
@userr2684291 Then that's really generous of them, because it is so expensive.
Adding an r made that username unique with the least amount of effort while still making some sense.
Is there any meaning to the number?
It was a competition of sorts which also benefit(t?)ed the university.
@JohnNash Not that I know.
I don't know the number myself. I know it's 2... something.
Hm, really not sure if that word's supposed to have one or two t's.
The ODE and its American counterpart say both are permissible, while the LDOCE lists only the version with one t. Okay, GloWbE says that version is also preferred the Anglosphere over, but the other one isn't unknown either. I'm glad this matter has been settled.
 
2 hours later…
23:24
hello
min 9:60
9:06
We spent 9 bilion dollars a year, so we are not at the bleeding edge
Can someone explain to me the meaning of bleeding edge in this case
in relation to technology
Bleeding edge technology is a category of technologies so new that they could have a high risk of being unreliable and lead adopters to incur greater expense
however if I translate it in this way, I do not catch the relation of both
Anonymous
23:37
@THEGreatGatsby For it to make sense, you need to include the following phrase: We're not at the bleeding edge, but we're damn close.
what is the meaning of that
that the JPMC is spending so much and they are using the latest technologies that are not safe and reliable
or something else ?
Anonymous
Bleeding edge is just an elaboration of cutting edge, meaning they've got the newest and best technology. They're saying they might not be quite the newest and best, but they put in so much money that they're pretty close.
Not the latest technology, but close to being the latest technology.
Anonymous
It doesn't necessarily contain the 'not safe and reliable' meaning.
so he meant that they are almost close to the latest technologies
and I should consider that they are so close because they spent so much money right
Anonymous
23:39
It can mean that, because it can mean they're so new they're still in development and may not be quite as well-tested and reliable yet. But people use the phrase without that nuance, too.
What he means is already not a matter of English.
As far as the English is concerned, the definitions are there.
Anonymous
@THEGreatGatsby Yeah. He's saying their technology is advanced because they put a lot of money into it.
As to what he has in mind, nobody knows for sure.
Maybe he is not expressing himself clearly.
ok but he is using bleeding technology
not cutting technology
right
Well, bleeding edge is what we have discussed above.
23:42
if he used cutting I would asume it make sense but if you said bleeding edge = cutting edge
now I see the meaning
Oh, are you asking about the difference between bleeding edge and cutting edge?
when we said bleetyeding edge means unreliable and not safe
that is why I am asking
becuase make no sense if we use it in that sense
but if sense is bleeding edge = cutting edge
then it makes perfect sense
I think the two terms mean the same thing to me.
my main point is to understand the meaning what he is trying to imply into peoples eyes
It may not be unsafe. It just means the latest.
But the latest software is not very well tested, so it may have many bugs.
But the two terms just mean the latest.
23:45
ok thanks
10:44
affects our exposure
I am not sure what is the meaning of this
if I say affect exposure
I know the meaning of both words
I think this is something something bad when happened we can say
it affects our exposure ?
affects our exposure = it can ruin our image ?
is this is correct meaning
I have no idea what he means either.
People may not use precise language in interviews like that.
ok but what is general meaning
of this
affect exposure
What you can do is check several dictionaries for the word or phrase in question.
I have no idea what he means.
Sometimes, a word only makes sense if you know the context. Maybe you will need to listen to the whole speech to find out, who knows.
Exposure definition: Exposure to something dangerous means being in a situation where it might affect you
Yes, like I said I have no idea.
23:50
he said he is reading the newspaper
and can find something that can affect our exposure
tell me your interpretation of this
I have no idea. =)
@@snailboat
what do you think
if @JohnNash is not aware

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