« first day (125 days earlier)      last day (4783 days later) » 

2:00 PM
i m watching
 
In Russian it's titled "I have lost my mind".
 
guys good it is
 
Haha.
 
lol
 
Guys anyone could tell me to speak/write english without grammatical errors/
i m very poor in writing
 
2:08 PM
Read, read, read, write, write, write.
Don't push it. It will either come naturally, or it won't come at all.
 
im making so errors while asking question
 
Nobody is perfect.
 
ya right. but atleast i should make communicate clear know.
 
Sure.
 
Actually im iphone developer
 
2:12 PM
See, then you should be more worried about becoming a native Cocoa speaker. Or whatever their language du jour is.
 
is it French. language du jour
 
They develop iPhone applications in French now? Oh là là!
 
0
Q: Critical review of blog post

n0nChunHey Guys! I wrote a blog post a long time back. For this post I chose a writing style very different from what I'd read or what I'd seen before. Some guys did criticize me and others did acknowledge me for the same. Now this is not a publicity stunt, but could you guys provide critical comments ...

 
@RegDwight, nope
 
@Robusto God I will have 2000 rep on Writers in no time, just for adding [critique] tags.
 
2:16 PM
God who?
 
Knock-knock!
 
Who's there?
 
No wait. This is totally backwards.
Ah. Now we're going into the right direction.
 
Backwards totally is this. Wait, no!
 
@Robusto God!
 
2:17 PM
God who?
 
God I will have 2000 rep on Writers in no time, just for adding [critique] tags.
See? Much funnier!
 
Du machst Spass!
 
But seriously, I'm at 137 there. Fear my mighty reps! Fear them already!!!
No? Nobody? Oh....
 
Pfft. I fear no reps. Except those involved in exercise.
 
Those are ribs, not reps.
 
2:19 PM
Clearly you've never been in a weight-lifting program in the U.S.
 
Clearly I don't miss a thing.
 
Weight-lifting program? I prefer to have a weight-lifting app.
 
Word.
 
As long as it ain't a bagle-eating app...
 
Now, if you were to threaten me with a weight-lifting program, then I would fear you.
 
2:21 PM
Bagel, dammit!
 
Hahahahaha.
 
Peter Noone spells it "bagle" too.
 
B to the A to the G to the L to the E!
 
Bettah step off, before you get kicked to the curb.
 
Let the mighty bagle soar!
 
2:22 PM
Kosmonaut is a serioius bagel enthusiast.
 
Yes, but I just can't understand his missing love for bagles.
 
@Robusto ...as his avatar shows.
 
OMG. A blue bagle!
 
@Martha Haha
Tomorrow I can buy a green one.
 
I hear there's also VW Bagle and VW New Bagle.
 
2:23 PM
@RegDwight Just because you like boiled-then-baked bread doesn't mean you're a misspelled-dog person.
 
@Martha No? First time I hear that!
 
Wait, @RegDwight is a beagle?
 
You see? Martha gets it. I'm just not a fan of misspelled dogs.
BUT
 
See, I like me some bagels, too, but I'm definitely a cat person.
 
That would explain a lot. "On the internet no one can tell you're a dog."
 
2:24 PM
I do really enjoy bagel dogs.
 
@Robusto "... but Robusto can tell you're a beagle"
 
Well, you might be a dachshund. I can't tell just by looking at your gravatar.
 
Zoom in. Enhance.
@Robusto OMG the post we migrated was by n0nChun. Cue some interesting comments.
 
Non sequitur-du-jour: can we please change the tag to something else? (1) I'm not even sure if Old English is on-topic for this site; and (2) it's being used to label questions about early English, not old English. Well, with one exception. For which see point (1). And yes, I know I've answered that question and favorited it and everything.
 
Well, I also created back in the day.
If something is mistagged, retag it. Don't blame the tag.
 
2:32 PM
I guess Old English is on-topic, because it can inform about etymology of Modern English. But yes, things should not be tagged Old English when it is really Early Modern English.
 
Gah, stupid computer keeps begging for a restart. BRB.
 
I mean, I understand that what Martha is actually saying is that many people don't know which tag to use, but that is true of pretty much every tag, with the possible exception of and .
 
Yes.
I don't think it is a reason to get rid of the tag.
Especially if the tag doesn't come up all that often.
It's not a huge hassle to fix it, probably.
 
I think Old English is proper for a site that purports to be about English.
 
Well, there's also Martha's concern that Old English is just off-topic here.
But I don't think so.
Ah, Robusto beats me to it.
 
2:44 PM
@Robusto Technically, you can argue that Old English is not English, but an ancestor language. But I don't think it is useful to anyone to be so strict.
Obviously, you do have to draw a line somewhere though. Germanic is a bit further back.
 
@Kosmonaut Well, there are dialects of Modern English that are mutually unintelligible, too, aren't there?
So unintelligibility alone should not be a factor.
 
@RegDwight Of course not. I am not trying to make that argument against OE anyway.
 
@RegDwight Well, yeah, if you count both Shakespeare and whatever approximation of English my mother speaks. :)
 
@Kosmonaut Not saying that you are. Just leaving random thoughts here for the protocol.
 
I don't want to argue against OE either, because it's one of my areas of interest, but it is a very different language than modern English. Hence my occasional bouts of doubting its topicality.
So, unless there are objections, I think I shall go and retag some early-modern-english questions.
 
2:56 PM
I think if the question were strictly about Old English it might be off-topic. But Old English in the context of modern English would pass the sniff test for me.
I mean, if the question were "Is eode the correct verb to use in the sentence Sume man eode ham to his huse ?
 
@Robusto I agree with that.
 
"Please proof-read my essay in Old English".
2
Now that I would love to migrate to Writers.
 
@Robusto Haha. I like that one.
 
@RegDwight HAHAHA
 
Every once in a while, I wish I weren't a mod so that I could post a really good troll question.
 
2:59 PM
@RegDwight — Now, do you want me to make my comments about your essay in Old English or Modern English?
 
ROFL! You guys are eeevil.
 
@Robusto Make them in Ancient Greek. And use only aorist.
 
@Kosmonaut Isn't that what sockpuppets are for?
 
Nah, we're eeeevil. Four e construction.
 
@Martha I would need to use a sockpuppet AND a proxy server.
 
3:00 PM
Oh, dear. I'm mortified. Usually my spelling is very good.
 
@Kosmonaut Just ask your Russian co-worker to IM the question from his iPhone.
 
@Kosmonaut Or a sockpuppet and a different browser?
 
@Martha Not enough. The IP needs to be different
 
Also, you must put on a different tie.
 
@Kosmonaut — IP daily.
 
3:03 PM
@RegDwight Does anybody else occasionally get the feeling that RegDwight is spying on them from the building across the street?
 
There's no building across the street, so no.
 
I never get that feeling, either.
 
@Kosmonaut — No. He's spying on you from inside your computer, silly.
 
But back to the actual question, @Kosmonaut, why do you want to post a troll question? You feel we aren't getting enough of those?
 
@RegDwight Haha, I'm not serious!
 
3:05 PM
Just ping ArthurRex to pump up the volume.
 
Argh, I'm tired of those.
 
Wow, I just noticed someone dropped a revenge spree on my ass last night.
 
@Kosmonaut Yeah, he replied to my "reménytelen eset" comment with (1) a demonstration that either he doesn't know as much Hungarian as he thinks he does, or that he's deluded about his behavior; and (2) a very bad-taste joke.
 
@Robusto Hm?
 
@Robusto Um, what? Serial downvotes?
 
3:09 PM
Seems like it. I guess I pissed someone off.
3 16436 (-2)
3 16481 (-2)
3 16453 (-2)
3 16481 (-2)
 
Weird. Because I got a series of upvotes to ooooold answers of mine this night.
 
Sometimes I get those too.
But I think I pissed someone off in 16481.
 
Well, there are some, ahem, critical comments by n0nChun...
That guy is a mystery to me anyway.
 
Yeah.
 
When I taught ESL, the book always said "Did you use to" and "I didn't use to".
I never say that, I treat "used to" as a special singular unit, but FWIW...
 
3:14 PM
Argh.
But what is annoying is, I went out of my way to help this guy, and he's rude and then takes revenge. No good deed goes unpunished.
 
Yes, I feel that way sometimes too.
In most (American) dialects, used and used to aren't pronounced the same.
 
I mean, disregard the answer, disagree with it, whatever, but I'm making a sincere effort to be helpful — even to the point of searching for a corroborating link.
@Kosmonaut — Yeah, it's more like useta.
 
Yeah, what sucks is the personal affront. The points are irrelevant, but the sting sits deep.
 
And then n0nchun's answer is actually not good... it is just a link.
 
Jinx!
Kosmonaut beats me by 5 seconds.
 
3:19 PM
Someone owes someone a coke.
 
No 7ups accepted!
 
"This object is used to open doors." = [juztu] or [juzd tu] — "This object used to work but now it doesn't." = [justə] or [justu]
Fixed
 
Feb 8 at 14:53, by RegDwight
E jushto!
Awwww, I was going to turn your "crap, backwards" into a "crap, forwards", but you turned it into a "fixed" instead...
You're no fun. Like, at all.
 
No way. I was totally fun at about 7 PM last Thursday.
 
Speaking of which. It's half past four, and I haven't touched a single Lego brick yet.
 
3:25 PM
@Kosmonaut — We're only concerned with the fun you provide here.
 
Cue stupid joke from @Robusto.
Or clever joke. You never know...
But whatever, I'm off to touching bricks no man has touched before!
 
creepy
but have fun
 
@RegDwight So ... your wife does most of the Lego work around your house?
Anyway, go Lego. See if we care.
 
@Robusto Well, I have to thwack you first.
Kthxbye.
 
@RegDwight — And you should always give me the benefit of the doubt. Always.
 
3:29 PM
I have a metric ton of doubts about you, but I wouldn't call them beneficial.
I'm out, me said!
 
@Robusto, Thwack.
(Because I know that's what you were waiting for.)
 
3:43 PM
@Martha — Huh? How was that a pun?
 
17 mins ago, by Robusto
@RegDwight So ... your wife does most of the Lego work around your house?
 
@Martha — Look where your thwack links to ...
 
That's weird, I didn't link that to anything. I just typed "@Robusto".
Ew. It didn't used to do that, did it? It's linking any @-mention to the closest message by that person.
The chat is trying to be too smart for its own good.
 
Stupid chat.
 
 
1 hour later…
5:04 PM
Hi.
 
F'x
5:36 PM
hi all
so, it's bounty season already? They come and go so fast!
 
5:51 PM
Bounty season?
 
6:10 PM
Questions:
Analyzing historical discussions about/on/of the state and political autonomy in three different periods, A. Nonymous shed some light upon...
Which preposition to use?
I saw some comments on a similar questions today, but what about this specific sentence?
My first choice would probably be "of", with "on" second...
I'd say all three would be acceptable, but one is probably more suitable than the others.
 
hi all
just catching up
 
Hi!
Do you read all chat history?
I suspect that several people do so here; I should be careful with what I say...
 
@Martha (regarding which word in possessive constructions gets modified) Arabic (at least, the formal variety thereof) modifies both nouns, for good measure... (al-muwazzafuun = the employees; al-sharikatu = the company; but "the company's employees" is "muwazzafuu al-sharikati"). Best not to do things by halves ;-)
The "muwazzafuu" form only ever appears in possessive constructions
@Cerberus Only when I have something more important that I need to be avoiding ;-)
 
6:27 PM
@PSM: I always have something like that!
 
BTW @Cerberus, I think you can actually have nice quotes here in chat.
Ah, doesn't work.
 
@Kosmonaut (regarding "I didn't use/used to") I can never make up my mind which I prefer. I tend to chicken out and say "I never used to..."
 
Hm. How do they do it in the Tavern?
 
@Reg: Nice quotes? Like quotes in Questiosn and Answers?
 
Well, not that nice. More like in Gmail or other email clients.
 
6:32 PM
@Kosmonaut (and used and used are pronounced differently by most people in the UK, too)
 
Where you get a vertical line on the left-hand side of the quote.
 
Ah right.
> Harr indeed!
 
Harr! That's precisely what I tried, but it didn't work!
 
I did mine with > and then some spaces.
 
@Martha (regarding ArthurRex) Yes, I noticed that... it's not the first time reading one of his comments has made me feel vaguely uncomfortable...
 
6:34 PM
Perhaps it was the spaces...
> Analyzing historical discussions about/on/of the state and political autonomy in three different periods, A. Nonymous shed some light upon...
Yup. Works now.
 
@PSM: I agree about Arthur in general; he is a bit odd.
@Reg: It is a bit painful to see my sloppy typo repeated several times... probably a good lesson.
 
Ach Gottchen, I didn't even notice.
 
So what about my discussions? Which preposition is better, on or of?
(Silly German diminutives...)
 
Isn't there like a question for that?
I'm still catching up, so sorry if I misunderstand.
3
Q: "A discussion of", "a discussion on", and "a discussion about"

Simon“A discussion of”, “a discussion on”, and “a discussion about”: When is each phrase used in preference to the other? If context is important, I want to use it as a subheading on a piece of non-fiction.

(And you have the very same diminutives in Dutch, you just spell them differently.)
 
Right, I noticed that Question; but my question is on the one hand too specific to be covered by that one, on the other it is too similar to post it as a separate question.
(But we refuse to use our diminutives in such silly phrases.)
 
6:43 PM
Uh, I'm gonna duck out. I know what I would use, but from that question it appears that if you ask three people, you'll get four opinions.
(You have much more silly phrases, can't fool me.)
And actually, now I'm no longer so sure what I would use.
 
Yeah it is probably a subtle thing. Even so, I'd be interested in your choice, arbitrary as it may be... unless you're scawed...
(Fair enough.)
Oh...
 
@RegDwight I'm going to plump for "of"...
 
Ich muß den Kopf durchlüften, I guess.
 
My choice would be "of": with "on", it sounds more like an actual organised discussion...
 
@psmears That's what I was going to plump for, too, but now I have no idea, seriously.
 
6:45 PM
@Psmears: Thanks!
Hey it seems we are all plumping for the same guy.
This counts as three votes.
 
Semantic satiation, here.
I must look at some other words.
Daffodil, for example.
 
Eh, semantic satiation? As in, you've looked at it so long that your mind becomes all blurry?
 
Sure. Don't tell me you're not familiar with our most famoustest question.
 
Where's @Robusto when you need him? Based on his answer to that question I'd expect him to cast a dissenting vote ;-)
 
22 hours ago, by RegDwight
Hooray for editorial mentions:
 
6:48 PM
It seems I am not! I looked it up at Wiki and it seems to mean what I suspected.
 
34
Q: Is there a word or phrase for the feeling you get after looking at a word for too long?

Boofus McGoofus(Perhaps this only happens to me, but I doubt it.) Sometimes after looking at a word for a while, I become convinced that it can't possibly be spelled correctly. Even after looking it up, sounding it out, and realizing that there's simply no other way to spell the word, it still looks wrong. ...

@psmears You have to mention Chicago, d'oh.
It will summon Robusto in no time.
 
@RegDwight Silly me...
 
An excellent answer, Martha's: I immediately got the right interpretation when you mentioned the phrase, even though I didn't know it (the phrase).
 
7:26 PM
Okay, people, does this question even make any sense to anyone?
0
Q: Is 'peaceful demonstration' an oxymoron?

ArthurRexOh, we know the standards: Jumbo Shrimp, Real Phony,Living Dead..... is 'peaceful demonstration in the list: reasons why/not are, of course unexpectedly anticipated.

 
It makes sense in so far that I understand what is asked... but it isn't a very good question, no.
 
I am rather tempted to see it as NARQ.
Especially if you pay attention who the OP is.
I think this is pushing the envelope a tiny bit too far.
 
It is not a very good question; but close it? This guy is not nearly as bad as our previous clown.
 
It leads nowhere. It could be argued that this question is of no use to anyone but the OP, who knows the answer already.
 
Re: the discussion question, I think the three possible prepositions all have slightly different meanings, but I'm not sure I can describe the difference coherently.
 
7:36 PM
@Martha: I think so too; it is difficult to decide which subtly different meaning would be most appropriate in that sentence...
But should you have an intuitive preference, I'd be delighted to hear it.
 
@psmears — Huh?
 
@Robusto We are talking about discussion on vs of vs about.
 
Umm, I haven't been in prep school for along time.
 
@RegDwight, you should be in the lounge right now. They're talking about site promotion.
 
> Analyzing historical discussions about/on/of the state and political autonomy in three different periods, A. Nonymous will shed some light upon...
Which preposition to use in this sentence?
@Mich: What is site promotion?
 
7:42 PM
Promotion of site.
Obviously.
 
Promoting the site's virtues elsewhere, as in PR?
 
@MichaelMyers I'm logged in and catching up. Thanks.
 
Yes, they brought in a PR guy to virtually talk about it.
 
OK.
 
@RegDwight — Do what you like. I don't really care. I wrote that response either late at night or early in the morning. Right now I'm watching Serenity with my son and I don't care about prepositions masculine and prepositions feminine. Or the lights of Norway and all that.
 
7:44 PM
Have fun, then.
 
Du auch.
 
@Rob: I see. Should you be bored later today, feel free to @ me your choice, because I actually need this sentence, that is, I am helping a friend with her PhD.
 
Well, quick, give me the sentence now.
Son and wife are putting pasticchio in the oven atm, so I have one or two mins.
 
> Analyzing historical discussions about/on/of the state and political autonomy in three different periods, A. Nonymous will shed some light upon...
Reg, Psmears, and I all voted for the same preposition, but none of us was entirely positive.
 
@Robusto Wasn't suggesting that there was anything wrong with your response - just would be interested in your input in @Cerberus's example. But if you're busy that's fine :)
 
7:47 PM
I would go with them in this order: 1. on 2. about 3. of
 
@Rob: OK thanks!
Funny, we all chose of.
 
Ask me tomorrow and my mood might change. This is one of those occasions where the context depends on what words are used in the sentence for me.
@Cerberus — Definitely my last choice, and it's a distant 3rd.
I would almost never use of in a sentence like that.
 
It is the historical that makes me want to use of; with on, it sounds a bit as though someone organized an actual debate.
 
@Cerberus, given the almost-not-parallel awkward nature of "the state and political autonomy", I'd actually put in my vote for "about".
 
Whereas this "discussion" is rather like a discours.
 
7:51 PM
I suggest you take a couple shots of Jägermeister and look at the situation more clearly. Fight your fear with alcohol, if that's what it takes.
And ... I'm gone. See you all later.
 
@Martha: I actually replaced the real topics with "the state and political autonomy" because my friend didn't want her stuff to be searchable on the internet; but the real topics are "democracy and political authority".
Haha ok bye Rob.
 
Yay, we have votes for all three prepositions. From native speakers, if I recall rightly...
 
@Robusto: no misbehavin', now!
 
@Psmears: Yay for you! Boo for me!
 
Hmm... "discussions of democracy..." "discussions on democracy..." I could go with "of", here.
 
7:54 PM
@Martha: Yay!
 
@Cerberus That's fair... I suggest you go for my solution (for being the first), Robusto's (for coming from the person with the highest rep), or Martha's (being the only one that actually came with some sort of reasoning...)
 
Haha, "some sort", yes.
@PSM: But I thought you voted for "of" as well?
Yes, you did!
So yours and Martha's are the same!
 
I was referring to Martha's original answer
 
Ah, right.
But I must take her updated answer as a closer fit, as she based that on the real topics of discussion I gave later.
 
OK, I guess I can allow that ;-)
 
7:59 PM
@Cerberus, just tell your friend to use "discussions regarding" and be done with it.
<evil grin>
 
@Martha: Hmm, that might be an option...
I guess we were trying to save on long words because we'd already used so many of them...
 
I was kind of joking. (I mean, "regarding" can work, but it's not necessary to confuse the question with yet another choice.)
 
Brb I needs to cook dinner.
@Martha: Phew! Thank God!
 
@Martha It's not necessary. But it is fun.
 
@Martha Or "historical state-and-political-autonomy-related discussions ". Easy as pie, really.
 
8:07 PM
@psmears Well, yeah. Hence:
7 mins ago, by Martha
<evil grin>
 
8:18 PM
@Cerberus: Trying to be helpful (for once!) I did just ask my other half for yet another opinion, but I'm afraid the response could be summarised as "I don't know"...
 
@PSM: Well that is a valuable reply: uncertainty among ehhm those whose opinions I value tells me that none of these prepositions would be grossly ludicrous.
 
@Cerberus That's definitely a reasonable conclusion
 
@Reg: Thank you for that highly elegant solution!
Now I shall have to continue my cooking. Your beeps will be heard.
 
8:40 PM
Sounds like a question for a linguist, @Kosmonaut:
2
Q: Words that Sound All-Inclusive, but Aren't Necessarily All-Inclusive.

Jonathan SampsonWords like "anywhere" and "everybody" usually have a predefined or implicit context during conversations: Everybody is going out to lunch. Would you like to come too? We are willing to go anywhere - we're starving. In this statement, clearly the speaker doesn't mean all people from all plac...

 

« first day (125 days earlier)      last day (4783 days later) »