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5:00 PM
I will concede that these errants were led astray by others.
 
Let's make it as annoying as possible.
 
@Robusto yeah, it is a strange expression but I find it amusing and use it sometimes. Is it used that way in English too?
 
Doesn't make it any less illiterate.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 youtube link please. it is boxing day un-eve.
 
5:00 PM
@Mitch jinx?
@Cerberus pish, "illiterate". Knowledge of Latin is not a requirement for "literacy".
 
@Robusto augh! trying...to...keep... eyes... op... en.... drools
bnm, ,kmjhnhmj.l head slams into keyboard
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 But knowledge of how Latin expressions should be used is.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 no I'm just slow. or rather, yes. a jinx
 
@Cerberus It's an English word now. Didn't you get the memo?
 
@JohanLarsson I never heard it used that way until today. But that doesn't mean I didn't understand what you meant.
 
5:03 PM
@Cerberus Are you say that using 'bona fide' to mean 'authenticate or true' is illiterate?
or the other way?
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 If you're going to use any expression, you need to know the consensus among literati, about how the expression is supposed to be used. It doesn't matter whether it is Latin or English.
@Mitch Yes.
 
@Robusto It is not commonly used in Sweden either but I did not invent it
 
hides
 
@Cerberus That's just elitist snobbery. I don't care what the "literati" hoi polloi's consensus is. irregardless of what they think, I think people can use words in English differently than how they were used in Latin.
 
They can. The fact that it is used in English already means it isn't used the exact same way as in Latin.
 
5:06 PM
@Cerberus Oh. Well, that's the way most people use it (as 'authenticate'), even well-educated ones.
 
But there is still a right way.
@Mitch Outrageous!
stamps foot
 
@Cerberus evolution?
 
@Cerberus we'll find you!
 
@Mitch And why are you using a verb?
 
@Cerberus Oh don't go there.
 
5:07 PM
@Cerberus No there isn't. There is an old way. Snobs who are afraid of change try to stamp out new ways because they're different from the old way.
Anyways: this conversation has been had before.
 
@JohanLarsson Of course things change, but this expression is still unacceptable in that sense.
 
@Cerberus why? it's a simple extension of its original use.
 
Perhaps it will be accepted one day. For now, you should just say "real" or "genuine" if that's what you mean.
 
@Cerberus foot stomping can get heated. and with socks off a bit smelly (there for e the need for socks as presents. for xmas. bona fide socks, not those multitoed things.
 
@Cerberus It's in the oxford dictionary. So who else needs to accept it?
 
5:09 PM
@Cerberus verb? Don't most sentences need them?
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 And if any clinging to linguistic traditions is snobbery, then we are all guilty of it. Claiming that you aren't is silly.
 
@Cerberus It's accepted now. Is it a Dutch thing too?
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Because the extension is unwarranted: it is more like an entirely different meaning, and one that we already have several perfectly good words for. In that capacity, it sounds like a genteelism, trying to sound important. And in educated language one must be especially careful with changes in potentially presumptuous words.
 
@Cerberus No, I'm not saying that any clinging to linguistic traditions is snobbery. I'm saying that claiming that some group of "literati" get to agree or disagree on how a word should be used is snobbery. They are not the only keepers of the traditions.
 
@Mitch Ahh so *that's * what's behind the socks. Makes sense.
 
5:11 PM
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Is that his whole schtick...the atheism thing? It's funny...but does he have enough material?
 
@Mitch But bona fide isn't a verb...
@Mitch Nobody would ever use it in this silly way in Dutch. It is only used in the conventional way as determined by international consensus.
 
I've never bona fided anyone. wait...what are we talking about? Did MRS use it as a verb? That's a godawful illeteracy if I've ever heard one. And I mean that to sting.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Then who?
 
@Mitch He has other material. Like "If I didn't have you", "Inflatable you", Peace anthem for Palestine, etc. See here: youtube.com/playlist?list=PLE5E01E666491E1CF
 
Consider the German word handy.
 
5:13 PM
@Cerberus Uh, everyone? Everyone's consensus matters in language. Not just people who read old books.
 
Surely you will dislike this?
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Not really...
 
@Cerberus haha, I find it funny.
 
And stupid, right?
It is so funny that we can use it ironically.
 
@Cerberus No, really. Everyone who emits language shapes the language.
 
But language is not just a means of communication.
Just like architecture, clothing, etc.
 
5:15 PM
@Cerberus International consensus? we'll burn down your parliament, piss on your flag, eat your roadside cuisine, then say 'oh, I'm sorry, we were trying to stamp out the bad people, you know to help out the population'. Maybe just stop at 'oh I'm sorry'.
Cripes, I know...off topic...let me see, back to xmas barbs.
 
@Cerberus I don't find it stupid. I can't speak for how Germans find it. They might find it funny and yet also useful. There are lots of English words that english speakers make fun of. So what?
 
@Mitch Burning down parliament would be inconvenient. You may piss at my flag if you like to, though.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 So those words function in an informal context where irony is appropriate. But in a context of formality and boasting complex phrases?
 
@Cerberus who used it as a verb? I can't find that anywhere in the transcript. I can't be properly disgusted without a link.
 
@Cerberus Sure, it's not JUST a means of communication. But that's it's primary function. And in that function people communicate stuff. And if the communication is received properly then it's goal has been accomplished. And if those communicators used "bona fide" to mean "genuine" as an extension of "made in good faith, sincere", then sure, a Latin speaker might tear his toga in rage, but the English speakers were just speaking English. Just like an English speaker might giggle at "Handy".
 
Ask yourself the question: why would anyone use "bona fide" instead of "real"?
 
5:17 PM
For Christmas.
 
@Mitch You said "authenticate" twice.
Surely that is a verb?
 
@Cerberus to look snazzy? like multicolored socks with toes.
 
@Cerberus Surely that is a typo for "authentic"
 
@Cerberus !! yes. I did.
@Cerberus yes it is.
Now I will authenticate all over whatever flag of your choice.
bona fide wasn't being used as a verb.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 If communication is not a problem, because it is easy enough to convey the required information, why even talk about it? Do not aesthetics become more important then (unless they inhibit the efficacy of communication)?
 
5:19 PM
actually 'authenticate' -is- a verb just not the one I meant.
 
@Mitch And there you have the exact problem.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 But he typed it twice, so I thought it might not be a typo.
 
@Cerberus Perhaps the writer was using "bona fide" ironically, to emphasize that the REAL Kindle reader is the real one, but by putting that little label on it, which draws attention to itself, you are actually saying that it is meaningless that one is "authentic" and the other not.
 
@Mitch It was not. Then we are agreed.
 
@Cerberus For variety, if nothing else. Plus it carries the specific connotation of having been vetted.
 
@Cerberus I am telling you that I do not necessarily disagree with the aesthetics of using "bona fide" in this way. The word has more meanings than you allow and lots of people use it that way, non-ironically. Personally I probably would not use it, but in the context of the quote you posted, I think it's fine.
 
5:22 PM
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Ehh I don't fully understand this irony you are describing, but, yes, if it had been used in an appropriate ironic way, that would of course be fine. But there was no trace of irony. It is was just a misguided way of trying to sound genteel or sophisticated.
@Robusto Yes, variety is a problem.
 
People use the term bona fides as a plural noun meaning credentials.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 I still don't understand why you think "many people use it" should convince me. Many people misspell words, including myself; doesn't mean I am going to defend my own bad practice.
 
@Cerberus but the point is about 'bona fide' as authentic, not about my solecism. You almost had me there.
 
@Cerberus Well, what I mean is, he's calling the Kindle "bona fide", i.e. authentic, but in a way that means that this is not a virtue, or else a totally irrelevant detail. Contrast with a bona fide Lamborghini vs a knock-off. In that case the "authentic" one is probably much better. And using "bona fide" in this case draws attention to the "authenticity".
 
@Robusto I may have seen it used that way...can you use it in a sentence?
@Mitch Damn.
 
5:24 PM
@Cerberus it is short hand for 'mnay people have used it that way for a long time and so it is considered standard English now' as oppose to ' many people have used it that way for a long time and is recognized as a stupid school boy error'
 
@Cerberus it's in the OED, I already told you to look it up
 
@Cerberus Absolutely it is a means of communication. Your definition of communication may be limited, however.
 
@Cerberus I mean many educated people who know how to read and write and are intelligent and not considered "illiterate".
 
@Cerberus Eric liked the candidate, but wanted to see his bona fides before making a decision on hiring.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 what, you used 'authenticity', nominally a noun, but here as a verb, but in quotes so it is nominalized. WTF dude.
 
5:26 PM
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 I'm sorry, I really can't follow your reasoning here. If you were using bona fide the wrong way but ironically, that means you are somehow echoing those who use it the wrong way. And that certainly wasn't the care. There was no irony.
 
@Cerberus "wrong way"?
The article didn't use it the wrong way.
 
@Robusto human resources and security have been called
 
@Robusto What does this mean? I said it was not just a means of communication.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 You know very well what illiterate can and cannot mean.
 
@Cerberus argh. we should just use bits.
 
I am suggesting that the writer used "bona fide" instead of "real, genuine, authentic" to draw attention to the realness, authenticity, or genuineness of the Kindle, in a way that downplays that characteristic while using a "fancy" word for it.
 
5:29 PM
@Robusto Okay, so then why not use credentials? I would never ever use bona fide like that. There is no reason to, and we have a perfect alternative.
@Mitch Perhaps that is better, yes.
 
@Cerberus And I say it is always a form of communication — on multiple levels and axes. It goes beyond mere denotation, even connotation, even nuance, to communicate things like emotion, class, political bent, whatever. But the point is, it is always communication.
 
@Cerberus Lots of words have synonyms.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 You really think so? That was no my impression. And I would want to see a bit more irony than just that.
 
@Cerberus In that particular context 'bona fide' works fine. It is a little too informal for me though. Sounds like a cracker trying to put on airs.
 
@Cerberus Sure there's a reason to. Bona fides says something less formal and specific than credentials. It probably just refers to whatever vetting process the company has in place.
There are zillions of ways to say every single thing. English is richer for that. Piss on anyone who wants to pare it down to a single prescribed formula for every expression.
Seriously, @Cerb, that is so self-evident I can't believe you said what you did. I can't believe you could even make the words come out of your mouth.
Or your hands.
 
5:32 PM
@Cerberus I am just suggesting a reason for using that word. I can't know what the writer was thinking. I, personally, would almost never use "bona fide" ever. Is there ever a time when one of its straight-forward, short, non-latin synonyms wouldn't serve? I'd probably grab one of those first.
 
@Robusto Yes, okay, in that way. Then it also needs to communicate subconscious stimuli to effect an aesthetic experience in the listener, and so style becomes important. Usually subordinate to the simple conveying of information—in so far as the two can be separated—, but still. Oh, and in certain genres I think style even trumps simple information, like poetry.
@Mitch I am glad you feel that way. Putting on airs is what makes it bad.
@Robusto What is so evident?
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Then even we are agreed, it seems.
 
@Cerberus 'zillion ways to say things'
 
Of course.
 
@Cerberus yay..let's move on. something about how xmas is stupid.
 
@Cerberus Agreed in not using it, perhaps. Not agreed in the quoted writer being wrong to use it. I also wouldn't reach for the words "lorry" or "lift" when I mean to say "truck" or "elevator"
 
5:37 PM
@Mitch Wai!
 
wait I know. have you noticed how at the same time, obesity rates are skyrocketing and mostly by things changeable by controllable behavior, but there's more and more anti-obesity-bullying?
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Oh, you're so wrong!
@Mitch I'm not sure about the latter.
 
@Cerberus The impact of that statement would be greater had you left in the 'wrong'
 
@Mitch Yes but.
 
@Cerberus sorry, I misspoke that.
 
5:39 PM
Did you?
 
skyrocketing anti-bullying of obesity.
 
How is that different?
 
@Mitch anti-bullying?
 
I just meant that I wasn't sure whether fat people were bullied more now than before.
 
it is more looked down on now than previously bullying people because of their obesity
I don't know about less bullying but more anti-bullying.
 
5:41 PM
The obesity is more looked down on, or the bullying of fat people is more looked down on?
I don't know about either.
 
The bullying is looked down on more.
 
Hmm.
 
I know, I'm not saying ti well.
 
Why do you say this? What gave you this impression?
 
skyrocketing obesity is all over the news.
 
5:42 PM
well, the thing is, there are two groups at play. One, the anti-obesity crowd, and two, the anti-bullying crowd.
 
anti-bullying is my perceptino.
 
I don't know.
 
and choice of words is also part of it.
bullying is bad, obviously, right?
 
Of course.
 
so anti-bullying is good, right?
(and I agree that anti-bullying is good)
 
5:43 PM
Less good than bullying is bad, probably.
Because anti-bullying can be done in bad ways too.
 
right.
 
While bullying cannot be done in a good way.
 
(I think that's the nuance of the word and psychology of the situation; one person's 'convincing argument' could be received by another as 'bullying')
 
Even that is possible.
If you say, "hey fattie, you should eat less", that is both a convincing argument and bullying at the same time.
 
@Cerberus haha, "convincing"
 
5:45 PM
Usually.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Isn't it?
 
it isn't really an argument
 
Not literally convincing, probably.
 
it might be a true statement.
but it assumes the conclusion
 
But I agree with the factual reasoning: "being fat is bad, and eating less makes you less fat, so you should eat less".
 
@Cerberus tchrist would call it a catachresis. I would call it confusing.
@Cerberus Right. So my point is...
 
5:47 PM
@Mitch It=?
 
if I have one at all ...
 
perhaps it should be "Hey, fatty! You should eat less, and exercise more! And cut out the trans-fats! Did you know you're at risk of type-2 diabetes!"
 
How can an argument be catachrestic?
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 That would be a more elaborate version.
But does it change our discussion?
 
@Cerberus is that a statement isn't 'convincing' an explanation is (or isn't) convincing. I'm just repeating MRS's point, because you set yourself up for that with the 'bona fide' brouhaha/kerfuffle/
 
@Cerberus well, some fat people don't eat a lot. It's more the quality of what they eat. Or their really low metabolism and total lack of exercise. It's unrealistic to ask them to eat less. Perhaps impossible.
 
5:49 PM
@Cerberus your choice of word 'convincing' was catachrestic.
 
I saw this episode of What Would You Do (yes, Mitch, I'm hooked, I love it), where this guy approached a fat mother and daughter in the supermarket to comment on what was in their trolley.
@Mitch Ehhh you've lost me. If a statement is argumentative, I don't see why it couldn't be convincing.
Illocutionary functions and all.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 yes, exactly my point. that's kind what should be said to help stop the problem, but it seems unable to be said because it is bullying. Ergo a dilemma.
which need to be managed.
by the authorities.
by adding caffeine to all products with high fructose corn syrup
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Uhh. I would say eating less is usually a sensible recommendation?
 
@Cerberus An attempt at a factual statement is not an argument. or argumentative.
 
Not always, but in the large majority of cases it would help.
 
5:51 PM
@Mitch Well, there are people who disagree with the very notion that being fat is "bad", and so they view any attempt to convince them that it is "bad" as bullying.
 
@Cerberus ok but your first statement wasn't made in an illocutionary context.
 
@Mitch Why not? I do not understand this.
 
@Cerberus ... yes, sorta, maybe. It's more complicated than that. Usually eating "different" would be a better recommendation. But it would require a whole lifestyle change. Apparently people are unable to do that, usually.
 
@Mitch The argumentative value of my statement seemed pretty clear, at least to me.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 yeah, there's that, but there's the purely medical perspective, diabetes and all (well, maybe that's not pure)
 
5:53 PM
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Sure, the recommendation may not be effective. But, if followed...
We commonly respond to people talking about novel, fancy diets by recommending the VDH diet.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 or the food manufacturers could stop putting high fructose corn syrup in absolutely everything. just like the could stop putting absolutely everything in a cardboard box and plastic wrapping which is filling our landfills/garbage dumps.
hmm. epiphany? two birds one stone?
considers proposal to put fat people in landfills
 
@Mitch The question on how much packaging is enough is actually more complicated than that too.
 
What does it stand for? Vreet De Helft, or "Cram In Half".
It is untranslatable.
Vreten is a somewhat vulgar word for eating.
De Helft = The Half (of what you would normally eat).
 
Fressen? what animals do with food?
 
i.e. that cellophane wrapper on the cucumber means far less food spoilage and thus much more efficient delivery, which reduces greenhouse gasses beyond those incurred by packaging the food.
 
5:56 PM
@Mitch That would be a nice start.
@Mitch Exactly!
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Good point.
It's always very complicated.
BRB garbage.
 
6:35 PM
I am so sleepy.
 
me too. must be the turkey
 
I think mine is due to head cold. And too many late nights recently.
If only I had a hat.
 
I'd lend you mine but it's minifig-sized
so how was Christmas?
 
It was pretty good.
Very tiring.
I spent a lot of late nights finishing the scarves I was making for the visitors.
The boys had incredible meltdowns two nights in a row because they were up for an hour or more past their usual bedtime.
But generally speaking, it was fun. Good food, good visit.
How about you?
 
Hello
 
6:49 PM
my kids were so good I'm still surprised about it. No meltdowns and hardly any disagreeing. It was actually a little out of character for them. Granted: we didn't let them stay up late. But still! And yesterday they left to go to Grandma's house so it's quiet today.
 
Wow.
Here's a funny Christmas story.
So my kids each get one present from Santa. Did I tell you this story already?
 
we had a good christmas overall. both sets of grandparents came, and also our neighbour from across the street, and the food was good and the headache that was threatening to explode didn't. So I was pretty happy.
@KitFox you haven't told me yet
 
This year, they were going to get Lego jedi starfighters.
Big excitement.
So Christmas morning, my eldest opens his Plo Koon starfighter and says "Oh wow, a real one! This is even better than a Lego one!"
I start to correct him and realize he's right. It's not a Lego kit. It's just a toy starfighter.
He figured he must have been extra good since Santa brought him something he didn't even know he wanted.
 
so... it wasn't a lego one? santa brought the wrong thing?
anyway, your son has a lot to learn about what constitutes "better than lego" :)
 
Yep. Santa special ordered the wrong thing three weeks ago and never once noticed.
 
6:53 PM
whoops
 
Of course, now that I've put together the little one's Lego kit, now he thinks maybe he'd like one for his birthday.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Yeah. Whoops. Glad he liked it.
 
my daughter got a bag of candy that are shaped like lego bricks. she didn't notice that they were candy. She started building something with them and said that that was her favourite present: the multi-coloured lego.
 
Nice.
 
we were like "what multi-coloured lego?"
 
I ordered the correct thing last night. His birthday is in two months, so hopefully I can hold out until then.
 
6:55 PM
and all christmas day she went around the house saying "Thank you, Santa! Do you think he can hear me?"
 
Hahaha.
I should go. I have to get home while the blizzard is less blizzardy.
Later.
 
Blizzards, even?
Poor you.
It's 7 degrees here.
Fairly warm.
 
it's -5 here and we got 10-15cm of snow last night
 
Eeek!
We should all move to the newer colonies, like NZ and California.
Your climatological graphs are worse than ours, but they beat both of us by a large margin.
Or we should build some transparent cupolae over our cities in order to regulate temperature. And rain!
 
7:07 PM
I wouldn't want to live in NZ or California
 
Why not?
Neither would I.
But I would take their climates, if the graphs speak truth!
 
well, NZ is too far from everything and it's upside-down. California is in the US.
 
Although no frozen canals, no snow-covered landscapes would be a pity.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Good points.
 
@Cerberus I thought you didn't like hot weather anyway
 
I hate it.
Cold weather is somewhat better.
But I would prefer 20 degrees all year round.
Wouldn't you?
 
7:10 PM
no
I like hot weather
 
...
Then move to Egypt maybe.
 
and I don't mind cold weather
 
Do you have a car and A/C everywhere, and few power disruptions?
 
Then I wouldn't care about temperatures at all.
 
7:11 PM
but I also like hot weather for being outside
like when I go to Aruba for a vacation.
or summertime here.
 
I like 25 °C when I am sitting in the shade, doing nothing.
But walking in the sun means the effective "temperature" will be closer to 35 even when it is really 25.
I also wouldn't care about rain if I could get anywhere by car.
And if they sprinkled salt on the roads, of course.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 By the way, did I mention that Toronto has the most immigrants of all cities in the world?
And Amsterdam is second.
I read that.
 
@Cerberus most, how? percentage? anyway that doesn't surprise me. My parents were walking through a mall and they didn't overhear anyone speaking english. not one person. then they realized that they were discussing this fact in french.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Haha what? Are your parents Québecois?
 
@Cerberus my mom is
 
I presume they meant the percentage of people living in the city being born in other countries.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Ahh cool.
I didn't know.
So you must speak French! I had no idea.
 
7:23 PM
@Cerberus must I?
 
Mais oui!
Ne parlais-tu Français avec ta mère?
I hear a lot of foreignese here too.
 
I don't speak french with my mother. She speaks it to me though.
and my written french is... bad.
rusty.
I aced french class in school though.
I should have kept it up more.
 
nods
 
8:12 PM
@Cerberus Really? I thought Auckland was right up there. I think I read recently that only 40% of Auckland's residents are New Zealand-born.
 
Perhaps Auckland is third?
But Amsterdam's residents will surely be more than 40 % born in the Netherlands.
BRB groceries.
 
@Cerberus It's quite likely. NZ is strange. Auckland contains huge percentages of every skin colour you can possibly imagine. Then, the further south you go, the more uniformly white the faces are.
I love that about Auckland.
 
@DavidWallace But isn't the indigenous population non-white? So the city might have racial diversity without so much having "immigrants".
 
Yes, but the indigenous population is concentrated in the same way as the non-white immigrants. And they're also a minority. The largest ethnic group among non-immigrants is caucasian.
 
8:35 PM
I should find this list to investigate what they meant exactly.
First result, a PDF, page 953.
 
Hmm, the Auckland result is from 2001. I'm sure the FB percentage is much higher now.
Interesting to see Muscat on that list.
 
I can already see that these percentages are probably not comparable across cities.
 
I'm wondering if I am misremembering the 40% figure - like maybe it was 40% not NZ born, rather than the other way around. I don't think so though.
I'll have to find it.
 
For instance, they took the administrative municipality of Amsterdam, which is much smaller than what most people consider the "city".
@DavidWallace This almost–40 % is rather suspect...
Surely that is what you read?
 
Ah, of course; Auckland is not the same city as it was in 2001.
It used to be a cluster of 4 or 5 cities, like the Wellington region. Auckland was just one of those cities. A few years ago, they all amalgamated and named themselves Auckland. So Auckland is now one huge city.
 
8:48 PM
@DavidWallace Exactly: data are probably not comparable.
Look at the pink areas.
Those are the administrative municipality.
 
Of course, if that were the factor, I'd expect to see Manukau or Waitakere on the list. Odd.
 
But the areas attached to it would be considered part of the city too.
 
Gotcha.
 

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