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00:00
I sometimes wonder what feelings bubbly wine has when it's being drunk.
I don't know if that's a thing other people wonder about.
@PeterDavidCarter-Poulsen What I meant was that this chat isn't babysat by a bunch of mods, like SFF chat is now (because of stupid stuff getting flagged by stupids). Let's keep it that way, so that we can all keep swearing ;)
I guess. I dunno. I'm in a weird mood. I think I might just lurk or something and watch other people swear or not swear. I feel kinda depressed.
I self medicate with Faulty Towers. Perks me right up.
It's harder than it should be to find out whether a Webster's New 20th C. Unabridged has been published since 1979.
Print is dead.
00:08
Or any other unabridged Webster's.
Print doesn't die, but it burns rather well.
Oh ho, there is an '83.
I always just feel bad that Bazil Faulty is surrounded by idiots.
00:54
@PeterDavidCarter-Poulsen That's why it's so good. But besides, that's Sybil.
@Mitch I rather meant the general names for specific foods, like "champaign" or "bourbon".
 
1 hour later…
02:02
@Cerberus It's called grain alcohol. E.g., Everclear. - What did you think I meant by corn?
02:23
@cornbreadninja麵包忍者 I did some web searching and couldn't find anything myself. references or pdfs
02:36
@Mazura Wait, so you do not only use corn to mean "maize", but you also use grain to mean "maize"??
So confusing.
Squares and rectangles: corn is one type of grain.
This is grain to me.
And probably the most common grain used to make alcohol. Deff in the US. That's what we do: grow corn. Also why: "bourbon" was invented in the heart of the corn belt.
Or corn. I can never remember the exact difference.
@Cerberus That looks like wheat.
02:39
I believe, to many Americans, corn = maize.
@Mazura All the same to me.
I'm sure one is a subspecies of another.
Maize is Spanish for corn and an adopted loanword (or w/e). You average American does not know that (maize is another word for corn), IMO.
The reason I do, is because I did an experiment in 3rd grade about soaking your popcorn to increase the yield.
A half hour soak the previous day will increase it by ~25%. Saltwater had no differential effect.
That is, judging by the remaining unpopped kernels.
@Cerberus Is there a single word for the concept of: all squares are rectangles, not all rectangles are squares?
@Mazura I always forget how you use the word corn to mean maize, which is unnatural to me.
To me, corn is what you make bread from.
I was explaining what went through my head when I was reading the Wikipaedia article.
@Cerberus Eh, that's wheat. Cornbread is... not bread.
Corn is what standard bread is made from, except in the language of your region.
Cornbread is a generic name for any number of quick breads containing cornmeal. They are usually leavened by baking powder. == History == Native Americans were using ground corn (maize) for food thousands of years before European explorers arrived in the New World. European settlers, especially those who resided in the English Southern Colonies, learned the original recipes and processes for corn dishes from the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Creek, and soon they devised recipes for using cornmeal in breads similar to those made of grains available in Europe. Cornbread has been called...
02:52
Although I'm not sure about Canada.
Bread is a staple food prepared from a dough of flour and water, usually by baking. Throughout recorded history it has been popular around the world and is one of the oldest artificial foods, having been of importance since the dawn of agriculture. There are many combinations and proportions of types of flour and other ingredients, and also of different traditional recipes and modes of preparation of bread. As a result, there are wide varieties of types, shapes, sizes, and textures of breads in various regions. Bread may be leavened by one of many different processes, ranging from reliance ...
Flour is a powder made by grinding uncooked cereal grains or other seeds or roots (like cassava). It is the main ingredient of bread, which is a staple food for many cultures, making the availability of adequate supplies of flour a major economic and political issue at various times throughout history. Wheat flour is one of the most important ingredients in Oceanic, European, South American, North American, Middle Eastern, Indian and North African cultures, and is the defining ingredient in their styles of breads and pastries. While wheat is the most common base for flour, maize flour has been...
Corn or maize is a large-grained crop native to the Americas; in British English, "corn" can mean any cereal. Corn may also refer to: == Places == Corn, Lot, France Corn, Oklahoma, United States == Other uses == Corn (surname), and persons with the name Corn (color) Corn (emulator), a software emulator for video games Corn (film), a movie Corn (medicine), an ingrowing callus often on the foot A type of snow == See also == Korn (disambiguation) Corne (disambiguation) Corny (disambiguation)...
I see Wikipaedia is a bit Americocentric.
I suppose if you have a gluten allergy, then corn bread it is.
@Cerberus Show me citations from this millennium. I'm curious.
But the standard meaning of corn/koren/etc. around the world is not maize, but cereals.
Show me? Am I your slave?
I'm off anyway.
02:56
Corn: "a North American cereal plant that yields large grains, or kernels, set in rows on a cob. Its many varieties yield numerous products, highly valued for both human and livestock consumption." –G
I didn't realize it was native to NA.
That could be the problem right there, and why it's "Americocentric".
And why we get to stake a claim on alcohol made from it, and get pissy about when the term is used elsewhere, like with champagne.
@Cerberus That was intended as a polite request, not a rude challenge.
Might as well point out that "Americans" generally only grow four types of corn these days, where as Mexicans still grow over a hundred. Potato famine, anyone?
How could you not know that corn is from here?
So, corn means cereal in BE?
@tchrist I prob did at some point (in 3rd grade ;)
So?
> Many gardeners have heard that colonists learned from the Indians to plant each corn kernel on top of a dead fish. This is no "fish story." Decaying fish contain nitrogen, which corn needs for good growth. The Indians and colonists may not have known why it worked, but they liked the results, so continued to do it.
List ten foodstuffs that originated in the New World. No cheating. Go.
03:05
Nitrogen soil levels, that I was aware of.
Pizza.
Uh.....
Tomatoes I think.
Corn !
taps
chiles
virtually all beans
potatoes
chocolate
wild rice
pumpkins and kin
No coco in Africa?
vanilla
most any nut you feel like eating
Cows?
Old World had cows.
And I was talking about food anyway.
03:09
Cows are food :)
> Foods That Originated in the New World: artichokes, avocados, beans (kidney and lima), black walnuts, blueberries, cacao (cocoa/chocolate), cashews, cassava, chestnuts, corn (maize), crab apples, cranberries, gourds, hickory nuts, onions, papayas, peanuts, pecans, peppers (bell peppers, chili peppers), pineapples, plums, potatoes, pumpkins, raspberries, squash, strawberries, sunflowers, sweet potatoes, tobacco, tomatoes, turkey, vanilla, wild cherries, wild rice.
What country did you grow up in again?
Wow, onions? The Old World sucked.
Chicago.
Impossible.
Wait, are you a child of the ghetto?
Nope.
Well to do, I'd say.
Every child is taught these things.
03:11
Like I said, prob in 3rd grade. That was a very long time ago.
But you remember everything from then because your brain is still empty.
I know I do.
There are, um... other factors at play here.
My guidance consular was right. Stay in school kids!
I just always wondered what it felt like to have X's for eyes, like those dudes in the workbook.
That commercial is prob why I'm still alive. I always did my "homework" first.
It also basically said you'll be fine as long as you know what you're doing. Bad PSA, bad dog!
Anyway... so, corn means grain?
Long ago and far away.
Corn antedates the European settling of the New World.
It had to mean something.
That’s why there are three barleycorns to the inch.
03:24
So I need to learn Dutch or German to trace the etymology? : "Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch koren and German Korn ." –G
English is not the child of Dutch or German.
But there is a kernel here you might notice.
"Related to" does not mean "taken from".
I'm guessing it's: 'grains that have kernels'. Other than corn, that would be... ?
It is the nature of grain to have kernels.
@tchrist Ah ha. I'm beginning to see @Cerberus's confusion.
@tchrist Germanic languages don't stem from Germany. That clears up some of mine.
03:45
@tchrist Umm that doesn't make sense?
Nuts I often eat are hazelnuts, walnuts, chestnuts maybe.
I don't think any of those are new.
Well, we have black walnuts.
The same for beans: green pease, haricots verts, chickpease.
I nearly never eat chestnuts here. Unfortunately.
Maybe what we call "brown beans" are new? But I don't often get to eat those.
Fava beans are Old World.
03:47
Do you have "tame chestnuts", trees whose chestnuts one can eat?
No.
They can't live here.
Hmm too bad.
They are killed.
Oh, and we eat beech nuts.
The American continent used to be wall-to-wall giant chestnut trees.
03:48
Most unfortunate.
@Mazura Or, rather, your own...
It's Homerically tragic.
You can still eat beech nuts?
I loved reaping nuts as a child.
We also had a hazel tree in our garden.
We gathered hickory nuts and black walnuts. Hazel was unusual but not unknown.
Hmm I don't think I know those.
Too bad we don't have walnut trees here.
> The word "bean" and its Germanic cognates have existed in common use in West Germanic languages since before the 12th century,[1] referring to broad beans and other pod-borne seeds. This was long before the New World genus Phaseolus was known in Europe. After Columbian-era contact between Europe and the Americas, use of the word was extended to pod-borne seeds of Phaseolus, such as the common bean and the runner bean, and the related genus Vigna.
@Cerberus Hickory nuts are like tiny walnuts. Kinda.
03:50
What is the "common bean"?
I know pecan nuts.
Phaseolus vulgaris, the common bean (also known as the string bean, field bean, flageolet bean, French bean, garden bean, green bean, haricot bean, pop bean, or snap bean), is a herbaceous annual plant grown worldwide for its edible dry seed (known as just "beans") or unripe fruit (green beans). Its leaf is also occasionally used as a vegetable and the straw as fodder. Its botanical classification, along with other Phaseolus species, is as a member of the legume family Fabaceae, most of whose members acquire the nitrogen they require through an association with rhizobia, a species of nitrogen-fixing...
> These include the kidney bean, the navy bean, the pinto bean, and the wax bean.
Most beans you eat are from the New World.
Fava beans are Old World.
Vicia faba, also known as the broad bean, fava bean, faba bean, field bean, bell bean, English bean, horse bean, Windsor bean, pigeon bean and tic(k) bean, is a species of flowering plant in the vetch and pea family Fabaceae. The origin of this legume is obscure, but it had been cultivated in the Middle East for 8,000 years before it spread to Western Europe. Fava or Broad beans have been found in the earliest human settlements. Remains are reported to have been found in Egyptian tombs. They probably originated in the Near East during the Neolithic Age and by the Bronze Age had spread to Northern...
Hmm I didn't know haricots verts were new.
Yes.
By "fava beans" you mean normal beans, aka. fabae?
But excluding haricots verts?
No.
I mean Vicia faba.
03:53
I don't know Latin.
4
Vicious.
@Cerberus "Confusion" was prob not the best word choice. I meant in regards to this: "But the standard meaning of corn/koren/etc. around the world is not maize, but cereals." So, corn means cereal? I would also like to see your research ;)
> In the Iliad (8th century BCE) is a passing mention of beans and chickpeas cast on the threshing floor.
> According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization the term bean should include only species of Phaseolus; however, enforcing that prescription has proven difficult for several reasons.
The Three Sisters are the three main agricultural crops of various Native American groups in North America: winter squash, maize (corn), and climbing beans (typically tepary beans or common beans). One of the major Native American tribes that used these "Three Sisters" to trade with others was the Iroquois. In one technique known as companion planting, the three crops are planted close together. Flat-topped mounds of soil are built for each cluster of crops. Each mound is about 30 cm (12 in) high and 50 cm (20 in) wide, and several maize seeds are planted close together in the center of each mound...
@tchrist This list is wrong. Things like onions, chestnuts, and plums are old.
@Mazura Yes, that is what it means everywhere else.
The American chestnut (Castanea dentata) is a large, monoecious deciduous tree of the beech family native to eastern North America. Before the species was devastated by the chestnut blight, a fungal disease, it was one of the most important forest trees throughout its range, and was considered the finest chestnut tree in the world. It is estimated that between 3 and 4 billion American chestnut trees were destroyed in the first half of the 20th century by blight after its initial discovery in 1904. Very few mature specimens of the tree exist within its historical range, although many small shoots...
03:59
@tchrist That doesn't make sense. Bean is an ancient word.
@Cerberus The Ancients had no need to refer to the New World Phaseolus spp.
But we did have the word bean.
It didn't mean what most people call beans today.
Or any day...
Bean is a common name for large plant seeds of several genera of the family Fabaceae (alternately Leguminosae) which are used for human or animal food. == Terminology == The word "bean" and its Germanic cognates have existed in common use in West Germanic languages since before the 12th century, referring to broad beans and other pod-borne seeds. This was long before the New World genus Phaseolus was known in Europe. After Columbian-era contact between Europe and the Americas, use of the word was extended to pod-borne seeds of Phaseolus, such as the common bean and the runner bean, and the related...
04:02
Extended, not changed.
Am I the United Nations’ keeper?
Spank it.
It's your project.
Monkey see, monkey do.
@Cerberus I was serious about your research. UD would be fine (if not preferred). If you have read the posts since you left, you'll see I'm stuck trying to understand the etymology of 'corn' in Dutch and German.
25
Q: Why does "corn" mean "maize" in American English?

WokI keep hearing "corn" as a synonym of "maize". This is widely popularized worldwide by popcorn. However, this is American English! In British English, "corn" can mean any type of "grain", especially "wheat", as in the Corn Laws. Why does "corn" mean "maize" in American English? Is there a histori...

Corn and grain both come from the same PIE root *ɡṛə-no- In English corn Grimm's Law has applied, and the original /ɡ/ (which appears in Latin grānum, whence Eng grain) has changed to /k/. Other English cognates include kernel, granite, grange, grenade, pomegranate, garnet, and granule. — John Lawler Jan 3 '13 at 14:46
In British English, "corn" can mean any type of "grain": increasingly not really true today; the en-US usage meaning "maize" is increasingly the meaning (at least without context suggesting the "locally common cereal crop" to paraphrase my dictionary). I assume this is both the availability of sweetcorn and popcorn in addition to the usual cultural invasion factor. — Richard Jan 3 '13 at 13:10
04:20
Lo and behold. Asked and answered.
>In British English, "corn" can mean any type of "grain": increasingly not really true today. - But true, nonetheless. How old are you, @Cerberus ;)
What's just after the MTV generation (and the one right before them)? "X" and "Y" won't help; I need catchy terms for them.
It went straight from MTV to "millennials"?
Term for someone who came of age in the 90s?
04:35
@Mazura Kids.
04:45
[ SmokeDetector ] Link at end of answer: Depression and happiness by anamilton on english.stackexchange.com
05:01
Alas: "there is no philosophy.se" - Heh.
05:11
@Mazura When you edit out the spam, people won't know to flag it as such.
Hmm. I was wondering why no one had edited it yet.
@tchrist Roll it back?
@Mazura I would.
05:31
Done. I see no applicable flag, other than to ask a mod to remove the link, which I can do. It's junk, but if I'm not willing to vote as VLQ on Fraser Orr's answer, they don't get one either. However - Fire torpedoes. Full spread!
05:44
[ SmokeDetector ] Link at end of answer: Someone who takes inspirational quotes seriously by Emily Cruse on english.stackexchange.com
05:56
@Mazura spam
But the only thing that makes it spam is the link. It's half an answer, almost. w/o the link it's just run of the mill garbage.
I want the real SE FAQ. The one that spells out in plan words, stuff i.e., this is how we get crap deleted, etc.
06:42
@Mazura Hello. Long time. Can you give me a feedback on this chat room? chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/40642/…
@tchrist Your feedback will be appreciated.
 
1 hour later…
07:50
Hallo guys. I want to say I thank you. I've just finished my thesis on machine translation. You help me a lot especially with the grammar part. There's one more thing to be done. I need to create a nice title for my work.
We can exclude something like "Machine vs human Translation", or "A comparison between human and machine tranaslation outcome". I consider these as well-worn...
 
4 hours later…
12:01
@Mazura That is one low-rep comment. Read the question and the answers.
Besides, it doesn't matter.
I'm talking the whole Germanic world.
12:51
@Cerberus Why would you want to wake a sleeping giant?
13:09
@tchrist OK most of those are unassailable. But onion? That's been worldwide forever.
@JustynaNogala Congratulations! Or preliminary ones. It ain't over til the thesis submission office accepts your margins and fonts and table captions and reference style.
For a title I highly suggest "'Invisible Idiot': a comparison of Human and Machine Translation"
You know about the 'invisible idiot' example, right?
@Mitch I know; I was wondering what the deal was there. Perhaps an American cultivar, is all I could imagine.
13:45
@tchrist But that's cheating or misleading. Tomatoes/potatoes/cocoa only ever existed pre-columbian in the americas. so totally on that list. but something that was old-world also shouldn't be on that list. like saying 'monkeys' are only new world.
more importantly, does SmokeDetector delete its chat messages itself after the problem is dealt with?
14:09
@Mitch no
14:29
Hi. I've uploaded an audio sample of my speaking. It's about two minutes, a poem and a few lines from a novel. Would very much appreciate your comments on how I can improve myself: vocaroo.com/i/s0osWVKr8k9r
@Færd What sort of advice are you asking for?
Generally, your speech is clear. Your intonation is OK. Your timing is pretty good, although you tend to speed up and leave out pauses toward the end of whatever piece you are reading.
@JustynaNogala Machines: Still Can't Translate a Meme ... A study of the comparisons between human and machine translations ... by [you].
14:50
@Mitch thank you.
@Færd I think you need to work on your vowels. You kinda sound like Christoph Waltz (the white dude in Django Unchained, from Austria) I think that's why he sounds funny to me (strangely elongated vowel sounds?). I had a hard time picking out what your accent is though, you're better at English then most Americans I know.
Sounds like a country drawl to me. Like Andy Griffith.
@MattE.Эллен OK, mister answer the question as asked and that's all. Then who did delete those?
His accent doesn't sound like a NNS to me at all.
@Mitch Steve did it.
@Mitch I'm not at liberty to say. damnit @kit!
lol
14:56
Oops.
@MattE.Эллен what's wrong with blaming SmokeDetector? I just wondered if it were automatic or hand made. Also, why bother deleting them?
@Mitch I don't know why they were deleted. You can blame smokey if you like
Probably to note that they had been handled.
OK.
No sense in keeping easy links to crappy/offensive stuff around.
15:02
Go-go-gadget: fire extinguisher bot.
Sure, understandable. but not knowing the mechanism feels weird.
I don't think it's weird.
I think you're weird for not thinking it's weird
you're moderatorsplaining
15:04
Are you the star faerie? ;)
@Mitch It's "modsplaining".
No, I'm Gunga Din.
@KitZ.Fox Exactly
modspreading is when chat is only inhabited by mods
I wouldn't have to explain that if I were blue
Look man, I'm starving but it's not lunch time yet. It's June already and what have I done. 1/2 world problems.
@KitZ.Fox Thank you. I was wondering if there was anything jarring or non-native sounding about my accent. I know there is; it certainly irritates me to listen to myself.
15:09
@Mitch which one?
13 mins ago, by Kit Z. Fox
His accent doesn't sound like a NNS to me at all.
You know that new service that packages up ingredients for meals so that it's on your doorstep when you arrive home and all you have to do is prepare it, so you don't have to worry about what to do for dinner but still have a meal that you prepared yourself?
@KitZ.Fox I'm flattered!
@Færd That's a universal.
No one can stand their own voice. Because you're so used to hearing it fro inside your own head.
@Mitch No, but interesting. We never have stuff like that where I live. Too low density.
15:11
Probably.
@KitZ.Fox I've only heard of it. But I call that a zeroth world problem being fixed, tech/services to allow you to feel like you've had a 'normal' person's experience.
But I can't help thinking..wow..wouldn't that be nice.
@Mazura Thanks for raising specific points, but I'm not familiar with Christoph Waltz's accent. So...
And I doubt if my accent has a name; any other day I have another accent. It changes merely by watching a movie.
@MattE.Эллен halfway between zeroth world and first world. Not exactly on Elysium, but a candidate for it.
(Although I seldom watch movies.)
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Yeah, that is kind of what I'm going for. Make it less comfortable and fun to post comments.
15:20
@Mitch oh! I thought you meant you'd solved 1 of 2 world problems
@Færd I'm not sure that's his real accent, anyway. But I like it; it's melodic.
@KitZ.Fox You might want to remove the font suggestion from your meta post. I think that accounts for most of the downvotes. A lot of people will simply take issue at your font choice and ignore the main point of your suggestion.
For example, I find that font neither nice nor, more importantly, readable.
especially since the font is local to your phone
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 You do realize that English has already done that, right? The hoi actually means the.
15:33
@terdon Yes, that was the joke he was making.
Damn, I sort of expected that but I don't often get the chance to know something that Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 doesn't so I took the plunge.
It's been a running joke here for a long time.
Oh well, that's what I get for being absent and presumptuous.
I'm surprised it hasn't come up before.
You are here rather frequently.
15:38
Feb 29 '12 at 21:14, by KitFox
And the hoity toity say le the hoi polloi.
@KitZ.Fox It probably has and I've forgotten.
@MattE.Эллен Oh. No. But if the world problem of my not having eaten lunch will probably be solved pretty soon.
@Mitch you're solving malnutrition for a particular case. then you just need to solve it for the general case and you're done!
@MattE.Эллен theoretically I solved it for the general case already
@Mitch you're going to share your stomach with everyone?
15:42
ewww
@MattE.Эллен ewww...
kinx
ha ha
jinx
laughing out loud alot
15:45
Feb 29 '12 at 21:04, by Matt Эллен
man, doctors are such prescriptivists
@Mitch ah. good times
Heh, that's a good line Matt :)
also a classic:
Feb 29 '12 at 21:05, by Jez
bloody woman ignored my online dating message. bitch.
@terdon The greatest number of stacked articles I've seen is three: "On your next visit to Spain be sure to visit the La Alhambra."
2
15:56
nice!
@sumelic Brilliant! :)
@Mitch Oh man, and then he kept wondering why that happened to him. What with him being such a nice guy and all.
@terdon He's a men's rights activist.
Who would have guessed
Hello everyone. I have a question about sentence structure.
Please do not take any action with respect to x in without checking with me first. I want to add the subordinate clause (is that the right term?) "in the future". Where should that go?
@terdon makes me think of xbox girls
16:05
Hi @terdon. How's it going?
@FaheemMitha Hey, long time no chat!
@terdon It feels like it. How's the job? Are they paying you any more?
:-)
@FaheemMitha "...with respect to x without checking with me first..."
@FaheemMitha I don't see why it's needed, but I'd put it at the beginning: In the future/from now on please don't take any action...
@terdon Ok. True, "in the future" might be redudant.
16:07
@FaheemMitha Not yet, but I hope they will soon. The company will be asking for more money.
@Mitch Sorry, I don't follow.
@terdon What company is that?
@FaheemMitha remove the 'in'
@Mitch Oh, right.
@FaheemMitha saphetor.com
@terdon Oh. You're working for them?
So how would you rate your current pay: reasonable, mediocre, terrible? Or if you prefer from a scale from 0 to 10, with 0 absolutely appalling, and 10 out of this world/couldn't be better.
16:10
Umm... Better than most in Greece, below average for most of Europe, enough for my lifestyle at the moment.
Ok. Sounds like it could be worse.
But the work is interesting so far, and that's more important anyway
@terdon Well, it's worth something, at any rate.
@Mitch Do you concur that "in the future" is redundant in the preceding sentence?
Well, it can hardly be in the past.
@FaheemMitha grammatically and semantically it's not redundant. pragmatically it sure is.
16:23
@terdon That's certainly true.
@Mitch Fair enough.
@terdon So, is your work mostly programming? Or is there some scientific work too?
Mostly programming. The science is restricted to understanding papers to learn how to implement stuff. And in knowing what it is I want to implement.
@terdon That's me making video games
Whenever I make a new game, gotta go back to my first one
Forgot how to make gravity work again
character please stop floating
16:43
Do any non-indie game companies still make their own engines?
17:14
@terdon Ok. Basically bioinformatics stuff, then?
17:35
@Mazura Valve
Source was created by Valve, which can be classified as a company now
17:55
@MattE.Эллен now 1 of 2 problems solved. which creates another problem. Naptime. Exactly when does it occur?
writes grant
experimentals design
@Mitch Duh, naptime is always
If you're reading this, I'm asleep!
18:12
@Mitch time is an allusion
@KitZ.Fox My favorite may be the Rio Grande River.
Or in the words of the song, "Big Rio Grande River"
@MετάEd Rio Grande River Big
Rio Grande River Strong
Then the Colorado River (though incredibly long, the weakest of the village) managed to defeat the Rio Grande River using a simple sling and stone
18:56
@Demisemihemidemisemiquaver You are the Buddha
sees light
looks at everything a new way
Eww...
goes back to old way
Stupid Buddha
takes nap
I am the eggman.
@Mazura Yes, but the walrus is Paul.
One day, I'll attempt to learn what that all means.
19:17
@Mazura The walrus is dead. Long live the walrus.
20:14
Suppose I wanted to do some plotting on my Android device. Is there an interactive, interpreted language for Android that can plot?
Get a graphing app, no?
I've been reading reviews.
Most of them are designed to just take a function and plot it. They assume I want to do a cartesian 2d or 3d plot.
Isn't there a word that sounds like what antisepsis looks like it should be pronounced? an-tis-e-psis. Like: that guy is the antisipis of my existence. I'd swear I've seen a word used like that.
antithesis?
@MετάEd Bingo
20:24
Or it could be antichrist
:D
@MετάEd IDK what a cartesian is, so no help from me. I'd only link you to the first result for "graphing calculator app for android".
BOO.
It's already there:
12
Q: What is a term to refer to two ideas of exact opposition (e.g good & bad, pos & neg)?

user2901512So basically, I know the name for both sides of a coin, yet not the coin itself. In other words, when you refer to a coin, you don't want to say 'this object with one side heads, and the other tails', you would want to say 'this coin'. What I want is a general term to refer to two ideas, that ar...

@Mazura The usual graphing software draws X and Y axes for you, assumes that's what you want. I just want to draw.
A CORE implementation would be awesome but I think that's long defunct.
20:47
Oh, Frink.
@MετάEd BOOM. BOOM. BOOM.
 
2 hours later…
23:31
Tutanchamon's meteorite dagger.
Made from meteorite iron in the Bronze Age (when they couldn't acquire iron from the earth yet).

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