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03:00 - 13:0013:00 - 00:00

13:00
1
A: Can 'and' be used replaceable by 'or'?

StoneyB Surrender [it] and ... be spared [the consequences]. Surrender it   or    ... face the consequences. They are only equivalent because you're not just replacing and with or there: you're replacing and be spared the consequences with or face the consequences. The two forms of 'paratactic c...

Word of the day: paratactic conditional
Anonymous
@Araucaria What do you think of that nomenclature?
Heh. I just realized @snailplane works so far back up her history
 
1 hour later…
@TIPS It's kind of a very mild case.
@CowperKettle I hope your case is nothing serious.
Good evening! It is not serious.
Good afternoon!
I'm just taking some L-thyroxin. I was suprised to learn that Clinton takes dessicated pig thyroid preparation. O_O
@Cowp You can't take dessicated pig . . .
That would be cannibalism!
:D
14:12
Well I'm not familiar with those terms and the symptoms, so I hope the best for you!
That's a vintage medicine, dating back to the XIX century
@JimReynolds porkibalism
It's like injecting bovine-derived insulin.
Ah.
Thyroid is related to lack of insulin?
No, I mean taking the drug derived from the pig, and not synthesized.
14:16
Aha.
Is like taking your insulin from the cow, and not use the synthesized type.
Is it supposed to be better?
for humans
Synthesized insulin is way better for humans
As for thyroxine, I dunno.
Oh.
Because the porcine and bovine insulins differ by a tiny bit from the natural human insulin, and the synthesized insulin is theoretically the same as your natural insulin.
14:18
I wonder between powder milk and cow milk what is better for you (to mix with your coffee, etc.)
I've been using powder milk for a while and I like it.
Hm.. who knows. Milk is protein, and protein might become misshaped when dried.
(Sorry that my level of concern is so low. We were discussing medicine.)
There might be some articles on Sci-Hub about this.
Okay, will look it up prolly. Thanks.
As soon as there's natural milk around, I'd use it. (0:
14:21
Human milk? :P
no, the usual, cow milk
O_O
Yeah, I'm teasing you.
(0:
Mikhail Semyonovich Tsvet (Михаи́л Семёнович Цветь, also spelled Tsvett, Tswett, Tswet, Zwet, and Cvet) (Asti, 1872 – Voronezh, 1919) was a Russian-Italian botanist who invented adsorption chromatography. His last name is Russian for both "colour" and "flowering." == Biography == Mikhail Tsvet was born 14 May 1872 in Asti, Italy. His mother was Italian, and his father was a Russian official. His mother died soon after his birth, and he was raised in Geneva, Switzerland. He received his B.S. degree from the Department of Physics and Mathematics at the University of Geneva in 1893. However,...
The inventor of chromatography. His surname means "color" in Russian.
> O'Connor said, "Of course there are those who think it is obnoxious, but the ice cream is made with natural breast milk, organic and free range."
14:36
Hahahaha
I wonder if caged humans produce milk with a different taste
14:57
@Bob have you considered reviewing your favourite room list? You're in a lot of frozen rooms ;-)
Bob
Bob
@user252685 I've considered it, but... nah.
cool
cyber-literally :P
 
2 hours later…
17:28
1
Q: She's the author of or she's author of? - which one is correct?

Mr PenguinWhat's the difference in the usage of the article "the" with the word "author"? Why is the article "the" left in the second sentence? She's the author of "The Power of Glamour," "The Future and Its Enemies" and "The Substance of Style." She's author of the new book, “The Intimidatio...

Is it the same as with "He is captain of the team"?
"he is author of" peaked in 1920s to 1940s
"she is the author" only began to pick up in the last several decades
18:11
1
Q: Verb chaining and tenses

Eli KorvigoHere is a piece by Brodsky I wish you were here, dear, I wish you were here. I wish we were in my car, and you'd shift the gear. we'd find ourselves elsewhere, on an unknown shore. Or else we'd repair To where we've been before. The last two lines h...

+1 for a poetic question
To my humble opinion this question may be put on hold until the OP provides an example of any concept that can be expressed in English and/or Russian, but can't (to his knowledge) in Japanese. Otherwise with as little knowledge of Japanese as I have I suspect the OP's real issue was "Is my knowledge of Japanese that primitive?" Also as a native Russian speaker I consider OP's comment "да ты скажи по-простому" below as a rather rude version of "say it simpler", which makes me believe the OP doesn't really value detailed answers that others provide, and hence has unclear objectives. — kroki 7 hours ago
I guess that comment was gone, but I learned a Russian phrase!
But can you read Russian script?
I'll transcribe
> Da skazhi ty po-prostomu!
If "да ты скажи по-простому" is a rather rude version of "say it simpler", what's an equally rude English version of "да ты скажи по-простому"?
18:17
"Just say it in simple words"
I did not find it rude per se. It's rude int he context.
nods (and Thanks!)
You ask people to provide an answer to a rather shallow question, and then they do, you aggravate it by a shallow comment.
For me, it sounds like a pun of repair. — Damkerng T. 47 secs ago
I haven't checked any dictionary yet, though.
The use of the present perfect is a pun?
Oh, I missed the OP's real question!
18:23
"Repair" is a verb that can mean "move to" in some cases
"We repaired under the cover of trees, but the gullywasher was too strong, and we ended up soaked through"
Hmm... that's new to me.
A-ha! It's related to repatriate.
repair? nice!
> In a range of nosological forms, topical administration (using such forms as ointments, suppositories, drops etc.) leads to increased efficacy due to higher concentrations of the medicine in the affected area coupled with a lack of adverse effects typical for parenteral administration of interferon in high doses.
"nosological forms" is typical for Russian medspeak
But I guess if the source has it, the target text should also have it.
Good night!
Good night!
 
3 hours later…
22:04
Puzzle of the Day 20160704 (What does he sing?): drive.google.com/file/d/0B8KKQ0fwLEZ9N1ZVdHA2MUxsd0k/…
Hi, @PichiWuana! Welcome to the room!
Thanks!
 
2 hours later…
23:37
@snailplane I don't mind it too much (and I don't like it too much either). All the conditionals nomenclature is wonky. It beats saying something like conditional non-conditional constructions I suppose ...
@snailplane I'm trying to find someone H&Pish to read a bit of writing I've got to submit for an end of year review. It basically relates to this LanguageLog piece by Pullum on questions and conditionals. Would you be interested? Harsh feedback would be greatly appreciated :)
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