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user19161
12:02 AM
2
Q: Noun for "playing of the video/audio" object

Andrew ShepherdIs there a word which means running of this media event? For example: The advertisement was played 428 times over the promotions period. The advertisement had four-hundred and twenty-eight word-goes-here over the period. The word needs to encompass both video and audio media. The...

 
what is your attitude to Lenin?
 
user19161
I am not sure about my answer to the question above, but I think runs is OK and is the first natural word I thought of.
 
user19161
@trg787 No idea of him, forgot all my history!
 
and wtht lenin you did not get socialistic soociiety
 
user19161
@trg787 And I also know there was Stalin but that's all I recall.
 
12:18 AM
@Vitaly Don't worry, I was just in a bit of a bad mood and easily frustrated, no hard feelings. I am forcing myself to limit my presence to one room tonight because I'm hopelessly behind on several things that I need to do tonight (thesis, e-mails I was supposed to answer weeks ago). I'll pop in later when I'm done.
 
user19161
@Cerberus Then you should not come here at all. Good luck!
 
@JasperLoy I'm trying not to, and I've already closed my other (game) browser...
But then I get pinged...
 
user19161
@Cerberus Just close this tab as well now. Shoo!
 
Ungg... it's too hard!
 
he needs a more polite way to be ushered away
 
12:27 AM
I got bored waiting to transfer buses.
 
good ELU chat is the place to come
 
@Cerberus @Cerberus @Cerberus!
 
ah, blogging. It takes up so little time, and is yet so time consuming
 
@aediaλ What are you doing!
 
You're supposed to be working.
Ignore the pings.
You can do it.
 
12:30 AM
Well, happy birthday @Jasper! I hope you get lots of presents
 
user19161
@simchona Thank you! Have you had lunch?
 
@JasperLoy Not yet. Just a little mashed potatoes earlier
 
@simchona I have somehow managed not to blog. It's one of the very important things I'm going to get around to doing someday.
 
Happy birdday @Jasper
 
@aediaλ I officially contribute to one blog, and edit another
 
12:33 AM
@aediaλ It is hard... I am the worst procrastinator ever invented!
 
user19161
@aediaλ Good, aspiring linguist!
 
@aediaλ Same here!
 
user19161
@BogdanLataianu Thank you, I am a chicken after all!
 
user19161
@Cerberus Good o great philosopher!
 
No, bad! Cerberus bad!
I will even have to make up an excuse why I haven't e-mailed back to my professor all weekend.
 
12:34 AM
@Cerberus Well. A little self-flagellation never hurt anyone.
 
@simchona Doing it all the time, but I'm only getting numb.
 
user19161
2
Q: Term for wordplay using adjacent repetition of homophones

ShawnIs there a term for the kind of wordplay in which homophones are repeated adjacently with different meaning? For example, The rose rose up. Rows rose in church.

 
user19161
I have edited this question already.
 
Good title change
 
@Cerberus It's not even the weekend anymore, right? Don't tell me I went to work on a weekend.
 
12:36 AM
@aediaλ True...
You went to work on a weekend?
 
Hahaha!
 
user19161
@simchona I am a minimalist. I like to use the fewest number of words in my own writing, but I am not taking that to the extreme here on other's posts though.
 
@Cerberus I almost didn't get it and now I am silently laughing to myself like a madman on the bus.
 
user19161
@aediaλ or a madwoman
 
@aediaλ Ehh to be honest I really didn't get any of that, and I didn't even mean to make a joke... but I am glad I am even able to amuse you in my ignorance!
 
12:40 AM
Hola everybody.
 
user19161
@simchona Yummy, sounds like KFC.
 
user19161
@Robusto Hola, though I prefer hallo.
 
@Cerberus You can say that again.
 
Or hullo.
 
user19161
or Hello.
 
12:42 AM
@Robusto Aloha!
 
@Robusto Hi! I am not here.
@aediaλ bows
 
@Cerberus — I noticed.
 
@aediaλ Ooooh now I get it!
 
user19161
@Cerberus You really should be working on your thesis! And then after that your book.
 
@Cerberus: What's your thesis topic?
 
12:43 AM
@aediaλ Man I am slow. It all makes sense now. I was wondering about your unusual formulation already!
@JasperLoy You're right!
 
user19161
@Cerberus As always!
 
user19161
@Robusto Maybe on Robustos!
 
@Robusto I have been trying so hard to avoid distracting the puppy and then you come in here with that? You're gonna get him all wound up so's he chews the furniture.
 
@JasperLoy — Sounds like a no-credit course to me.
@aediaλ — I am here to help.
 
user19161
Let's stop pinging him then.
 
12:45 AM
@Robusto The influence of the great classical poetry in hexameter on that of the Biblical poets, who wrote epical poems in hexameter too, but about the Bible. I am specifically comparing classical depictions of the Golden Age with Genesis.
chews furniture
 
@Cerberus — Interesting.
 
So one might think! Until one has to do actually do it.
 
Cave canem!
 
Verum'st, cavete!
 
user19161
Interesting, maybe I will rewrite Genesis then.
 
12:48 AM
@JasperLoy Join the queue!
 
@Cerberus er, wouldn't the biblical poets have written poems in (what would become) the Bible rather than about the Bible?
 
@JasperLoy Who should we stop pinging?
 
user19161
@GraceNote Cerberus, because he has a lot of work to do but is not disciplined enough.
 
So we should stop inging @Cerberus, is what you're saying
 
@JSBᾶngs I'm not sure what you mean? You are saying that biblical poet is an incorrect term for poets writing about the Bible?
 
12:51 AM
@GraceNote We can't gerund him?
 
Hm. I lost a p.
 
@Cerberus biblical poet implies the poets who actually wrote the poems found in the bible
 
user19161
@simchona That is deep.
 
@simchona But aye, I mean, what would one Cerberusing be doing?
 
@GraceNote I must praise your attempt at self-control at least!
 
12:52 AM
do you mean post-classical christian poets like Milton? or perhaps earlier christian poets from the late roman empire?
 
@GraceNote Procrastinating by chatting on EL&U
 
@JSBᾶngs The latter.
 
Some kind of archaic utility of salmon?
 
swoon @Cerberus said queue! Look at all those successive vowels.
 
@Cerberus that seems very interesting. but on that i'll leave you alone, since i'm going to bed
 
12:52 AM
@JSBᾶngs You may be right. I was just making up a term there anyway. How about a biblical poem?
@aediaλ Oh shoot, I should have known...
@JSBᾶngs Night!
 
@aediaλ 'Tis one of his strengths
 
Adios @JSB!
 
I just like queueoid vowels.
 
G'nite, JS!
 
You're implying that javascript should be put to sleep?
 
12:54 AM
@Cerberus — You like vowel movements?
 
fans self
 
@Cerberus That'd be a very "nice" way to put it.
 
@Robusto Metathesis quantitatis, certainly.
@GraceNote I know how subtle your are of mind.
 
@Cerberus — Well, eat a lot of bran. Or meta-bran.
 
@Robusto You like swallowing vowels, don't you, you American?
 
12:56 AM
@Cerberus Home of the Alphabits
 
@Cerberus — I am having a rhotic good time. Grrrrrrr!
 
user19161
@Cerberus He's not American, he is a cigar, and a dream. But I guess you can have an American cigar and the American dream!
 
@Robusto What is that obscene sound after the schwa? Your vowels are troubling you?
@JasperLoy I'll pass on both, thank you!
 
@Cerberus — No. I have schwa de vivre!
2
 
@simchona Hey I'm not an Alpahbit, how dare you!
@Robusto That's what Louis XVI said about his mistresses.
And the later Kings about their harems, like Mitterand.
 
12:59 AM
@Cerberus — At least his mistresses kept their heads in times of trouble.
 
@Robusto Don't be too sure.
 
user19161
@cerb I really think you should be working on your writing now.
 
Jasper is right.
Later!
 
BTW, please be sure and remind me if the Sultan of Brunei job comes open. I want to put in an application. $50 billion and a harem. Don't even tell me about the medical.
 
user19161
Hmm, you may be the Sultan himself for all we know!
 
1:02 AM
I'm reasonably sure I'm not. And so are you, I don't doubt.
 
Good luck with your work, @Cerberus!
 
Waah!
 
You can do it @Cerb!
 
I bet the Queen is on line now and then.
She will be incognita.
 
user19161
I think one of the Sultan's sons was my schoolmate.
 
1:04 AM
Cya @Cerberus.
 
@JasperLoy Really?
@Robusto Later!
 
user19161
Good luck @cerb! May the force be with you!
 
Gracias!
 
user19161
@Cerberus Yes, if I recall correctly.
 
That's funny.
Our princes go to regular schools too.
 
1:06 AM
Enjoy, @Cerberus!
 
user19161
Secondary school that is. Maybe some other relative if I got it wrong, or maybe the Sultan has changed.
 
@GraceNote No enjoyment whatsoever, but thanks!
 
@Cerberus "Enjoy" seemed to always be the thing to say, whether someone's off to final exams, off to an examination, or whatever else ill befalls that person's future.
 
user19161
@GraceNote In a tone of humorous sarcasm I guess.
 
@GraceNote Really? What an odd ritual!
 
user19161
1:08 AM
@Cerberus I think you should be off, really!
 
Yes, stop pinging me!
 
@JasperLoy Not really. It's just a bit less formal than "Farewell"
 
@Grace I say "Have fun with that."
 
What are you talking about, @Cerb?
 
Later, @Cerberus
@aediaλ Aye, that too.
 
1:08 AM
Ahhh!
 
:3
 
Oh, something wrong @Cerberus?
 
user19161
Just go @cerb!
 
They're right you know, @Cerb
 
Stop it!
 
1:09 AM
@Cerberus Actually, to wit, sometimes I'll write "Enjoi" as part of my continued rebellion against the English language.
 
user19161
@GraceNote Yes I noted that. You can write a new dictionary and a new grammar book too!
 
@GraceNote What about ehnjoi?
 
Share And Enjoy!
 
@JasperLoy There used to be a lexicon about me. It was somewhat odd.
@simchona Eh, that's a bit too apathetic.
 
sulks to go rearrange letter magnets
 
user19161
1:12 AM
@GraceNote It was odd because it was not even lexicon.
 
user19161
@simchona Presumably after doing the folders?
 
@JasperLoy Internship over. No more folders
 
Well, @Cerberus has the right of it, though. I should head out as well. G'nite all!
 
user19161
@simchona I see. I know where you did it, and you know how I know.
 
Night!
 
1:13 AM
Hasta luego, Grace!
 
user19161
@Cerberus Goodnight, and good luck!
 
user19161
That's a movie actually.
 
Thanks!
 
user19161
@GraceNote Oh sorry. I should say goodnight to you instead!
 
Sorry to make this a mass exodus but I must go eat dinner before I waste away.
Work hard Cerb.
Gnight all!
 
user19161
1:16 AM
@aediaλ Goodnight. Have a great dinner!
 
Hi folks... I'm looking for some advice. We have a question on physics.SE that seems to me more appropriate for english.SE:
0
Q: What are the differences between the terms flammable, inflammable, and non-flammable?

AndrewThis question should perhaps go in Chemistry, to which I am committed, but since the Chemistry Stack Exchange forum is not yet in beta, I am wondering if you can help me from a physics perspective. I am wondering about the definitions of the terms flammable, inflammable, and non-flammable. Wi...

Would it be appropriate for migration?
 
@DavidZaslavsky: flammable and inflammable mean the same thing. Non-flammable is an antonym.
 
@DavidZaslavsky It would probably be closed really quickly
See:
2
Q: Difference between "inflammable" and "flammable"

shan23 Possible Duplicate: Why are not infamous and inflammable the opposite of famous and flammable like incomplete, inactivity, inappropriate and so on? I'm very confused by the existence of these apparently antonymous words, which actually mean the same thing. Which word should I use? Can ...

 
@simchona OK thanks, I had a feeling that might exist already
 
@DavidZaslavsky You're welcome.
 
user19161
1:20 AM
@DavidZaslavsky Actually it's just general reference as far as the English is concerned.
 
I'm pretty sure it's off topic on Physics so I'll close it and point the questioner to that question on English (in a comment).
 
Note that the question I posted was already closed as a duplicate, but its title is the one that came up in search first
 
user19161
Of course, inflammable means flammable but can also refer to an inflammable situation, in which case flammable should not be used unless intentionally metaphorically.
 
Fair enough, the poster should be able to follow the link ;-)
Thanks everyone for your help
 
user19161
0
Q: Is this a good short story?

roobid135Jack and the Pedestrian Once, Jack, the puerile imbecile, went to the park. He was perusing his favorite book - "Scheiss (1) Hitler!". A white pedestrian walked by Jack and said, "What a inane tome that 'erudite' is reading!" Jack heard this and said to the pedestrian, "You're a n*gro! Go to h...

 
user19161
1:28 AM
Off topic.
 
@JasperLoy Yes, yes and very much yes
 
user19161
@simchona One yes is enough. Now should I say done, done and very much done?
 
Wow, Physics.SE has some strange answers. 24 upvotes and a checkmark for an answer that DOES NOT EXPLAIN WHY AIRPLANES FLY!
24
A: What really allows airplanes to fly?

SklivvzA short summary of the paper mentioned in another answer and another good site. Basically planes fly because they push enough air downwards and receive an upwards lift thanks to Newton's third law. They do so in a variety of manners, but the most significant contributions are: The angle of at...

@DavidZaslavsky: If you're still here, maybe take a look at that physics answer I linked.
How does nobody mention Bernoulli's principle?
 
user19161
@Robusto Well I don't know physics, but he did say planes fly because ...
 
Well, because Bernoulli's principle doesn't work. It's a popular but incorrect explanation. c.f. xkcd:
 
1:33 AM
In fluid dynamics, Bernoulli's principle states that for an inviscid flow, an increase in the speed of the fluid occurs simultaneously with a decrease in pressure or a decrease in the fluid's potential energy. Bernoulli's principle is named after the Dutch-Swiss mathematician Daniel Bernoulli who published his principle in his book Hydrodynamica in 1738. Bernoulli's principle can be applied to various types of fluid flow, resulting in what is loosely denoted as Bernoulli's equation. In fact, there are different forms of the Bernoulli equation for different types of flow. The simple form...
 
user19161
We need to ask the Wright brothers for the answer,
 
@DavidZaslavsky — Haha. OK, sudo answer the question correctly.
 
though I guess the EL&L room is probably not the best place to have this discussion ;-)
 
user19161
@DavidZaslavsky a good place nonetheless for some entertainment
 
@DavidZaslavsky — This is The Incomprehensible Room. Welcome, and Stop Making Sense now!
 
1:36 AM
oh, I can do that...
well, I thought I could do that. stupid sense, it's so hard to get rid of
 
BTW, I took pilot training, and this is one of the first things they taught us. It's on the private pilot's written test, even.
 
what, that airplanes fly because of Bernoulli's principle?
By the way, if you want entertainment: this is physics.SE's top voted question
83
Q: Cooling a cup of coffee with help of a spoon

fortranduring the breakfast with my colleagues a question popped into my head: What is the fastest method to cool a cup of coffee if your only available instrument is a spoon? A qualitative answer would be nice, but if we could find a mathematical model or even better make the experiment (we don't hav...

 
Umm, shouldn't you people be finding dark matter or something? Instead, you are measuring out your lives in coffee spoons, as T. S. Eliot might say.
 
Maybe the dark matter is the stuff at the bottom of a coffee cup, you never know
 
So Taster's Choice is what keeps galaxies from flying apart? Interesting.
 
1:47 AM
That would be awesome
 
There is magic in them crystals.
 
...although I might as well point out that coffee is big at physics conferences
 
@DavidZaslavsky: It's popular in Tarentino films as well.
I think @Cerberus needs to be pinged for a break from his boring thesis grinding.
 
Hey!
You can't entertain yourself very well, can you?
 
I guess that's my cue to go watch Pulp Fiction ;-)
 
2:05 AM
@Cerberus — It's funnier when we annoy you. Physicists have proven this theorem already, so just deal with it.
Oh, and @Cerberus: Here's some hexameter for you:
S'io credesse che mia risposta fosse
A persona che mai tornasse al mondo,
Questa fiamma staria senza piu scosse.
Ma perciocche giammai di questo fondo
Non torno vivo alcun, s'i'odo il vero,
Senza tema d'infamia ti rispondo.
 
@Robusto Huh, is that really hexameter? I am not familiar with Italian prosody (is it based on word stress or syllabic quantity?), but I can't squeeze these lines into hexameters for the life of me.
Isn't that terza rima?
 
@Cerberus — Si.
 
OK.
 
Each line tends to 6 stresses. I figured that was close enough for rock 'n' roll.
@Cerberus — From The Divine Comedy, so of course it's terza rima.
 
2:21 AM
I'm not sure hexameter is ever used for anything but the dactylic hexameter, but OK.
What do you think about this?
0
A: When is it appropriate to use the word "she"

CerberusI believe proper etiquette demands that you should never refer by "he" or "she" to someone who is or is presumed to be taking part in the same conversation. You should use either "you" or a proper name or title ("Cleopatra", "His Majesty", "Mr Archimedes", "my superior").

 
I see some add a comma before presenting something
 
@Cerberus: I dunno. I think it is fine to refer to someone by he or she. Nothing was said about the person being present or not. But even if she were present, it's fine after giving the name and title to make subsequent references using pronouns.
 
example: ...under the title, “Economy has Obama facing major political test — and Democratic strategists divided.”...
I think that is incorrect
what do you guys think?
 
@Robusto Hmm... you have never heard of this? It is de rigueur in Dutch, but it could be that few people know about it.
 
2:36 AM
What about this:
0
Q: Common Icelandic Words

RLHAre there any words within the English language that are of a common or semi-common use that originate from Icelandic?

 
I suppose if you were being really formal. But if it's an etiquette question, it doesn't belong here.
 
@Robusto OK.
@BogdanLataianu Many people use that comma; I've seen it in respectable literature. But not everyone uses it. I'm not sure. Sometimes I use it, sometimes I don't.
I think you should ask a Question about it!
 
thank you
 
0
Q: What is wrong with the word "performant"?

alfonsoI keep getting the red underlining in Word whenever I write the word "performant". Here I intend to refer to something that performs good or better than something else (ie it's more performant). Is there something wrong about that word? Does it mean what I actually want to say?

 
2:52 AM
:)
 
user19161
Talking about tiramisu, strange thing, I just had some bought by my aunt.
 
@Bogdan -- I voted to close that question, but I approved the edit
-1
Q: What's the meaning of "saw" in this sentence?

user12289 The terseness and perceived difficulty of C saw it being ousted from university teaching during the late 1990s in favour of Java but there is a growing feeling amongst some teaching communities that Java really is not such a good place to start beginners. What's the meaning of saw in t...

 
some write so bad English
 
@BogdanLataianu such bad
 
"whtat the saw meaning..."
 
user19161
2:59 AM
@simchona Done.
 
@JasperLoy Many thanks
 
was it fine that i edited?
 
@BogdanLataianu Yes! Don't worry about that
 
user19161
@BogdanLataianu Anyone can edit! Sometimes it is not approved or accepted doesn't matter. Sometimes it is the system not working properly also.
 
user19161
Yay, I got the word-choice badge!
 
3:03 AM
Well, the question was deleted
@Jasper I have...etymology, meaning, and single-word-requests
 
user19161
@simchona OK good!
 
@JasperLoy It helps that a lot of them are double-tagged
 
user19161
Hmm, my fan gave me another 30. Probably the same one as yesterday, but could also be the one from last week.
 
user19161
But maybe the one last week is the one yesterday?
 
@JasperLoy Maybe it was someone who knew it was your birthday
 
user19161
3:08 AM
@simchona Well, everyone with an internet connection on earth knows now.
 
^^
 
user19161
@sim That sentence which I said had 4 meanings is very mysterious. I guess I may find the answer in future.
 
user19161
@bog I get all my avatars from avatarsdb.com, you can take a look there if you feel like changing.
 
thanks
 
user19161
3:19 AM
@ChaosGamerΕΛΥēelū Yo! I hope you enjoyed your kimchi.
 
@Chaos: In the future, can you please not mention Hitler or try to make jokes about it?
 
@simchona I am not against Jewish, alright? I was just joking. Yes, I will stop.
 
user19161
There, there, closure.
 
@ChaosGamerΕΛΥēelū Jewish is an adjective, and doesn't go with your sentence. But thank you.
 
user19161
Hear, hear. Jew is the noun, Jewish is the adjective.
 
3:22 AM
Well doesn't "Jew" sounds offendive, just like saying "Jap"?
 
user19161
This is amazing. I get to use there, there and hear, hear all at once!
 
@ChaosGamerΕΛΥēelū Offensive
And he has a point. It's better to say Jewish people
 
@simchona never thought you could agree with me :). anyway can't chat frequently, I'm currently playing live game.
 
@ChaosGamerΕΛΥēelū It was bound to happen, especially after you said I had good taste for Korean food
 
@simchona Kimchi is Korean's mascot.
 
user19161
@ChaosGamerΕΛΥēelū I thought it was you.
 
user19161
3:41 AM
2
Q: When is it appropriate to use the word "she"

angieMy boss has asked me not to refer to her as "she" because she says it's disrespectful. After I refer to her by her proper name or by her title, isn't is appropriate to refer to her as she?

 
user19161
This is a very weird question.
 
@JasperLoy It seems like a politeness question, though I like @Cerb's answer
 
user19161
@simchona I know, but weird because I cannot think of the exact situation where her boss finds it rude, so maybe the boss is crazy in this case.
 
@JasperLoy I feel like I've heard something about this, actually
 
user19161
@simchona Really, like what? You might want to give an answer or comment there too.
 
3:44 AM
@JasperLoy That referring to someone as "she" discounts them (only in really archaic, formal situations)
Because if they are present, you should use their name
 
user19161
@simchona Well suppose I say: Ms Simchona has kindly agreed to be the guest-of-honour. She will now talk to us about kittens. Let us put our hands together to welcome her. You mean in some situations we should replace the she and her?
 
@JasperLoy I'm not sure "her" is wrong, but using "she" is apparently like pointing
I'm not clear on the rules, but it rings a very distant bell
 
user19161
@simchona OK Noldorin has some comments there.
 
@Jasper I added an answer of my own
 
user19161
4:00 AM
@simchona I think for the question being asked, this is the best answer that we can give.
 
@JasperLoy Thank you
 
 
4 hours later…
7:56 AM
Happy Birthday @Jasper!
Hope you're having a good day.
 
8:17 AM
Hey @Matt
 
@simchona still awake? Hello!
 
Haha, its not late here
 
oh!
oh well, good then
 
user19161
@MattEllenД Thank you!
 
user19161
@simchona It is only 10 pm, the time when real life begins.
 
user19161
8:22 AM
Yay, I got the pundit badge! It is very weird, I got three badges in the past few hours. A spectacle in the universe.
 
It shows you're a valued member of the EL&U community
 
user19161
8:45 AM
@matt Anyway I think you will be able to close questions soon, only about 200 away!
 
@JasperLoy Yep, I need to get something like 8 rep points per day to have close vote privileges by TLaPD
then there will be swashbuckling adventures aplenty!
 
user19161
8:59 AM
I have been doing quite a number of edits recently. It's a good idea for editors to try to make each edit count, to give the maximal improvement to each post you edit.
 
9:51 AM
Yay, Jasper is oooold! Congrats!
 
10:01 AM
For the fun of it, I went to look at vgv's questions in other boards
 
Jez
since i got this new washer-dryer, all my clothes are wearing out much more quickly, particularly the elbows. :-(
 
@simchona did you find anything good?
 
0
Q: How to use to + V-ing

ThuanI saw some scenarios that we used the structure to + V-ing. I saw the following: Looking forward to + v-ing Disposed to using few words. I would like to apply what I learned in school to helping make more money This is the closest we have come to winning the league I'm confused about that.

This comes up over and over and over again.
11
Q: "To hear" or "to hearing"?

Ed. BrazilI often see constructions like this one: I look forward to hearing from you soon. It seems a little strange to me. In my mind it would look better using the infinitive form "to hear". I don't know if it has something with the verbals... Anyway, what I want to know is which form is correct a...

 
user19161
@RegDwightѬſ道 Thanks! I would say: Age is just a number.
 
@JasperLoy Well, how should I put it...
 
user19161
10:09 AM
It is natural to age, and age is a natural number.
 
user19161
In mathematics, natural numbers are the ordinary counting numbers 1, 2, 3, ... (sometimes zero is also included). There is no universal agreement about which set of numbers is designated by the term "natural numbers": some use it to designate the positive integers }, others include the number 0, so that the term designates the non-negative integers }. The former definition is the traditional one, the use of the latter definition appears first in the 19th century. Some authors use the term natural number to exclude zero and whole number to include it; others use whole number in a way that ...
 
@JasperLoy You travel through space at 30 km per second, on a piece of rock, around a huge ball of fire. It's only natural to celebrate every time you come around 360° and survive.
 
Jez
@RegDwight Every day?
 
user19161
@RegDwightѬſ道 I have not heard this one!
 
@Jez I mean full circle around the ball of fire. Note how I did not mention the other rotation at all. Context, my friend. Context.
@JasperLoy That's because I just wrote it.
 
Jez
10:15 AM
Also it's not fire, it's nuclear fusion-causing plasma
 
user19161
I am sorry I don't know your birthdays if you do not hint it. I can't look at every profile every day.
 
Also it's the Incomprehensible Room, not the Nitpicker's Corner.
On a second thought...
 
user19161
I only hinted mine because @Jez revealed his.
 
Jez
what's more fascinating to consider is that we're all clumped together from a supernova
 
user19161
@Jez should be given a badge for setting the standards!
 
10:17 AM
♫ We are staaaarduuuust... ♫
 
11:00 AM
@RegDwightѬſ道 Celebrate the rotation as well WOOO!!! YAY!!!
Also
Happy Birthday @Jasper!
 
user19161
11:12 AM
@z7sgѪ Thank you!
 
user19161
1
Q: Usage of an apostrophe in addition to a double quote

ThursagenI've got this scenario, where the word is a contraction, but it's the last word in a quote, and so the apostrophe and the quote clashes: 'He's been a-lickin'' What it looks like, is the sentence ends with a double quote. Another situation that arises if we try using double quotes, is: ...

 
user19161
Seems to be dup, though the apostrophe has different functions in the dup question.
 
@Jez I am clumped together from pocket lint
 
 
1 hour later…
12:36 PM
hai guyz
i just googled "squid reproduction" for all of you, since i know you were wondering about it
here is a nice video you might like:
 
@JSBᾶngs — Wait, what? Squid porn in The Incomprehensible Room? Our standards may be low, but I think you had to get into a bathysphere to post that.
Welcome back, @RegDwight. I hope the trip was fun.
 
that video is one of the most beautiful things i've seen in a long time. i'm not even joking
 
@JSBᾶngs — I dare not click on it at work. Someone might get the wrong idea.
 
indeed. I currently have the wrong idea about JSBangs
 
srsly, peeplz, just watch the friggin video
it's not squid having sex, it's squid giving birth
 
12:42 PM
But squids have too many arms and not enough legs
 
@JSBᾶngs — Then it's false advertising. We were all expecting squids in flagrante delicto.
 
@GraceNote you have too many arms and not enough legs
 
@JSBᾶngs eye doughnut know wot two sigh
 
On a more related note, who knows what a "voiceless velar fricative" is?
 
@Robusto "reproduction" implies the birth-giving part, too, not just the sexing part
@GraceNote ooh! me! pick me!
 
12:44 PM
@JSBᾶngs — Yeah, what a gyp.
 
@JSBᾶngs Alright! Go in the Bridge and show 'em who's boss!
 
@GraceNote — JSBangs is our senior voiceless velar fricative correspondent.
 
user19161
The voiceless velar fricative is a type of consonantal sound used in some spoken languages. The sound was part of the consonant inventory of Old English and can still be found in some dialects of English, most notably in Scottish English. It is not to be confused with the voiceless uvular fricative (IPA , X-SAMPA X). Features Features of the voiceless velar fricative: Varieties of {| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="4" ! IPA !! Description |- | style="font-size:24px" align="center"| || plain velar fricative |- | style="font-size:24px" align="center"| || labialised |- | ...
 
Oooh, I see, I see
 
user19161
@grace click to hear the sound in the link
 
12:46 PM
Thanks, @Jasper
 
You find lots of voiceless velar fricatives in Phlegmish.
 
user19161
@GraceNote The only word I know in an English dictionary that has this sound is loch. The link here has this pronunciation but is not as clear as the wiki oxfordadvancedlearnersdictionary.com/dictionary/loch
 
@JasperLoy — It depends. There are lots of them in Yiddish words. Non-Jews often don't pronounce them correctly, though. Cf. tochus vs. tookus, etc.
 
@JasperLoy and loch isn't really an english word. in nativized pronunciation, most people say loch just like lock
 
@JasperLoy Arda and JSBangs got me to learn it with German.
 
12:51 PM
And while you may argue that Yiddish isn't English, lots of Yiddish words have worked their way into English.
 
@Robusto But who cares about that lowly language?
 
@Cerberus — Wow. I am getting vertigo from all the ironic ramifications of that statement.
 
@Robusto Good. Your own fault.
 
@Cerberus — That's right. Blame the victim.
 
well, if you weren't a victim, then you wouldn't be a victim.
 

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