I use words like "hejudas" because I operate a lot on the sound of my voice to express meaning and so using a word that sounds like the expression I intend, out of lacking the right words, is how it usually ends up, as it were.
@Cerberus So if you're not using the term to hide offense from them, or to exclude someone intentionally, I don't think it's necessarily rude to use a term someone might not understand.
Spam means something that does not help communication, not just "spam emails". Very well this is my short-sighted understanding of it. It also stands for larger general topics such as "stream of consciousness", absurdisusm and train of thought. Now I want to know what else is under the cover. A s...
@Cerberus If you can think of a way to make it clearer for them, sometimes that's considerate, but sometimes nothing but a particular word or phrase will do. You can sometimes work in a quick reference to the meaning/definition without being too obvious or making someone feel dumb, either.
Moreover, I like it when people use words or expressions that I have to look up, provided that I will learn something from it that I find interesting at all. Obscure words yes: pop references, no.
I think things is the correct term, here, implicitly. nods head
" It also stands for larger general topics such as "stream of consciousness", absurdisusm and train of thought. Now I want to know what else is under the cover."
I'm going based off of that that he wants to know everything that spam can be used to refer to.
@Cerberus I dunno. In work writing, I sometimes make things simpler for the public. I seldom find it necessary to put back in the jargony words that were there before, 'cause they weren't really serving a purpose. But I wouldn't, like, tell poet Carl Sandburg to revise "haunches" to "hind limbs" to be more simple and clear.
@GraceNote lol Sorry. Jackanory is a kids TV show in the UK. Basically a bedtime story is read by the presenter. So "Jackanory" has become slang for "tell us a story".
Well, if either did carry the name "Ed", then I could blame that appellation, since all people who I know named Ed do likewise at every opportunity. Everyone else points out it's an Ed thing, too.
See, here in this room, you don't have the defenses of your fellow Bridge mates. It means I get to target you alone, which increases the pressure and makes you feel uncomfortable as if there actually was some sort of issue at all, rather than the whole thing being so utterly nonsensical that it didn't even elicit any response at all. But you wouldn't know that. Which increases the pressure.
You know I can't take you seriously @Grace when the top non-pinned starred message is about breasts and you're talking about how things are too curvy in here.
Asplenium is a genus of about 700 species of ferns, often treated as the only genus in the family Aspleniaceae, though other authors consider Hymenasplenium separate, based on molecular phylogenetic analysis of DNA sequences, a different chromosome count, and structural differences in the rhizomes. The type species for the genus is Asplenium marinum.
Many groups of species have been separated from Asplenium as segregate genera. These include Camptosorus, Ceterach, Phyllitis, and Tarachia, but these species can form hybrids with other Asplenium species and because of this are usually incl...
In early times, even though people did not have a set of rules on grammar, they have continued to write and study English. During Shakespeare's time, there was not even a standard rules on spelling. However, sooner or later someone had to write all those rules of grammar right? So, who was offici...
@MattEllen To me, it doesn't because it tells me about the history of print moreso than the history of the language, since print may influence but does not necessarily fully control the propogation of the grammar.
The history of English grammars begins late in the sixteenth century with the Pamphlet for Grammar by William Bullokar. In the early works, the structure and rules of English grammar were contrasted with those of Latin. A more modern approach, incorporating phonology, was introduced in the nineteenth century.
Sixteenth to eighteenth centuries
The first English grammar, Pamphlet for Grammar by William Bullokar, written with the seeming goal of demonstrating that English was quite as rule-bound as Latin, was published in 1586. Bullokar's grammar was faithfully modeled on William Lily's L...
The Great Vowel Shift was a major change in the pronunciation of the English language that took place in England between 1350 and 1500.{H.C. Wyld - A Short History of English first published 1914 reprinted 1957}
|last=Robert Stockwell
|chapter=How much shifting actually occurred in the historical English vowel shift?
|contribution-url=http://www.degruyter.de/rfiles/p/9783110175912Sample%20Article%20(R.%20Stockwell).pdf
|year=2002
|editor1-last= Donka Minkova
|editor2-last= Stockwell
|editor2-first= Robert
|title=Studies in the History of the English Language: A Millennial Perspective
...