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Anonymous
16:01
0
Q: a-an consonant starting words

Leos LiterakIs there some special rule for words starting with two consonants? I was taught to use a article when a word starts with consonant (or an otherwise). I just wrote "a mPOS device" but MS Word proposes to use "an". I can hear "emPOs". Is this a special rule or the Word spell checker bug? Thanks

Anonymous
That sounds like a duplicate to me! :-)
Ah, come on! Isn't that "too brood", at least?
Anonymous
No, the answer is quite simple
@MARamezani Eh, why too broad?
Anonymous
16:02
Words that start with consonants phonemically are preceded by a; words that start with vowels phonemically are preceded by an
Anonymous
That's the whole answer
Hmm, maybe I couldn't have summed it up like that.
> I just wrote "a mPOS device" but MS Word proposes to use "an". I can hear "emPOs".
Anonymous
I mean, sure, you can elaborate on what precisely that means, or put it in other terms.
Anonymous
"It's based on sound, not how it's spelled"
16:04
I can hear "emPOs", so I wonder what confused him.
Anonymous
Since he can hear that it begins with a vowel, if someone tells him that the rule is about sound, he should be fine.
@DamkerngT. Obviously the spelling.
But if he can hear *emPOS", he should also hear "anempos".
Anonymous
As a bonus, someone could explain the traditional rule about ði-ðə allomorphy
Hah, I finally earned "electorate".
Anonymous
16:07
(Pronounce the with the /i/ vowel before vowel sounds, pronounce the with the /ə/ vowel before consonant sounds)
The thing is I believe that we already have such a question (and answers).
Congrats!
Anonymous
Me too, and that's one reason I didn't rush to answer it … :-)
Anonymous
@MARamezani Nice, a gold badge!
Youngest to earn it, I'd say!
I earned it sooner than fanatic. :O
Anonymous
I still don't have Fanatic on ELL.
16:09
I see. So the pronounciation is the rule. — Leos Literak 50 secs ago
See, self-answerable.
Anonymous
There you go, Leos Literak.
I think he's gonna delete that question.
Anonymous
I still feel like the would be a nice bonus.
Yeah, let's be sure about everything.
> Once upon a dream, ah was a hoomin.
That's F.E.'s about me.
What does it mean?
Anonymous
I believe he is now a tiger.
16:12
"Ah", I suppose, is "I".
Right?
Anonymous
Once Upon a Dream is presumably a reference to Maleficent
Anonymous
@MARamezani Yes, that's correct
@snailboat Or he could be a doll.
Anonymous
I can't speak for F.E., but I know that when he used to come around chat, he talked about Maleficent a lot.
Anonymous
@MARamezani He could be. I have the sneaking suspicion, though, that he is not
16:14
Sometimes Tiger chatted with Robot.
Once upon a dream, huh @DamkerngT.?
Robot remembers that Robot had to patch our walls lots of times.
Anonymous
I don't really want to discuss him at length in his absence, though
Anonymous
Since I don't believe he wants to be a part of ELL chat
Anonymous
But hopefully we've cleared up what his "About Me" means, at least to the extent that I can help with :-)
Anonymous
16:16
If you have further questions, you could perhaps leave him a temporary comment somewhere
Anonymous
And ask him directly
Anonymous
(Not really SE policy, but ELL is a fairly chatty place)
So now that we're backbiting, does anyone know why CarSmack changed to that name?
Anonymous
I don't know why he changed his name to Doulos
Anonymous
It's not my intention to speak ill of anyone who isn't present
16:21
I know @snailboat. It's not nice.
But we're not ill-talking.
Anonymous
Well, you said backbiting :-)
We're just talking.
Anonymous
So I wanted to issue a disclaimer.
I think MARamezani meant just talking behind their back.
Anonymous
That has negative connotations, too! :-)
16:23
Perhaps not as strong as backbiting.
Anonymous
Hmm, perhaps not―I'm not really familiar with backbiting. I had to look it up
Yes, Damkerng. I've been through hell to translate my religious laws about backbiting to English!
I have a fairly adequate knowledge about the thing.
It's negative connotation.
Islamic teachings treat both the same way.
Sometimes it's quite difficult to map a word in one culture to another.
0
Q: Can you help me define parts of speech in these sentences?

Study.English.WellSome of them don't even have predicates. I simply don't understand how to distinguish parts of speech here. What a still perfect day! No sound! A lovely evening. Then the first stars.

Are those ellipsed, or are they minor sentences?
What a still perfect day!
Anonymous
Why do they want to identify the parts of speech in those sentences, I wonder?
Anonymous
16:29
@MARamezani That's a type of major sentence, an exclamative
Nah, I mean isn't it awkward?
@snailboat I think their name, Study.English.Well, suggests that they could be a teacher.
They ask those types of Qs a lot.
Anonymous
Oh, wait, it's true that there's no predicate there
> What a still perfect day!
Anonymous
16:30
"What a still perfect day this is!"
Hmm... I think I've never heard What a still before.
Anonymous
We could construe it as ellipsis if we wanted :-)
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Me either. It must mean nothing is moving
Anonymous
In which case it would be reduced from a full exclamative clause
16:31
I guess they're solving a stupid grammar book's exercises.
Anonymous
Sounds likely
Anonymous
You could construe a lot of those as ellipsis if you wanted to. The problem is that you can't construe every nonsentential utterance as ellipsis
I think all of them are some forms of ellipses.
Argh, they never write good titles.
On Chem.SE?
Anonymous
16:33
And in other cases, there's no clear choice for the ellipted material: "It's a lovely evening." "What a lovely evening." "This is a lovely evening."
Nah, I mean that user: Study.English.Better.com
Forget strike tag.
Anonymous
In chat, strikeout has special markup: ---three dashes before and after---
Anonymous
I'm not sure it'll work in that case, though.
Thanks. I'll remember that.
Anonymous
Study.English.Better.---com---   ← Let's try!
Anonymous
16:34
Failure.
Anonymous
But it's pretty handy when discussing ellipsis
Maybe it's because of the dot: Study.English.Better. com
Anonymous
Yeah.
Anonymous
That's why I suspected it wouldn't work
Yay.
I learned the thing.
16:35
The nicest thing about ellipsis is we can insert anything we like (that makes sense for us)!
Anonymous
Yay! :-)
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. That's also the least nice thing about ellipsis.
Anonymous
If we don't use it in a rigorous fashion, then it loses all explanatory value
Isn't it good that we can communicate without having to communicate explicitly? :-)
Anonymous
As you can change any sentence to mean anything at all if you're willing to posit arbitrary ellipsis except this one, 'cause its meaning is so clear no amount of ellipsis could possibly change it
16:37
I mean, the use of it, not the explanation for the question.
Yes it's good that we communicate.
Right! This is kinda fun, I think!
Anonymous
Well, there are definitely rules about what you can insert.
Anonymous
And they're language-particular.
Anonymous
16:38
For example, in Japanese, you can usually leave out a negator if it's clear from context. In English, you can do that.
I wonder what this would look like: :)
Anonymous
You might be able to figure out I left not out of my last sentence about English, but English doesn't really work that way, so it ends up rather confusing
Oh, it doesn't look like anything.
@snailboat I mentally filled that not for you!
Anonymous
Yep! But leaving it out is more or less an error in English rather than a grammatical option :-)
16:40
@MARamezani Makes me think of watermelon!
Anonymous
My sentence was misnegated.
This is watermelon: :O
Oh, I can use that whenever I want to type big theta.
Anonymous
I type te-ta with Japanese input. θ or Θ
Hi @Freddy!
I'm wondering what part of speech no and not are.
> There is no sound!
Anonymous
16:43
@DamkerngT. No is a clear determiner
It looks like an adverb to me.
Anonymous
In fact, in the 19th century some grammarians called it the negative article
3
36
Q: Help us test the shiny new "User Activity" page! (Plus a bunch of new features.)

JaydlesToday, we're shipping the new "Activity Page" of the Profile here on Meta SE, so you can test it out and hopefully share some feedback and suggestions before we ship it network wide. Hate words? Assuming you're signed in, just click your face up in the top bar, and you can see it right now. Or,...

Anonymous
To go along with a and the
16:44
@snailboat Oh, that's an interesting idea.
Anonymous
That was when the determiner category was less fleshed out, of course
Anonymous
Of course, articles are prototypical determiners
Anonymous
So you could still call it that if you wanted―it's just tradition that we label a and the only that way, really
@MARamezani hello
@MARamezani Coming soon?
16:45
Hello everyone
Hi @Freddy!
I just saw it featured on meta.
ohh so this is done like this
Anonymous
No is similar to determiners like the and which in being number neutral
16:47
Hmm... If no is a determiner I think we can call all of these "noun phrases".
Anonymous
Whereas determiners like a and one and every work with singular nouns specifically
> What a still perfect day!
No sound! A lovely evening. Then the first stars.
Anonymous
No sound is a noun phrase.
Anonymous
Then doesn't really seem to fit into a noun phrase
Then the first stars is a bit different. It's Then + a noun phrase.
Anonymous
16:48
I guess it does under some circumstances as a peripheral modifier...?
Anonymous
I'd have to look up then to figure out how to describe it
I think this then is a conjunction.
Anonymous
Well, then you must think of the example as a reduced clause
Anonymous
16:49
Why sadface?
The new shiny change isn't for betas.
> The sun came up. Then the first stars appeared.
Duh, I was stupid.
Hmm... Macmillan seems to suggest that that then is an adverb.
Anonymous
Yeah, but the traditional adverb category is too broad to be especially useful as a description
Anonymous
16:54
So you need to be more specific
Anonymous
Certainly then is not much like very
@Hellion Oh, yes! I didn't read the whole sentence. Thanks for the correction. (I should remove my comment but that would leave Hellion's comment dangling, so I'll keep it there to remind me of my own mistake. :-)) — Damkerng T. 55 secs ago
Guys, one question has bothered me as soon as I became a member in ELL.
Anonymous
As long as the mistake doesn't mislead anyone
That's what I get from my 10-second reading/reviewing. :-)
Anonymous
16:59
Being exposed to a mistake and correction may leave someone worse off than if they learned the right thing in the first place
@DamkerngT. You robo-reviewer!
Anonymous
Students don't always remember which things they read are mistakes and which are correct―they tend to pick up whatever language they're exposed to
@MARamezani Sometimes I do that!
@snailboat That's so true!
@snailboat That's not quite true for a careful reader.
Anonymous
@MARamezani What makes you think so?
17:01
I sometimes get like that.
And that sometimes is when I don't pay enough attention to what I read.
Anonymous
Just keep in mind the introspection illusion and that many effects are observable more through scientific study than via anecdote
Oh, I can't argue with that!
Btw, I had a question....
which is...?
Why isn't there a policy against answering questions that are gonna get closed (especially when as a dup)?
Anonymous
Well, there is an expectation that people not do so
Anonymous
17:06
And especially people who've close voted
There is this question:
0
Q: The brown bears found At / In / On?

jihoon The brown bears found on / in/ at Kodiak Island are the largest in the world. Here's the prepositions that I will always get mixed up. on It is more likely to emphasize that bear was found on the Island not a land. So, the author might talk about how bear can be found 'on a island' or s...

Anonymous
But people nonetheless answer AND close vote on the same question
@MARamezani I just wish that all the high-rep users would do that automatically.
Anonymous
Of course, if you believe a question should be open, then why not answer?
It's a dup, and some earned rep by answering it.
Anonymous
17:06
Even if you think other people will close it.
(I mean avoid answering those questions.)
You lost me!
Let me read the script.
Anonymous
Some users go as far as inserting placeholder answers on questions they believe will be unjustly closed
Anonymous
So that they can edit these into proper answers at a later date, if the time runs out on them
Anonymous
Of course, if you believe a question should be open, you might answer and vote to reopen after it gets closed
Anonymous
17:08
And sometimes questions do manage to get reopened.
I think closed questions and duplicate questions aren't the same thing.
Anonymous
Duplicates are a type of closed question
Anonymous
But they're special in that they aren't automatically deleted
Only some of the closed questions are duplicate, yes.
Yes. I've seen the case a lot, specifically on ELL.
Anonymous
17:08
They're the kind of closed question we want most.
Anonymous
We don't want off-topic questions or questions that make no sense
Other closed or soon-to-be-closed ones are sometimes worth fighting for.
Anonymous
But duplicates are okay―they help future users find the (hopefully correct) answer to another question
I give up!
On what? That question?
17:10
But still, couldn't one just answer a dup and get [dirty] reps for that?
By answer, I mean a copy.
@MARamezani I think that happened quite a lot! I wondered every time what was in their mind when someone wrote an answer they knew it was duplicate.
Anonymous
If you see a copied answer, flag it for deletion
@MARamezani Another trending thing here is to Google for an answer on other sites and copy it to ELL.
Would that work?
Anonymous
If you see an answer copied from another site, flag it for deletion
17:13
@DamkerngT. Indeed!
Anonymous
Plagiarism should be deleted on sight
Anonymous
If there's attribution, then it's potentially okay
Some of our answerers are relatively advanced when it's about this copying.
Yup. Not about only one answer.
@snailboat If we look closer, I think even in those answers with attribution are potentially misleading. I mean they could sum it up differently from the original.
17:14
Or reference.
Anonymous
If they're wrong, we can downvote
Anonymous
ELL doesn't have nearly enough downvotes
But....but....but I'll lose a rep if I downvote an answer! :)
I don't really care much about the rep points. What really worries me is I'm not sure how well it will be received.
But I do agree that we could use a lot more downvotes on ELL.
17:19
There are serial upvotes (as in, going on an upvote spree on different questions from different users) who never get caught.
To simply outmatch others' vote counts, or for a reason I can't imagine.
(BTW, I think I could say that because I already have enough rep points to engage in any activities on our main site.)
@MARamezani Oh, really?
Anonymous
@MARamezani That's right, that's one of the two things that reputation buys you apart from privilege―downvotes and bounties
Anonymous
Since ELL has so many misleading answers, it's helpful to use comments or downvotes when appropriate―for example, if the misleading answer is the highest ranked one
Anonymous
Then the goal is to get the correct answer to the top
Anonymous
17:22
Comments are good, but they aren't always useful.
Anonymous
Bounties are good, too. I like to set bounties to work on the unanswered question list
Anonymous
Unfortunately, last time two of my bounties failed :-(
Anonymous
I have now offered 6800 reputation in bounties
ELL is way better when it gets to "unanswered".
Anonymous
17:23
I don't really like to see it go down the drain like that―maybe I should pick better questions to bounty?
Anonymous
We have 274 "unanswered" questions
In chemistry, the first unanswered has a 25 score.
In ELL, some of those questions are the ones that are actually "case-closed".
I bet that it's not easy to find old but good questions in the unanswered list.
Anonymous
On Japanese, our top unanswered is scored 8
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. That's true.
Anonymous
17:24
I go through the list and upvote every answer I can to try to remove them from the list
Anonymous
But lately it seems like that's only a small fraction
Anonymous
That's why the list is still over 200―I can't find answers worth upvoting :-(
Maybe we can try another method: vote to close!
Anonymous
Sure. I've done that too, but probably 1% of the time or less
Closing! COUNT ME IN! Too bad, I don't have an account.
17:26
Oh, top voted questions in the unanswered list are actually pretty good!
But take some time to read, I think.
Look at the one in chemistry!
25
Q: Is there a general consensus on the causes of the alpha-effect?

Greg E.There have been various explanations posited for the $\alpha$-effect. The $\alpha$-effect refers to a phenomenon wherein nucleophiles with lone pairs on atoms adjacent (i.e., in the $\alpha$- position) to the atom bearing the reacting lone pair sometimes exhibit dramatically higher reactivity tha...

Now that's a question! (Though I don't get it)
I really like your question and the research you have done. I also think your reasoning is quite solid. However, as the definition is quite vague and attempt on finding a 'true'explanation can also only be vague. I agree with you that transition state stabilisation might be the strongest clue so far, but I am also afraid, that it remains an rather unsolved question so far. (Anyway, I'd be delighted if you could post doi or isbn into your question.) — Martin May 12 '14 at 10:12
Oh, this has turned into some kind of patriots' war!
Sounds like something unanswerable.
I don't know much about chemistry, anyway.
A bounty would be useful in this case.
See that user (Martin)?
17:28
Yes?
He's the most welcoming user I've seen in SE.
His profile pic is actually very "cool" now.
It was friendlier.
Martin taught me how to be moderator in CSE
17:42
Oh, Freddy, I don't think chemistry.SE is still that much "out-of-beta" for it to be CSE. One would might think of it as Cooking.SE or such.
Whew! That's a brainful. "The setbacks to the Minsk deal [ since the rebels disavowed it by taking a strategic town they said was not covered by the truce ] have prompted new calls for U.S. President Barack Obama to give Kiev lethal weapons to defend Ukraine." — snailboat 43 secs ago
Is it that brainful? :)
Anonymous
Nah, it's a brainful. :-)
Anonymous
Inserting that many words between the subject and verb can make it a bit difficult to keep track of what's going on.
I didn't have any other uses of "since" in mind, and I thought it's really rudimentary.
Anonymous
You have to be able to fit the whole thing inside your brain to understand it, which means reading it all at once and having it in your working memory. When learners are just starting out, they can't chunk their L2 as effectively and read more slowly, both of which increase the demands on your working memory
Anonymous
A beginner might not make it all the way to the verb have without getting lost
Anonymous
17:50
Keep in mind that what's rudimentary for you may not be for others :-)
@snailboat Unrelated, but this reminded me of "one man's meat is the other's poison". I have no clue why!
It looked like an LCDOE!
Anonymous
I have the full version of the LDOCE on my electronic dictionary
Anonymous
It's pretty neat
17:56
@MARamezani Nice parse!
LDOCE, LCDOE, Whatever!
Anonymous
@MARamezani CGEL categorizes this under "verbless exclamatives", suggesting that it's interpreted with be and the subject understood, so as a type of ellipsis like we discussed
Anonymous
They also point out that you can omit just be
Anonymous
> What a terrible thing, that 'wailing wall' in Berlin!
Anonymous
17:57
That's their example for be omitted but the subject retained
By the way, if someone mentioned something as a sort of suggestion and said, "What say?", would you consider it rude?
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Hmm, it's not part of my dialect so I'm not sure …
I've just read "What say we" on ELU and it reminds me of "What say?" I've seen before.
@DamkerngT. "what say?" or "say what?"
Anonymous
@MARamezani I don't understand "GP"
17:59
Good point.
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. "What say you?" and such is comprehensible to me
Anonymous
The only expansion I could think of in context for GP was Geoffrey Pullum, but Rodney Huddleston wrote that chapter of CGEL
Anonymous
Ah, "good point"?

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