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00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

00:04
@JohanLarsson Haha, fabulous!
He's just crazy in any way imaginable.
00:25
Hi
Hello.
What is this animal called in English? A dog. How is this animal called in English? Come here, dog.
Bah.
I am not called, I am bidden.
@Cerberus If I had meant you, I would have said "dogs".
Hmm.
I can live with that.
00:37
Are you thinking with the little heads?
With the tipsy heads.
Only slightly. But still.
Two beers at dinner, four after.
That's not so bad, right??
> IN GREEK mythology, Cerberus is the three-headed dog guarding the gates to Hades. In modern Greek politics, the troika is the three-headed monster that traps the country in an economic underworld. At the finance ministry in Athens, even the cleaning ladies shout “murderers” at visiting members of the troika. In Lisbon protest banners declare “Fuck the troika”. There is now a popular Portuguese neologism, entroikado, roughly meaning “economically screwed”.
@tchrist Heh, is that the Eurozone?
I suppose we did treat Greece badly...but, then again, they did mess up badly themselves.
But the crisis is over.
00:43
Couldn’t not think of you.
> Meanwhile, as of this year, the most liberal soft-drug policies in the world are to be found in America, in the states of Washington and Colorado, where growing, dealing and using cannabis is legal and taxable at the state level. At least in those two states, America has leapt ahead of the Netherlands, where smoking cannabis is tolerated but growing or dealing wholesale commercial quantities will still land you in prison.
They’ve begun to grow hemp here again.
Thomas Jefferson would be glad of it.
Plus of course they’ve continued to grow pot.
For which George Washington would take no small joy.
The American Declaration of Independence from Silly Red Soldiers was drafted on a hempen document.
00:59
> “Mommy, Teacher said today that over in Europe, every state is a country. I don’t understand: how come they don’t fix that?” ”That’s been tried, dear, but it never seemed to work out very well.”
 
1 hour later…
02:06
@tchrist That is mostly true, although I doubt whether you will be thrown into prison for such minor offences as drug dealing.
@tchrist Heh, if you mean Hitler...
But das Vierte Reich, alias the European Union, is doing rather well.
hiya
I've got a question that I'm not sure it's worth posting on the main site
it's about a sentence, here
Citrus unshiu is a seedless and easy-peeling citrus species, also known as cold hardy mandarin, satsuma mandarin, Nomenclature In Japan, it is known as mikan or formally . In China, it is known as Wenzhou migan (); the Japanese name is a result of the local reading of the same characters used in the Chinese. In both languages, the name means "Honey Citrus of Wenzhou", Wenzhou being a city in Zhejiang province, China. It is also often known as "Seedless mandarin" (). One of the English names for the fruit, "satsuma", is derived from the former Satsuma Province in Japan, from which th...
" It is probably of Japanese origin and introduced elsewhere."
if I understand correctly, that elsewhere should be read as 'everywhere else'
but is that a proper use of elsewhere?
that sentence seems a bit funky to me
mainly because I always thought of 'elsewhere' to mean 'somewhere else'
meaning an undefined single location
not multiple undefined locations
@AlexM. Hmm but the thing is, a "location" is not a well defined thing.
"The rest of the world" is a location, as is "large parts of Europe and Africa".
So elsewhere is used correctly.
02:24
ah, so it's sort of like, a single undefined location formed by multiple undefined locations
got it
makes sense now
thanks!
@AlexM. Exactly! Perfectly logical, right??
It's just like otherwise, which does not necessarily refer to a single specific way/situation.
02:47
George Lawrence Mikan, Jr. (June 18, 1924 – June 1, 2005), nicknamed Mr. Basketball, was an American professional basketball player for the Chicago American Gears of the National Basketball League (NBL) and the Minneapolis Lakers of the NBL, the Basketball Association of America (BAA) and the National Basketball Association (NBA). Invariably playing with thick, round spectacles, the 6 ft 10 in 245 lb. Mikan is seen as one of the pioneers of professional basketball, redefining it as a game of so-called big men with his prolific rebounding, shot blocking and his talent to...
Did someone mention mikan?
Nope.
Yes they did.
みかん、ミカン
蜜柑
Are you sure this entity counts as a person?
@MετάEd Ya know, that is exactly what I was thinking.
> In Japan, it is known as mikan or formally unshu mikan (温州蜜柑 unshū mikan?).
02:52
@JasperLoy Why yes, it is,.
@Cerberus What, do you think it counts as a horse?
Clever Hans (in German, der Kluge Hans) was an Orlov Trotter horse that was claimed to have been able to perform arithmetic and other intellectual tasks. After a formal investigation in 1907, psychologist Oskar Pfungst demonstrated that the horse was not actually performing these mental tasks, but was watching the reaction of his human observers. Pfungst discovered this artifact in the research methodology, wherein the horse was responding directly to involuntary cues in the body language of the human trainer, who had the faculties to solve each problem. The trainer was entirely unaware...
@Robusto That is pretty clever, to read the unconscious cues of a person.
Maybe Clever Hans could have been a whiz at poker, since he could read tells.
Exactly
02:59
@Robusto If I knew what it was, I could perhaps tell you.
Here's one who could paint.
Ahh nice.
I suddenly need a horse. Or maybe it was more beer.
Cholla (born May 20, 1985 - died March 22, 2013 in Nevada, USA) was a mustang-Quarter Horse mix known as the painting horse for his very special ability. Because of his wild temper, the cowboys named him after the cholla cactus. Biography After being tamed and traumatized by the cowboys with the sacking out method, at the age of 5 the horse was bought by Renee Chambers, a trained ballerina, who succeeded in gaining his trust. Many years later, in 2004, his ability to paint was discovered by chance, when he was following his owner painting the corral fence. The horse used a sturdy easel an...
@Cerberus No, it was a horse.
Night.
03:21
@Mitch Oh, OK.
Good.
The alcohol is almost out of my blood again.
 
2 hours later…
05:14
!!youtube Kashmir
05:58
!!wiki Kashmir
Kashmir (; ; ; ; ) is the northwestern region of the Indian subcontinent. Until the mid-19th century, the term Kashmir geographically denoted only the valley between the Great Himalayas and the Pir Panjal mountain range. Today, it denotes a larger area that includes the Indian-administered state of Jammu and Kashmir (which consists of Jammu, Kashmir Valley, and the Ladakh regions), the Pakistan-administered territories of Azad Kashmir and Gilgit–Baltistan, and the Chinese-administered regions of Aksai Chin and the Trans-Karakoram Tract. In the first half of the 1st millennium, the...
!!wiki led zeppelin Kashmir
@skullpatrol The Wikipedia contains no knowledge of such a thing
!!wiki kashmir led zeppelin
"Kashmir" is a song by the English rock band Led Zeppelin from their sixth album Physical Graffiti, released in 1975. It was written by Jimmy Page and Robert Plant (with contributions from John Bonham) over a period of three years with lyrics dating to 1973. The song became a concert staple, being performed by the band at almost every concert since its release. Page and Plant released a longer live version, recorded with an Egyptian/Moroccan orchestra, on No Quarter: Jimmy Page and Robert Plant Unledded (1994) and continued to perform the tune with an orchestra on their 1995 tour. Overvi...
 
2 hours later…
08:07
morning
 
2 hours later…
10:09
Where can I find a spelling idiot? — Matt Эллен 1 min ago
 
1 hour later…
11:21
ROFLMAO
12:12
tips hat
 
2 hours later…
So people add faux tails to chickens to study how T-Rexes moved.
weird.
I wonder what t-rex tasted like.
Good.
It tasted good.
Even better now that it is extinct and I can never have it again.
14:52
@KitFox If they keep collecting DNA out of them, why shouldn't we bring them back?
I know, I know, listen to Jeff Goldblum. "Oooh, aaah, that's how it always starts. Then later there's running and screaming."
15:11
@mr. Shiny and new What movie is that from?
I don't want to know. Poor kitty.
Btw that is the longest gif I have ever seen.
It looks like one of those fantasy back to the future flicks
@skullpatrol "Search Google for this image" tells me the original is a television ad.
I didn't try to figure out what it's an ad for.
Thanks for trying :-)
@skullpatrol there are GIFs of entire movies.
I think I posted Terminator 2 to this very room.
15:26
Wow, good to know. Thanks.
I'm such a noob.
Wow, you're level 7!
yesterday, by RegDwigнt
1. Noooooooob, 2. Nooooooob, 3. Noooooob, 4. Nooooob, 5. Noooob, 6. Nooob, 7. Noob.
Congrats!
You beat the game.
8. Nob
Just wait till you reach level 12.
That one's making the rounds in SE chat, it seems.
15:35
Not everything that counts can be counted.
Not everything that can be counted counts.
@MετάEd No Jovial porn in this chat.
@skullpatrol Yes, Bilbo.
And they say that “Cruelty, thy name is Woman”: let the NNses parse me last sentence. Enjoy.
0
A: Is the use of 'shew' and 'glew' as the past tense of 'show' and 'glow' commonplace in some areas?

tchristThose aren’t “incorrect”. They’re now regional rather than standard. Outside of Scotland, they mostly haven’t been seen nor heard since the American Revolution. There are some 19th century examples from Scots writers, however. Your what-if is immaterial and unanswerable. These things happen a...

> One or both — or even neither — may simply not be Standard English
They will get all snickerknitted over my neither may not be, I’m sure.
@tchrist what is "Bilbo"?
And my inarguably correct use of nor will doubtless make Microsoft Word dump core.
@skullpatrol Damn it, Jim, I’m a programmer, not a cultural-reference dictionary.
!!wiki Bilbo
Bilbo Baggins is the title character and protagonist of J. R. R. Tolkien's 1937 novel The Hobbit, as well as a supporting character in The Lord of the Rings. In Tolkien's narrative conceit, in which all the writings of Middle-earth are translations from the fictitious volume of The Red Book of Westmarch, Bilbo is the author of The Hobbit and translator of various "works from the elvish" (as mentioned in the end of The Return of the King). Appearances The Hobbit In The Hobbit, Bilbo Baggins, a hobbit in comfortable middle age at 50 years old, was hired in spite of himself as a "burgl...
15:46
All that is gold does not glitter,
Not all those who wander are lost;
The old that is strong does not wither,
Deep roots are not reached by the frost.

From the ashes a fire shall be woken,
A light from the shadows shall spring;
Renewed shall be blade that was broken,
The crownless again shall be king.
@tchrist What's the connection between shew and the American Revolution?
@Cerberus All the citations I could find that weren’t Scots antedate the American Revolution.
> The spelling shew, prevalent in the 18th c. and not uncommon in the first half of the 19th c., is now obs. exc. in legal documents. It represents the obsolete pronunciation (indicated by rhymes like view, true down to c 1700) normally descending from the OE. scéaw- with falling diphthong. The present pronunciation, to which the present spelling corresponds, represents an OE. (? dialectal) sceāw- with a rising diphthong.
I suppose I should add that.
So there is no connection, right?
It is a rather random reference to an historic event as it stands, suggesting a connection.
Gotta run home, watch the Sochi Opening Ceremony.
Bye.
15:50
But only by two years.
?
By the way, what was the population of Britain in 1777, and what of he 13 colonies?
I imagine Britain's must have been...I don't know, 10 million?
And that of the colonies tiny?
What’s the Christian name of the famous early 19th-century English writer surnamed Scott?
I’m spacing it.
Ah, probably somewhere around 8 or 9 million.
15:53
Not Sir Francis Scott.
@tchrist Walter?
Yeah.
I think.
Lemme check.
Ivanhoe?
Yup.
I wanted to verify that he was a Scot not an Englishman.
Why it is so easy to type the first of those two words and so hard to type the second?
My memory is not entirely deficient, you know, except when it is.
Englishman?
15:55
Yeah.
It's not so hard.
No monosib.
Scot’s a nice monosib.
Just press the buttons on your Klavier.
I am also rather fond of the name.
For ’tis mine own.
Sir Walter Scott was indeed a Scot.
You don’t see many Sirs Walter Englishman cutting capers in the street, do you now, eh?
Your name is Scot?
> 1775 — 2,400,000 (13 colonies)
I'm surprised they were so large already.
> Year Population
1625 1,980
1641 50,000
1688 200,000
1702 270,000
1715 435,000
1749 1,000,000
1754 1,500,000
1765 2,200,000
1775 2,400,000
16:06
I'm surprised that Bangladesh is over double the density of South Korea
1000 people per square kilometer :-O
One person per square meter?
I added the beef.
2
A: Is the use of 'shew' and 'glew' as the past tense of 'show' and 'glow' commonplace in some areas?

tchristThose aren’t “incorrect”. They’re now regional rather than standard. Outside of Scotland, they mostly haven’t been seen nor heard since the American Revolution. There are some 19th century examples from Scots writers, however. On shew Regarding shew (past of show), the OED in particular state...

@Cerberus Middle name. Two t’s.
16:24
One person per thousand square meters.
Whatever that means.
Do you mean about 100 feet on an edge or around 3000 feet on an edge?
I mean about 31 meters on an edge.
About 100 feet.
Or 40 degrees celsius.
Actually, 103.75, which is close to 104 F, which is 40 C.
Yep, every square that size contains one person in Bangladesh
According to @cerb chart.
!!wiki Bangladesh
16:42
|'}} | conventional_long_name = People's Republic of Bangladesh | common_name = Bangladesh | image_flag = Flag of Bangladesh.svg | image_coat = National emblem of Bangladesh.svg | symbol_type = Emblem |other_symbol = |other_symbol_type =Government Seal of Bangladesh | national_anthem = | image_map = Bangladesh (orthographic projection).svg |official_languages = Bengali |languages_type = Other languages |languages = English, Indigenous minority languages | ethnic_groups = | ethnic_groups_year = 1998 | demonym = Bangladeshi | capital = Dhaka | latd=23 |latm=42 |latNS=N |longd=90 ...
Probably should just go back to measuring things in degrees of longitude.
Or minutes.
At the equator, that means one mile a minute. Nautical miles, of course.
So there are 60 miles per degree of longitude. If you’re going 60 knots, that will take you an hour to move one degree east or west.
That’s more like 69 land miles.
I don’t know how to calculate air speed, or I’d give that, too.
@skullpatrol Haha, no, 1 square km = 1000 m x 1000 m, so 1 million square metres.
You have to go east or west, because degrees are different north and south. The problem with using degrees of longitude is that it’s only 59.7 nautical miles per degree north/south at the equator, rather than 60.1 east/west.
So each Bengali has a space of 10 x 100 m, theoretically.
Or 32 x 31 metres.
Still not a lot, but we only have a bit more than twice as much here.
Give ’em a football field and let ’em disport themselves as they may.
16:56
By the way, as to that chart, if you take the (former) province of Holland, I'm sure we'd have a density around 1000 people per square metre as well.
> Provincie Zuid-Holland: 1265 inw./km²
Too many shocking people shocking.
> Provincie Noord-Holland: 1018 inw./km²
We have 49.
Per square mile.
Which is much beefier.
And that doesn’t even count the pyramidal area.
16:58
We could trample you...
You’d have to find us first.
Heh.
And you’d die of altitude sickness first.
We have enough man power...
Yes, altitude is profoundly disturbing to us.
Footrace at 14,000 feet, youngster: you’re on.
16:59
Especially anything over 10 m high!
gasp
You’d pass out and turn blue.
We actually have a huge mountain in the south-east, in Zuid-Limburg.
While I crossed the finish line at howsoever leisurely a pace as it pleased me to dawdle.
We marvel in awe at its nearly 300m summit.
14kf >> 300m
17:01
Hah, metric factors with Imperial units??
That's Unnatural.
No, we don’t use Inpeerial, as we’ve no peerage in the steerage. Thems be English units.
Same thang.
Either way, "kf" is just...an abomination!
When in Rome...
It’s normal.
You can't have a name like that.
Like how the boiling temperature of water falls one degree C per kf altitude rise.
Look it up.
17:04
You have to use some other unit, preferably one referring to an ancient field length or tax border.
Spare the rod, spoil the child.
I'm sure 376.1 feet equals 1 preynd.
Or some such unitte.
So you can use that.
I will not tolerate decimals either.
If you go smaller, add some number of a smaller unit.
There are 666.666666666666666 cubits per kf.
Very well, then use cubits.
As a linear measure or a cubic one?
17:06
Or just 7 miles, 14 cubits, 27 feet.
macbook# units cubit3 meter3
* 0.095569357
/ 10.463605
I don't know.
There are about 10 and a half cubic meters in a cubic cubit.
Which is as nicely round a number as you’re apt to get.
Or maybe you would prefer fathoms.
There are 166.6666666666 fathoms in a kilofoot.
Or 15.151515151515 chains in a kilofoot.
That’s convenient.
15 chains.
Cords are nice.
You're betraying your own kind with your "kilofoot".
There are 128 cubic feet in a cord.
17:10
Yes, chains is much better.
So five feet on a side.
Make a cord.
In lumberman-speak.
I like the 2**7 nature of 128.
Seems more natural.
What have I started?
Second place South Korea is only about half as dense.
A knot is 6080 feet per hour.
23 mins ago, by Cerberus
@skullpatrol Haha, no, 1 square km = 1000 m x 1000 m, so 1 million square metres.
How many fathoms per minute?
17:15
Do they still use vadems in navigation?
macbook# units admiraltyknot 'fathoms/minute'
* 16.888889
/ 0.059210526
Besides, aren't vadems only used to measure depth?
macbook# units '40 admiraltyknots' 'miles/hour'
	* 46.060606
	/ 0.021710526
macbook# units '40 admiraltyknots' 'furlongs/fortnight'
	* 123810.91
	/ 8.0768327e-06
Now consider Mark Twain.
His work was banned by the Ivy League.
considers Mark Twain
Didn't he write "De Negerhut van Oom Tom"?
You can guess how that translates.
17:19
!!wiki mark twain
Samuel Langhorne Clemens (November 30, 1835 – April 21, 1910), better known by his pen name Mark Twain, was an American author and humorist. He wrote The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) and its sequel, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885), the latter often called "the Great American Novel." Twain grew up in Hannibal, Missouri, which provided the setting for Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer. After an apprenticeship with a printer, he worked as a typesetter and contributed articles to the newspaper of his older brother Orion Clemens. He later became a riverboat pilot on the Mississ...
> Samuel Clemens, maintained that his primary pen name came from his years working on Mississippi riverboats, where two fathoms, a depth indicating safe water for passage of boat, was measured on the sounding line. The riverboatman's cry was "mark twain" or, more fully, "by the mark twain", meaning "according to the mark [on the line], [the depth is] two [fathoms]," that is, "The water is 12 feet deep and it is safe to pass."
See? A depth.
@Cerberus Tsk.
Censorship is stupid, buwhaa!
17:20
@Cerberus Aye.
So then no "vadems per uur".
Unless you're talking submarines.
They just use knots.
Or German u-boats
macbook# units '40 admiraltyknots' 'fathoms/second'
	* 11.259259
	/ 0.088815789
In Dutch, u-boats would be very polite boats.
17:25
40 knots really is quite a good clip.
What does the "u" stand for?
The polite/formal word for "you".
Like French vous, German Sie.
!!wiki U-boat
U-boat is the anglicized version of the German word U-Boot , a shortening of Unterseeboot, which means "undersea boat". While the German term refers to any submarine, the English one (in common with several other languages) refers specifically to military submarines operated by Germany, particularly in World War I and World War II. Although at times they were efficient fleet weapons against enemy naval warships, they were most effectively used in an economic warfare role (commerce raiding), enforcing a naval blockade against enemy shipping. The primary targets of the U-boat campaigns in b...
Gravity is powerful thing.
macbook# units g 'feet/second/second'
	* 32.174049
	/ 0.03108095
macbook# units g 'feet/second2'
	* 32.174049
	/ 0.03108095
macbook# units g 'miles/hour2'
	* 78972.665
	/ 1.2662609e-05
macbook# units g 'kilometers/kilosecond/second'
	* 9.80665
	/ 0.10197162
macbook# units g 'kilometers/kilosecond/kilosecond'
	* 9806.65
	/ 0.00010197162
macbook# units g 'kilometers/kilosecond2'
	* 9806.65
	/ 0.00010197162
macbook# units g 'myriameters/kilosecond2'
	* 980.665
	/ 0.0010197162
Boring.
17:35
Not to a physicist
Can’t we just round 9.8 to 10 so it is in correct metric?
They do that^ sometimes
macbook# units g miles/hour/second
	* 21.936851
	/ 0.045585394
macbook# units g km/hour/second
	* 35.30394
	/ 0.02832545
macbook# units g km/second/hour
	* 35.30394
	/ 0.02832545
macbook# units g km/second/minute
	* 0.588399
	/ 1.699527
macbook# units g km/minute/hour
	* 2118.2364
	/ 0.00047209084
The units of length and time can be chosen to make any constant equal to unity.
Such as the speed of light, c.
You just like being at the center of the universe.
17:40
Infinity does not have a center.
When everyone is running away from you, you know you are the center of the universe.
Or packing a bomb.
But everyone is running away from everyone else, thus motion is relative
!!wiki Hubble law
Hubble's law is the name for the observation in physical cosmology that: (1) objects observed in deep space (extragalactic space, ~10 megaparsecs or more) are found to have a Doppler shift interpretable as relative velocity away from the Earth; and (2) that this Doppler-shift-measured velocity, of various galaxies receding from the Earth, is approximately proportional to their distance from the Earth for galaxies up to a few hundred megaparsecs away. This is normally interpreted as a direct, physical observation of the expansion of the spatial volume of the observable universe. The mot...
18:07
Morning @kalina
Run, Hubble! Run!
Hubble was paid in full for his work
!!Youtube paid in full
!!youtube Eric B & Rakim paid in full
18:39
HTML people, why is this code inserting ;# in the meta content? Is this some kind of list delimiter? <meta content="Black 6;#B6;#B6J;#C57 Black" name="CommonNames">
Do you know what the Ethernet is @kitfox?
The Ethernet?
Is that the same as the Internet ?
No. Well. No.
Ethernet sort of generally covers wireless connections to routers.
A prof got mad at me for saying they are :(
18:51
As in, the ethernet card in your laptop.
It's not at all the Internet.
So it is the medium through which the Internet is transmitted?
!!wiki Ethernet
Ethernet is a family of computer networking technologies for local area networks (LANs). Ethernet was commercially introduced in 1980 and standardized in 1983 as IEEE 802.3. Ethernet has largely replaced competing wired LAN technologies such as token ring, FDDI, and ARCNET. The Ethernet standards comprise several wiring and signaling variants of the OSI physical layer in use with Ethernet. The original 10BASE5 Ethernet used coaxial cable as a shared medium. Later the coaxial cables were replaced with twisted pair and fiber optic links in conjunction with hubs or switches. Data rates w...
19:08
@kitfox so it can be the wires also.
Oh, yes. Ethernet cables.
The wired or wireless network
Right. Local network.
Thanks for the info :-)
!!YouTube thank you for being a friend
!!youtube Andrew Gold Thank you for being a friend
19:23
Hi
@Cerberus Would you mind reading my poem please? It's about time ;) Thanks
Time Poem
Tick tock, tick tock…
An endless devouring count,
Getting closer every flap of a butterfly’s wings,
Working away at life…
Tick tock, tick tock…
A golden flowing river,
In which we are encaged
And yet blindlessly we waste…
Tick tock, tick tock…
Oh thy friends!
We must not be swindled by time!
And thus, as time goes by…
Tick tock, tick tock…
Seize your chance,
For I asked a dying sinner ere the tide of life had left his veins,
“Time…” he replied and died…
Tick tock, tick tock…
Lo! Time will surely come to an end,
Whether it is thy fate or thy horn which will echo through the lands…
Time will come…
Tick tock… tick… [end]
What do you think of my poem everyone? Thanks ;)
Is there a Poets.SE?
:-)
@skullpatrol No, I don't think so... If you wouldn't mind me asking, what is your impression of the poem? Thanks ;)
The Oh thy friends seems like it ought to be Oh my friends.
And I suppose I could guess what you asked the dying sinner, but it isn't very clear there.
Ok thank you ;) I'll change that right now
Voila:
Tick tock, tick tock…
Oh my friends!
We must not be swindled by time!
And thus, as time goes by…

Tick tock, tick tock…
What is time?
I asked a dying sinner ere the tide of life had left his veins,
“Time…” he replied and died…
Thank you very much everyone 8-)
19:46
!!hi
@kitfox what happened to @kitsox?
My impression @tim would be uninformed since I don't know much about poetry.
@skullpatrol ok, thanks for your time
It sounds nice.
Yeah.. Thanks ;)
time and space are intrinsic
"A golden flowing river,
In which we are encaged"
20:15
it is not something to be observed
but a concept apriori
Indeed, what does a fish know of the water that it swims in all its life is a parallel to what does a being know of the time in which it lives in all its life.
I was looking for a word that describes someone as being quick to make assumptions. I'm sure there's an obvious word for that, but I just can't come up with one:/
Please help.
Impulsive
Hasty
20:31
@skullpatrol Um, I don't think that would describe the person as being one who makes (too many) assumptions quickly
Well, it might actually...
rash
What do you mean by makes assumptions quickly?
Like, one who presupposes things
but without consideration
Like bringing in your own set of prejudices?
You know, tacitly assuming things to be the case even though nothing of the sort is there to validate them..
Kind of like that but
As in I'm telling something him
and if I miss out on details
/or if I'm not clear
he'll assume some facts by himself
well, that's a fairly bad example:/
20:40
Prejudgemental
Overly assuming
@skullpatrol That's pretty good! Thanks a lot!
Thanks for asking.
I guess, "presupposing" also works
but I like "prejudgemental" better
00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

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