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01:39
What does "still a bit fan" mean? Like in "I'm still a bit fan of your band!"
Is the quote "a bit of a fan"? Meaning, is the first "a" a part of the quote?
Otherwise, I'd need more context.
@Jolenealaska: I just wrote a question for this: ell.stackexchange.com/questions/19764/…
I had a huge crush on Shaun Cassidy as a kid. I had posters, he was in a TV show that I adored. I have to admit, I'm still a bit of a fan.
The whole context is actually a user of my software telling me how she likes/dislike? it. twitter.com/pivot_data/status/448128542849925120
OK, so I guess she used to like my app, but that much anymore?
@Jolenealaska: Thanks! :-)
Hello @NicolasRaoul, perhaps English is not her language, and this "a bit fan" could mean "a bit of a fan" as Jolenealaska suggested or she just tried to say "a little fan" as in "she is sort of fan of your band", I guess.
01:53
Yes, it's just shorthand or lazy typing. She's being complementary.
It also might be a typo for "big fan". Even more complimentary.
As a matter of fact, I think that's exactly what it is. Typo for "big fan" which would fit perfectly in what she says in the tweet.
A-ha! That's also possible. The two keys are not very far apart.
"a bit fan" sounds quote odd, even to me.
Right next to each other :) It reads better that way too.
See, I just did a similar typo (unintentionally, I swear)!
I noticed that :)
@NicolasRaoul Did you catch the above conversation? I think that's it.
02:19
> So now I just play songs on my guitar.
It sounds rather odd, but I think it's passable. The question is, "Is it really passable?"
It did not occur to me, but now that you mention it, that might be that indeed!
Hum, so what should I do with the question... Being a typo makes the question moot I guess? Or @Jolenealaska you might want to add the second hypothesis and I'll mark the answer as accepted.
@NicolasRaoul +1 I think Jolenealaska should do that.
How 'bout you edit the question with an addendum.
As in EDIT: The whole quote was: "blab bla..."
Then I will edit my answer the same way.
You can mention that it came up in comments, or not. Whichever feels right to you.
As a third person, I'd say it makes more sense to leave the question as it is, and add another alternative explanation (which is more likely, imo) to the answer.
A short sentence would do, I think.
Ok, I'll do that, but I need to quote the tweet (minus names, of course)
02:30
Edited :-)
Hmm... Seems like "play songs on guitar" is more common than "play songs with guitar".
I couldn't find that post that explains why the past perfect is not necessary when the sequence of the events is obvious.
Hello @Theta30! Long time no see!
Cool thing of the day: "fly" meaning " To move with great speed; rush or dart: The children flew down the hall."
@DamkerngT. thanks
How is Hemingway?
@Theta30 Book V
02:35
It's been paused for a week. A little busy lately.
But I sure will finish it.
yes it was interesting
and remember some things from it
I see more people today in the room
7 people
(cool things of the day might be obvious for others nevertheless)
02:51
@Theta30 I used the word "fly" once here, for a sport.
Feb 27 at 20:39, by Damkerng T.
@skullpatrol sepak-takraw is really fun. You can fly during the game, lots of times.
@Theta30 Your fly also reminds me of "dash".
Great Morning Everyone!
Good morning!
morning or not, it depends on where you are
@Utkarsh Are you still looking for help with something?
@Jolenealaska "still"?
02:56
WOW..7pm...How did that happen? It feels like mid-afternoon.
Had I asked for help earlier also?
Didn't you ask for help a while back (a few hours) but no one was here?
Yep, 257 SE time
@Utkarsh this message.
which one?
@Utkarsh The one with the timestamp "yst 17:57" above. Just scroll back, it should be the same on your screen.
Oh! That? That Problem is solved now :P
I was asking if my sentences are correct before posting to my website
@DamkerngT. have you ever read the novel, journey to the centre of the earth?
03:06
or seen the movie :P ?
@Utkarsh As a novel, nope. But I've read its picture book version, and watched its movie adaptation.
Oh, I'm missing those picture books. :D
@DamkerngT. Hmmm, What do you mean by "as a novel"? I read it in a 150 paged book with 2-3 pages of images. Did i read it as a novel ?
I think of a typical Jules Verne translation as a novel.
I don't know how many translations there are.
and what about the canterville ghost?
That one I'm sure I haven't! :D
03:11
First, I thought that the story is real but after reading about it on wiki, :(
Hmm... what day is it?
@Utkarsh Isn't today your Birthday? :-)
Happy Birthday! @Utkarsh
@DamkerngT. Yup! Its my Birthday today! Thanks :D
I'm now curious about "get in" vs "get on" a submarine or a submerged boat or any similar vehicle. — Damkerng T. 46 secs ago
@Utkarsh Yay!
You get onboard.
I wish I could have invited you in my party but you are in Thailand :P
03:25
Happy Birthday! @Utkarsh
@Jolenealaska Thanks :)
@Utkarsh Hehe
@Jolenealaska Something like this could make it even trickier:
Or this...
Getting onboard would be more tricky, maybe. But that's still what I'd call it.
nods Thanks.
That's coming from a US Army veteran. :) I know lots of Squids (slang for Navy personel)
03:31
A-ha! Squids and Seals are different, I think.
Yes! All Seals are Squids, but not many Squids are Seals. Seals are the most elite of the elite.
Ahh... like those Top Guns, the best of the best.
I'd be in the Air Force, if we're at war.
Yes. It was a Seal team that killed Bin Laden.
Too bad that I wouldn't have a chance to fly a plane myself. My position is about communications.
Hmm.. I think this is the last year for me to serve the Air Force as a reserve. I will be discharged late this year.
So was my "real" job. The army kind of unofficially put me elsewhere after my first tour (Korea), but my official Army training was a communications job. I'm sure it's very different now. It's hard for me to believe, but that was over 20 years ago.
03:37
@Jolenealaska That's very, very big news everywhere.
It was sooo overdue. It was a huge weight being lifted.
I also have just watched Zero Thirty Hour recently. Perhaps it's rather close to what happened.
The Seal team is amazing, and so is the Intel.
I haven't seen Zero Dark Thirty, I probably won't.
Oh, I messed up the name. Sorry.
I get a little too wrapped in those kinds of stories. I remember 911 too vividly.
03:44
Oh, that was quite a shock.
I cried for days. I still get very emotional thinking about it.
I remember that I was about to leave my place for the badminton court, and it was on the news. A big shock.
I couldn't believe what I saw. I remember that.
The whole world changed that day. Since then everything is pre-911 or post-911
nods
I think several security measures here have also been revised after the event.
Oh, I'm sure of it.
03:48
I'm sure it must have much more emotional impact there.
I could feel it here.
One thing for sure, I couldn't bring a bottle of water with me on board nowadays.
A lot of it was sheer indignation. How dare you?! American Soil, American Citizens! That was beyond shocking for us.
We kind of had a sense of invulnerability that was shockingly stripped
nods -- It was also the first time I'd heard the word "harbor", in Bush's speech.
Do you mind if I ask how old you are?
Back then I didn't really catch what he said in real time, I had to read the transcript and the translation.
44.
Ah, you are about my age (46). For some reason I imagined you college age.
03:55
Hello!
Hello, Cerberus.
Hey Cerby!
@Jolenealaska I wonder, you do have bombings, right? Like in Oklahoma?
That was also bad?
Not as many dead, of course. But still bad.
That about killed me. I was absolutely shocked and stunned.
Trying to recall the Oklahoma incident.
03:56
OK.
Someone loaded a truck with explosives and set them off next to a large building.
Another one that stunned me terribly was the Columbine shooting.
(Of course I would be shocked as well. But I'm not sure I get this sense of invulnerability?)
Oh, I really did see it in some documentary, maybe on Discovery Channel.
I think that invulnerability thing comes with being American. As a people, we do have a sense of being the superpower.
Heh.
03:59
It's weird, but I think it is kind of built in.
Is the difference between Oklahoma and the Twin Towers perhaps that the latter was an enemy from the outside?
Apart from the scale.
Yes. Aside from the sheer scope
We have no history of being invaded.
Heh we chose different synonyms.
Pearl Harbour? The war against the English?
Different.
Of course I would be terribly shocked as well if someone carried out a large attack against a city here.
04:01
Times of war, and we kicked them out quite soundly.
911 was a sucker punch.
A plane accidentally flew into a large building here 20 years ago, and it's still seen as an important event.
Oh! Was it an accident?
But not that many people died. Tens, I think.
Yes, an accident.
It was at night, an apartment building.
No deliberation, no total collapse, no second attack.
Really! It looks worse than that. During "work hours" I suppose? It looks like an apartment building.
04:04
It was at night, early morning.
Night? Really? Wow, the small death toll is surprising.
The rooms at the end of hallway are riskier, or so it seems.
No, wait, it was 18.35. I misremembered.
But anyway, I imagine accidents such as this happen more often around the world.
43 people died.
Here, we have buildings collapsed by themselves sometimes. No plane needed.
Heh.
Yeah that sucks.
04:09
Yup. Usually it's about corruption.
And there are fires like the factory in Bangladesh...
Right.
I think I've seen the same thing in other countries around here too.
This city is thinking a lot these days about the 1964 Good Friday Earthquake. 50th Anniversary and all that.
Yeah.
Oh, was it a bad earthquake?
2nd strongest in recorded history.
it was considered the strongest for a while, but they changed some of the math.
The 1964 Alaskan earthquake, also known as the Great Alaskan Earthquake, the Portage Earthquake and the Good Friday Earthquake, was a megathrust earthquake that began at 5:36 P.M. AST on Good Friday, March 27, 1964. Across south-central Alaska, ground fissures, collapsing structures, and tsunamis resulting from the earthquake caused about 139 deaths. Lasting nearly three minutes, it was the most powerful recorded earthquake in U.S. and North American history, and the second most powerful ever measured by seismograph. It had a moment magnitude of 9.2, making it the second largest earthqua...
04:13
Oh! I've never thought that earthquakes could happen way up there.
If en earthquake of that magnitude hit, say...LA, the death toll would be beyond comprehension.
We're living on thin Earth crust indeed.
This is the earthquake capital of the world! We get them all the time. We hardly notice little ones. :)
9.2!?
04:15
That is like...Japan.
9+ is sure big.
I've been right on top of a 7.9
I hear you can get extreme tsunamis if you have a severe quake near a fjord/firth?
that was trippy
04:16
As in, hundreds of metres high.
That sounds plausible.
The 1958 Lituya Bay megatsunami occurred on July 9, 1958, when a large, 8.3 magnitude earthquake on the Fairweather Fault triggered a landslide that caused 30 million cubic metres of rock and ice to fall into the narrow inlet of Lituya Bay, Alaska. The sudden displacement of water resulted in a wave runup of 516 metres (1,720 feet) in height. This is the highest recorded megatsunami and the largest known in modern times. The event forced a re-evaluation of large wave events, and recognition of impact and landslide events as a previously unknown cause of very large waves. Lituya Bay L...
Oh yeah. the 64 eartquake whiped out a villiage with a tsunami. As it was there, then gone.
Oh, the earthquake causes the tsunami by "means" of a landslide.
@Jolenealaska That's pretty terrible.
Is it true that normal brick houses can mostly withstand a normal tsunami?
Yep. That's why the 50th anniversary is a pretty big deal here.
04:19
I saw people in the Thai tsunami hurry up the stairs of an hotel, and they were safe there.
On the higher floors.
I don't know. I've seen pictures of brick buildings just torn apart. Hold on, you might like a picture from the 7.9 I experienced...
Hmm.
Oh, the hotel in that footage is the same one I stayed in one of my trip.
Before the tsunami.
So I could imagine how severe it was clearly.
This isn't the good one that I was looking for, but it works...
Actually, that year I'd already planned to have a trip there and stay at that hotel (resort) again. Somehow something made me change my mind.
If I didn't change my mind, I must have been one of the victims.
04:24
7.9...bigger than any quake in north America for a very long time. Our only casualty was a little old lady twisted her ankle getting out of her house.
@Jolenealaska The road was gone!
I can't find the picture, but there was one highway that got split so that it looks like a broken pencil. But the two pieces are meters apart. It's a great shot.
@DamkerngT. Oh wow!
@Jolenealaska Impressive.
It was sooo weird to watch the road and cars go up and down over and over again in a giant wave. It seemed to go on forever.
I was in a cafe at the time. No one got scared, it was just kind of neat and exciting.
Hmm.
There wasn't any chance that the café might collapse?
04:35
Nobody left the building. There was no sense of that kind of fear. As it turns out, there was very little private property damage from that quake. A few and bridges bought it, but as fat as I know, no buildings.
Ah OK, good.
It's bed time for me.
I expect no quakes.
G'bye!
And the entire Denali mountain range (that's the big one, Mount Mckinley) moved over quite a bit.
Gnight Cerby
Scary!
Bai.
05:24
@Jolenealaska I found this one: "Don't even think about it." "Never do." youtube.com/…
Maybe it's too easy.
Real cute though! It's a possibility :)
what do we call a liquid or solid that numbs one's senses? Could anyone rephrase this badly structured sentence - "He may have made him unconscious by making him inhale something that causes numbness."
anesthetic, I think.
See also: analgesic.
Analgesics reduce pain. Anesthetics numb you.
@DamkerngT. could you also rephrase the mentioned sentence?
Is it "he" or you that don't know what that something is?
(If he knows what it is, he should just say its specific name.)
05:40
@DamkerngT. perhaps he doesn't know the specific name. he's looking for a generalized word.
If he doesn't know, perhaps your sentence is already fine.
I'm not sure I know any anesthetic that is being used by inhaling.
Oh, it made him unconscious.
@DamkerngT. I never suggested "anesthetic"! You did it..
> "He may have made him unconscious by making him inhale something that causes numbness."
@DamkerngT. yes. There must be a single word for "made him unconscious" and "something that causes numbness" that would fit in this sentence. We could replace "inhale" with "intake" or any other appropriate word.
I think you're looking for "anesthetize" and "some kind of anesthetic".
anesthetize is a verb, anesthetic is a drug or gas.
05:47
He gave him a knock-out drug.
Also spelled anaesthetise and anaesthetic.
@DamkerngT. A con "anesthetized" the fellow travelers. Does it sound right??
Anonymous
Word of the day: amanuensis
It sounds a little clinical for a fictional work.
Sound a bit formal, but it works for me.
05:49
@Jolenealaska Haha. It sounds as if robber was a doctor.
I like this word of the day. :-)
@DamkerngT. Could you suggest me something informal? A slang will do.
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. It's the sort of word of the day you might want to not use on a regular basis :-)
I think Jolenealaska just did.
Yep. Seriously, I'd consider knock-out gas or knock-out drug if you're talking about somone like Batman.
05:51
I think "put him out" also works.
Does if have to be something inhaled? Can it be oral?
@Jolenealaska any form of intake.
roofie?
slipped him a mickey?
@Jolenealaska isn't it too specific? Isn't there a general term?
got me with amanuensis...I'm clueless
Depends, what's your context? Sorry if I'm asking you to repeat yourself, ive been afk. Should I scroll up?
05:53
@DamkerngT. put him out how? :) with that?
@snailboat Oh, I have this app that keeps giving me an interesting word a day. I don't know 80% of the words it gave me. :-)
@SandeepDhamija Anyhow, I would say. I think it works in both fictional writing and informal medical writing.
The last word that that app gave me was geomancy.
I've played geomancy in Scrabble. :)
A-ha! That's neat!
My best all time turn: Tzarinas over two triple word squares.
With "z" right on one, I believe. :-)

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