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12:26 AM
@tchrist What do you think?:
Was this by chance a book written by Gene Wolfe? — Cerberus 25 secs ago
 
 
2 hours later…
2:08 AM
Eh?
@Cerberus No, it has to be deictic.
 
2:37 AM
@tchrist Is that a no?
@tchrist Elaborate.
 
In linguistics, deixis (/ˈdaɪksɨs/) refers to words and phrases that cannot be fully understood without additional contextual information. Words are deictic if their semantic meaning is fixed but their denotational meaning varies depending on time and/or place. Words or phrases that require contextual information to convey any meaning – for example, English pronouns – are deictic. Deixis is closely related to anaphora, as will be further explained below. Although this article deals primarily with deixis in spoken language, the concept can apply to written language, gestures, and communication media...
I don’t know why you say you have to get used to *dictic.
It’s like having a lesbian hermana: a deixis.
 
@tchrist Because that would be the traditional translitteration.
Cf.:
 
Pretty sure the term has been around for a bit.
 
But it is not the traditional way.
All ei's become i normally.
 
anapodeictic [adj.]
apodictic [adj.]
apomictic [adj.]
apoˈmictically [adv.] ← apomictic
deictic [adj.]
× deiktic → deictic
endeictic [adj.]
epideictic [adj.]
epiˈdeictical [adj.] ← epideictic
× epidictic → epideictic
heˈmictic [adj.] ← hemixis
holoˈmictic [adj.] ← holo-
ictic [adj.]
meroˈmictic [adj.] ← mero-
monomictic [adj.]
monoˈmictic [adj.] ← mono-
oligomictic [adj.]
panˈmictic [adj.] ← panmixia
polymictic [adj.]
† ˈstictic [adj.1]
stictic [adj.2]
› stictic acid ← stictic
Somewhat mixed up.
 
2:41 AM
I will not accept any arguments that do not concern traditional translitteration, because that was what I was talking about from the beginning.
 
I don’t know what that means. Those aren’t English words.
 
There is a traditional way of translitterating Greek into languages that use the Latin alphabet.
English words are normally based on this too.
K becomes c, not k.
Etc.
 
I meant that Translitterating is not an English word.
 
But it is the proper way of doing itself.
Or, actually, that is not translitteration, but mere adoption.
 
calliope ≠ kaleidoscope
 
2:44 AM
That's another wrong one.
 
heh
 
Should be calidoscope.
 
And kalendar.
 
Argh!
 
What, you prefer Calends?
 
2:45 AM
Kalendae are an odd exception, one among very few; but they are unrelated to Greek, so far as I know.
 
Ok, so you agree that calendar is wrong, right?
 
Yes, but that is a different problem.
It is more like lachryma and such.
 
It’s still an orthographic konfusion.
 
But a very old one.
Only just historical.
Depending on how you count.
 
K. is a weird initial for Roman names.
 
2:48 AM
Same problem.
 
So maybe we should just let it lie? :)
 
No!
 
Hey, I’m all for kalendar reform. I just don’t expect you to prevail on this one.
 
Oddities that came to be 2500 years ago have earned their marks.
 
Marcus not Markus.
 
2:49 AM
But 100 years ago?
 
I guess we can’t have a kinema any longer, eh?
Not a word you hear every day.
So, how do you feel about eukaryotes?
Or Kratos, Kydoimos, Kakia, Kalokagaythia, Keuthonymos, Karkinos, or the Keres? :)
Where Keres ≠ Ceres, of course.
 
@tchrist Nope.
 
I’ll just ceep finding more of these.
 
@tchrist That one is even weirder.
 
Not sure there’s a cure for them.
> As death daimons, they were also associated with Cerberus.
In Greek mythology, the Keres /ˈkɪriːz/ (Κῆρες), singular Ker /ˈkɜr/ (Κήρ), were female death-spirits. The Keres were daughters of Nyx, and as such the sisters of the Fates – collectively known as the Moirai, the names of the three Moirai being Atropos, Clotho and Lachesis. Some later authorities, such as Cicero, called them by a Latin name, Tenebrae, or the Darknesses, and named them daughters of Erebus and Nyx. == Etymology == The Greek word Kir or Ker ( κήρ ), means goddess of death, or doom. Homer uses the word with this meaning κήρες θανάτοιο , "goddesses of death", or meaning "violent death...
It’s still raining.
It’s been raining for like 4 days solid. And cold.
It’s like 54 out there.
This is more rain than we see all summer.
It’s like summer is on summer holiday.
 
3:05 AM
@tchrist Oh, I thought you meant Demeter.
 
I was wondering.
 
We've had a lot of rain too.
 
But she’s definitely not smiling on us.
kerostasia
 
Well, crops like rain, especially in summer.
Today was fairly cold as well.
 
The couldn’t plant some of our fields this year because of our spring flooding.
But this will likely do good to what’s there.
 
3:07 AM
You have so much water all the time!
 
It’s getting down to near 40 in Nederland tonight.
 
Move to below sea level.
 
That would be wet.
And unlikely to be below freezing.
 
Drier than you!
It's 13 degrees now.
 
April is not done with us yet, apparently.
This is April weather.
In July, no less.
 
3:08 AM
I love it.
It's cool but nice.
 
I have a 300’ ceiling right now.
 
What is that?
 
The cloud/fog level. It’s above the trees but not the hills, let alone the mountains.
 
A single apostrophe is a foot?
 
Yes.
Actually, it should be a prime but I’m lazy.
 
3:09 AM
You sure it's not an elbow or a nose?
 
gnostically yours
 
Mine?
All are belong to me.
 
It’s a salutatory remark.
 
Not valedictory?
 
Oh perhaps.
 
3:11 AM
There is no end to the number of websites about this.
 
For certain values of this.
Can you say [t͡ʂɻʷeɪd]?
 
What is that like? Trade?
 
Aye.
Or perhaps [t͡ʃɻʷeɪd].
 
I had to semi-guess some of the symbols.
That one is more familiar.
 
They can say it in Northern Ireland. :)
There’s a very wrounded r up there.
 
3:23 AM
No doubt!
I must to bed.
Any news about your burned friend?
I told your story to my friend today.
 
Yes.
The doctors say he’s healing well, but it still looks atrocious, and will for years.
He has to cover parts to not attract attention. Like his forearm.
Otherwise little kids come up to him and ask how he got hurt.
But he feels the day manager job is a promotion compared with the night one he had had.
Same money.
 
That is not so bad, then, the circumstances considered.
How about his debt?
 
Well.
The bills have started to roll in.
He doesn’t really understand yet how much he has to pay.
It looks to be 25%.
But only till the max-out-of-pocket, a figure he didn’t have off the top of his head.
The second surgery was $10k.
But there are dozens of bills for this sort of thing.
 
So how much in total, and to what extent can he spread it out?
He doesn't know yet?
 
Certainly not.
It usually takes a few months before the bills all sort out.
 
3:32 AM
He should flee to a different state.
 
Then again, it’s been a couple of months.
That wouldn’t help.
 
To a different country, then.
 
I’m sure he’s hit his max out of pocket. He just don’t know what that is.
This is an annual cap for how much you’re ever supposed to pay. Kind of.
He has itemized lists of all the many procedures and medicaments. It’s dizzying, apparently.
He’s down to almost no pain stuff, but his sleep is troubled.
 
Right.
 
He kinda never sleeps a full night. Ever.
He wakes up too crawly in his own skin.
 
3:35 AM
It is good that he does not have much pain any more; but apparently there is still enough pain to keep him awake?
Crawly, so it is more like an itch?
 
Yes, like an itch. They had had him at 80 mg of oxycodone and like 10 mg of methodone. I think he’s down to 5mg of oxy only, and that seems more a night thing.
For a burn victim, there is no alternative, and nobody asks questions. For anybody else though, they are very slow to part with such things.
He became rather unhappy with how dependent they had him on it. But he would have been screaming insane otherwise.
 
Understandably so.
I told my friend this story because I wanted to warn him of his gas heater.
But now it is really bed time.
 
Good.
And good night.
He visited this past weekend to watch fireworks, but it was too wet.
 
His index finger had continued to ooze and hurt for more than a month after he had burned it on an oven tray, so he was easily impressed.
Good night to you too.
 
 
4 hours later…
7:17 AM
which version is more appropriate ? "The first action conducted/carried out/performed by Germans took place in November 1941.
 
Could you please give more context @JustynaNogala?
 
sure
The first action conducted by Germans took place in November 1941. They transported several hundred people outside the town and executed them.
 
I would say "conducted by the Germans"
"Conducted," to me, sounds more cold blooded.
In this case.
 
7:35 AM
The Nazis were very cold blooded indeed
 
Indeed.
 
This one is interesting
[1943] In the next weeks [...] groups were led to prison, where they waited for a transport of 100 or 150 persons to complete, and then they were taken outside the town for execution. That is how about 45,000 Jews were exterminated.
 
Is this for your own interest?
 
I believe the Nazis killed more than 13,000000 people
 
Wikipedia has a huge article on this.
 
7:38 AM
off the record
wikipedia is not a reliable source of information
 
It's getting better :-)
 
is it? :D
 
It is a work in progress.
Unlike something like the Britannica
 
I don't know about the Britannia
what is it?
 
7:44 AM
when I type in google it generates some pub&meal sites :D
 
Sorry, wrong spelling :(
 
Oh
the site is still under way
Do you believe it could outclass Wikipedia?
 
For now, yes.
 
 
1 hour later…
9:03 AM
@Cerb ^friends?
 
9:53 AM
Oh, taxidermist humour.
That's a department of its very own.
 
more common than one might think
 
There's nothing to think. Taxidermist humour is exactly and precisely as common as taxidermists.
 
nope, you are confusing things.
 
Nope, I don't have time for that.
 
10:14 AM
@RegDwigнt I just posted this
...interesting word.
 
Mkay, but... how does it answer that question...
 
We need a definition of sorts to begin with, no?
Practical matters will help reshape it.
 
I'm not sure I'm following.
The definition of sorts is right in the question.
 
They're not very clear, in my opinion :-)
I can delete it if you want np.
"Look-alike" seems too vague...
 
I am not expressing any wishes. I am just noting a fact.
The question is asking for a list of "confusables" as they are commonly known, and the answer provides no such list. So sooner or later it is bound to get flagged or downvoted, that's all I'm saying.
 
10:30 AM
true
 
This never prevented people from posting such things before, so I'm not preventing you from posting it now.
 
No problem, let's see what happens :-)
Interestingly this was the end of the trail for the word "conundrum"
A play of words.
 
is there a synonym of "without stopping" ? which can be put at the end of a sentence?
not constant
not "non stop"
 
Continued.
 
Ceaselessly
The music played on ceaselessly.
The phone rings ceaselessly.
Mr Obama annoys me ceaselessly.
 
10:39 AM
Will he ever cease?
 
Also: incessantly, unremittingly.
 
The execution lasted whole day ceaselessly.
 
No.
No no no.
You mean without a pause.
You also mean the whole day.
You also don't mean any of these things because an execution can't last an entire day...
But if you absolutely must, you'd say the execution took an entire day.
Ceaseless execution just does not make any sense.
These things don't collocate.
Ceaseless executions, now that's a different thing.
The executions went on ceaselessly.
 
If there was a mass number of people in the middle of the forrest why the executions couldn't last ceaselessly all day long ?
 
Who said they couldn't?
I only just said they could.
 
10:49 AM
they can be ceaseless and last all day long, but they can't "last ceaselessly"
lasting a certain amount of time implies cessation
 
I get it
 
"The executions were ceaseless. It went on all day, long into the night."
 
:-/
Without cease is ceaseless
 
The Terror saw ceaseless decollations.
 
I prefer ceaseless decolletage.
 
10:55 AM
Eww.
I do prefer cleavages to take some sort of end.
Indeed, I demand it.
 
I cleave to that idea
 
Leave it to the cleaver.
And so we return to the Terror.
 
Cease this ceaseless terror.
 
Napoleon was no Caesar.
He wanted to take Europe, but couldn't quite seize her.
 
Et tu, Josephine?
 
10:58 AM
He’d’ve won had he only retained the Gallic tradition of pit toilets.
But no, he had to go in for a water loo.
 
Napoleon was Hitler.
 
@tchrist boom boom!
 
Boom boom, I want you in my room, let's spend the night together, together in my room.
 
YOU TWO GET A ROOM!
 
WE TWO IS IN AN ROOM
 
10:59 AM
:O
 
a room which Reg owns
 
Strange bedfellows.
 
23 hours ago, by RegDwigнt
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