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00:21
I am confused about what this question really is asking:
0
Q: What is the word for "the way a word sounds to your ear"?

DaleI do not mean "Phonaesthetics" or euphony or cacophony which carry a value judgement. Words have an audio 'pattern', mostly unique and different from other words. This is the unique audio "finger-print" of the word, which does not carry a un/pleasant connotation - it is simply the sound of a (par...

Does he want a sonogram?
I don’t know. Maybe ermanen’s answer is what the fellow is looking for. I can’t tell.
n11
n11
sound processing, he's talking about fingerprint, he should just take the Fourier frequencies
and plot a periodogram
00:51
@WillHunting I don't think she is a troll.
I checked her profile and her question and messages, and she just seems to be a nice girl who likes you.
@tchrist I would say "the collection of phones that comprise a word", probably.
@tchrist Waveform?
@KitFox I quit coffee after vacation and now I feel much more alert.
@WillHunting I thought that was your sock puppet.
Even more alert than when loaded with caffeine?
@Cerberus A move even, balanced kind of alertness.
Caffeine highs are unsustainable.
n11
n11
can 'revoke' be a noun? "the officers wanted the rigid time policy revoke"
n11
n11
01:03
ok the sentence isn't correct, thx, (passing a test)
The noun form is revocation.
@Robusto Hmm OK.
I never drink it.
@Robusto Or revoked, in this sentence.
Yes. But he said noun.
n11
n11
@Cerberus yes thought of it too
@Robusto Yeah I know.
But mine eyes reject a noun there.
@n11 OK good.
01:06
@Cerberus Yeah, but ask me a specific question and I will respond within the scope of the question. It's not up to me to figure out what someone thinks they might mean.
@Robusto Sure.
I wasn't answering any question, just butting in.
n11
n11
I am dead tired; nevertheless/therefore, I will keep working through the night (<hesitating between the 2)
But I really do feel more alert than normal, and yet calmer. Coffee tastes good, but exhausts your adrenal glands.
n11
n11
(but more nevertheless)
@n11 What do you think? The answer is pretty simple.
n11
n11
01:10
100% nevertheless 0% therefore
100% nevertheless.
It is a contradictory statement, therefore you need a contradictory signifier.
Did you see what I did there?
n11
n11
indeed sorry I mix therefore and however for some reason
@Robusto Nice.
@Robusto OK noted. Then I shan't start drinking it!
How long does the effect usually last?
The coffee buzz?
Yes?
01:19
A couple hours.
The energy lasts a couple of hours. The residual buzz lasts much longer, but isn't good for much.
Hmm.
What does the residual buzz feel like?
A very weak version of the primary buzz?
It just keeps you awake when you want to sleep.
Ah, yes, that sucks.
The reason why many people don't drink coffee after dinner.
Or drink decaf.
Yeah.
But is that good?
01:27
I really do like the taste of coffee, though. American or French. The Dutch coffee in Curaçao was tolerable, kind of a half-assed espresso, but I like a good big cup of coffee with breakfast.
A big cup?
French cups aren't big...
One of the hotels I stayed at in Paris served coffee in a cup almost the size of a soup bowl.
Haha.
Well, that is hardly typical...
They normally have smaller cups than we do.
Italian cups are the smallest, probably.
A basket of croissants and brioche with butter and plenty of good strong coffee. Damn, I'm getting hungry just thinking about it.
Heh.
01:29
Mm, coffee.
Plus de café, s'il vous plait.
sips americano
Hello!
Hi!
I think I'd say encore du café?
By the way, what is American coffee like? The stereotype is not good (thin/bland).
01:31
@Cerberus Are you asking or telling?
Something in between.
@Cerberus It varies widely.
OK, sure, it varies everywhere...but you were saying you wanted American coffee?
I think the stereotypical Dutch coffee is not good either.
If you get coffee on the East Coast, D.C. or above, it's proper coffee. Chicago as well. But if you go west, the coffee gets weaker and weaker until you hit the Left Coast.
I see.
The Left Coast.
01:32
@Cerberus American coffee is café filtre.
Many places don't have it at all.
Isn't all coffee filtered?
@Cerberus You understand that?
@Cerberus Eh, kind of.
Not really. I was thinking maybe leftist, New-Age California?
Espresso goes through that.
01:33
@Cerberus West Coast. On a map, west is left. Now do you get it?
Sure, I got that.
I thought there was a double layer.
Well, don't read too much into it then.
Tsk.
I'm used to reading complicated puns into everything you say.
Jul 19 '11 at 14:09, by Robusto
@aedia — Despite his multiple heads, @Cerberus remains a master of the single entendre.
They say "filter coffee" in the third-wave coffee scene to distinguish it from espresso in some places.
01:35
Third wave?
I know little about coffee, as I don't drink it...
First wave: Nestle instant. Second wave: Starbucks. Third wave: fresh roasting, focus on specific brew details.
I only know it's all very important and there are many subtle differences and such.
It's one of life's little pleasures.
What do the "waves" indicate?
@Mahnax That is a gross oversimplification. Starbucks didn't invent real coffee.
01:36
@Robusto Yeah, I'll admit that. But it's an easy way to avoid explaining anything.
People here say Starbucks is ehm not very high quality. But better than from the average office coffee vending machine.
Yes. Gross oversimplifications are a way to avoid explanations.
The lowest "wave" people have at home here is one of those devices, I forgot the name...
@Cerberus I don't care for Starbucks. I brew my own, when possible.
@Cerberus Keurig K-Cups?
No...
It's a stupidly named coffee maker, with pads.
01:37
@Cerberus Tampax?
Senseo!
I Googled it.
Nevah heared of it.
@Robusto How would you succinctly sum up second-wave coffee, then?
Is it used in your countries?
@Cerberus I've never heard of it either.
01:38
@Mahnax I reject the whole notion of three waves.
Does this look familiar at all?
@Robusto Oh, why's that?
Because there are lots of ripples and nuances.
Why is it a wave and not a tier or a rank?
Third wave may refer to: * Third-wave feminism, diverse strains of feminist activity in the early 1990s * Third wave ska, a musical genre * Third Wave of the Holy Spirit, a 1980s expression coined by C. Peter Wagner for a Neocharismatic Christian movement * Third Wave Coffee, genesis and establishment of coffee growers, roasters and retailers focused on achieving the highest form of culinary appreciation of coffee * Third Wave Democracy, third major surge of democracy in history The Third Wave may refer to: * The Third Wave, a name given by history teacher Ron Jones to an experimental recr...
01:39
I have been drinking gourmet home blend since the '70s. And I didn't invent it.
@Robusto Preground, comes in a can?
No. You buy the beans at a local gourmet coffee shop, then grind them yourself, just prior to brewing.
@Mahnax Okay, never heard of the term or the movement.
Coffee has always had the interest of connoisseurs...
But w'evs.
So it just means "good coffee".
@Robusto Oh, good stuff. Glad to hear it.
@Mahnax I still reject that as an oversimplification. Just because it isn't your oversimplification doesn't mean I ought to embrace it.
Just as there are many more divisions of prosperity than first-, second-, and third-world.
I live in a first-world country that has patches of third-world poverty all over it.
01:43
@Robusto Right. So do you propose the scrapping of any sort of organization of the various coffee movements, or something else?
Apparently there is a local historical reason for it, so fine.
@Mahnax I think the whole notion of organizing the various coffee movements is ipso facto ridiculous. It will never be more than an arbitrary set of distinctions. But if that helps you, go ahead and use it.
And simplifications can be useful...
Just don't expect widespread agreement.
Third-wave feminism is well known, however.
01:44
@Cerberus Not to me.
Not by name.
Perhaps it is mostly used in historiography.
The first wave was about universal suffrage.
Because I really don't give a shit what people want to call their movements.
The second wave was the hippies.
The third wave is now, about having female CEOs of large companies and such.
01:46
I also reject the categorization of anything branded as hippie.
Hehe.
@Cerberus That is such a crock. There is a lot of wiggle room between those divisions.
@Robusto Alright. I have suspected for awhile that it was terminology used to distinguish local cafés who do things differently from coffee chains to separate themselves from them, but I have no evidence for that.
@Robusto Certainly.
@Cerberus And just because we have two, three female CEOs doesn't mean women have genuinely arrived at a situation of equality.
01:47
But it can be observed that feminism was a more frequent topic in the social and political discours during those three periods.
@Robusto They have not. But it is a common theme in politics and such.
Feminism is the movement, not the (future) result.
Have you noticed that female CEOs tend to be promoted to those jobs only to take the fall for companies that are either on their way out or suffering a major blow?
Not specifically...
Look at the GM CEO. She was given her job two weeks before GM announced the huge issue with ignition switches.
I have only noticed their paucity.
So why would it make sense to blame the woman?
Those companies are desperate and feel they've tried everything else, perhaps.
Why not promote a woman in that case?
01:51
Haha.
Or a gay dwarf.
Are there such creatures? I guess there must be.
Of course.
One out of every ten dwarves...
Hey, does English have a word like promille?
That many? I think 10% is kind of a high estimate.
I don't think so?
22 mins ago, by Robusto
@Cerberus Are you asking or telling?
01:53
Most estimates say around 10 % of the people are gay...but nobody knows for certain.
@Cerberus In my experience, which is extensive (I have been in music and the arts for a long time), 10% seems way high.
@Robusto I'm sure you are familiar with this type of discourse.
@Robusto I think this is rather based on surveys and such.
I'm familiar with it when it doesn't look awkward.
shrugs
@Cerberus I usually see the range given as 5-10%. It depends on the area and cultural milieu. The Castro district in San Francisco seems to be pushing 90% (or more). But then you go to your average white-bread suburb and it drops way off.
Gay men flock to the cities, where they push the gay population way up in certain enclaves. But you go outside those places and it's much more dilute.
Not sure about lesbians. But I'd be surprised if that weren't also true of them.
01:58
Of course.
And there are tons of closet cases that you cannot identify.
Not that I care. I tend to get on well with gay men, and enjoy the fact that they're more likely to be cultured and intelligent (for some reason) than the rest of the population.
I wonder whether that's actually statistically true...I think I once read that it was. Perhaps they are more eager to prove themselves in some way?
@Cerberus But if they never come out of the closet, even to themselves, how may they be said to be gay? Hmm, I suppose it's possible. The "gay but doesn't know it" crowd.
There are those, but also the "knows but hides it".
I know many blokes my age who come out of the closet now.
And I'm sure many will follow over the years.
That used to be more the case in my generation. The closet queen. Now there's just about no real reason to hide it.
02:00
And still many will remain in the closet.
A reason...however that may be, many still have a hard time accepting it, let alone tell people about it.
Liberace famously won a court case against a publication that said he was gay.
Hah.
I think he a is a fashion designer?
Aug 2 '12 at 18:40, by Robusto
user image
He was a pianist.
Haha.
And perhaps the most flamboyantly gay man who ever lived.
02:03
shrugs
!!wiki Liberace
Władziu Valentino Liberace (May 16, 1919 – February 4, 1987), mononymously known as Liberace, was an American pianist and vocalist. A child prodigy, and the first generation son of working class immigrants, Liberace's career spanned four decades of concerts, recordings, motion pictures, television, and endorsements. At the height of his fame from 1950s to the 1970s Liberace was the highest-paid entertainer in the world, with established residencies in Las Vegas, and an international touring schedule. Liberace embraced a lifestyle of flamboyant excess both on and off stage, and acquired ...
Lovely.
> This was the most Gaudiest and disgusting Queer to ever live !! Makes ya wanna throw up !!
God. YouTube comments . . .
Lovely.
02:11
Ain't no rapper in the world could match him for bling, either.
Rappers are so gay.
@Robusto Interesting capitalization choices.
Haha.
Yes, very gay capitals.
 
2 hours later…
n11
n11
03:56
some questions are really weird i.imgur.com/OH3X1T7.png (I answered V)
 
1 hour later…
04:59
@n11 That's kind of a funny question.
What is it for?
Is it a kind of Captcha?
 
3 hours later…
08:07
0
Q: Is there or Are there?

ronWhich is better ? which is grammatically correct ? Is there any news about my candidacy ? Or Are there any news about my candidacy ? Thanks

duplicate
12
Q: "The news is good." Why?

Mehper C. PalavuzlarWe use "the news is good" instead of "the news are good." What is the rationale behind this? Are there similar situations in English?

@n11 you mean IV? flower is to flower pot as camera is to camera case
@Cerberus it's an interesting approach
if that's what it is
08:50
0
Q: Informal "Covered"

chance-=-=-==--==--=-=-==-= I am confused about the meaning of the third step in this list: link 1 "Whenever you sign in to Google you'll enter your username and password as usual. " 2 "Then, you'll be asked for a code that will be sent to you via text, voice call, or our mobile app. " ...

troll user
Sounds like a job for skull pa troll :D
On patrol for the skull of any trolls.
!!wiki troll internet
In Internet slang, a troll (, ) is a person who sows discord on the Internet by starting arguments or upsetting people, by posting inflammatory, , or off-topic messages in an online community (such as a forum, chat room, or blog) with the deliberate intent of provoking readers into an emotional response or of otherwise disrupting normal on-topic discussion. This sense of the word troll and its associated verb trolling are associated with Internet discourse, but have been used more widely. Media attention in recent years has equated trolling with online harassment. For example, mass med...
Apr 18 at 3:18, by xiaodongjie
@WillHunting you are a great guy. I sent you 100 kisses.
Why no body sends me anything like that.
Wondering if @Jasper will share the kisses with the community
09:10
I'm happy if Jasper keeps the kisses for himself
09:29
I am happy if I can be his shareholder.
Unless the kisses giver's mouth has awful smell.
09:51
!!wiki kiss
A kiss is the pressing of one's lips against another person or an object. Cultural connotations of kissing vary widely. Depending on the culture and context, a kiss can express sentiments of love, passion, affection, respect, greeting, friendship, peace and good luck, among many others. In some situations a kiss is a ritual, formal or symbolic gesture indicating devotion, respect, or sacrament. The word came from Old English ' (“to kiss”), in turn from coss (“a kiss”). History Anthropologists are divided into two schools on the origins of kissing, one believing that it is instinctua...
!!wiki the kiss
The Kiss may refer to: Art * The Kiss (Brâncuși sculpture), a 1908 sculpture by Constantin Brâncuși * The Kiss (Hayez painting), an 1859 painting by Francesco Hayez * The Kiss (Klimt painting), a 1907 golden painting by Gustav Klimt * The Kiss (Rodin sculpture), an 1889 sculpture by Auguste Rodin * V-J Day in Times Square, a 1945 photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt * Le baiser de l'hôtel de ville (The Kiss by the Hôtel de Ville or just The Kiss), a photograph by Robert Doisneau Film and television * The Kiss (1896 film), a 47-second film reenactment of the last scene of the stage musical Th...
V-J Day in Times Square is a photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt that portrays an American sailor kissing a woman in a white dress on Victory over Japan Day (V-J Day) in Times Square in New York City, on August 14, 1945. The photograph, taken with a Leica IIIa camera, was published a week later in Life magazine among many photographs of celebrations around the United States that were presented in a twelve-page section titled Victory Celebrations. A two-page spread faces three other kissing poses among celebrators in Washington, D.C., Kansas City, and Miami opposite Eisenstaedt's, which was...
!!youtube kiss
09:52
!!youtube hug
!!youtube kiss band
!!youtube prince kiss
09:58
!!youtube youtube

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