@MartinAJ "What about using a hammer?" vs "How about using a hammer?" vs "What's your opinion about using a hammer?" --- each of the first two is commonly used as an immediate reply to something like "This shelf support wouldn't go in." The last is more appropriate if the context hadn't been established by (immediately) prior conversation. Between what and how, how is slightly less confrontational, but they're essentially equivalent indications that you are about to suggest an answer.
I'm somewhat irked by answers in the comments, despite having made a few myself. It seems dismissive much of the time and more importantly, preempts the more thoughtful sorts of answers that are formally expected of the S.E. network.
What's particularly troubling about it is that it affects the U.I. Most "unanswered questions" were answered in the comments, so finding a truly unanswered question in our backlog is difficult.
@Wrzlprmft I trust you saw the smilie at the end of my previous message to you. Anyway, since you asked: your question is, quite justifiably in this case, asked in the 'answers' section of the page (hence the middle portion: 'question in an answer'). Replies to your question would by necessity be placed in comments under your 'question as answer' (hence the initial portion: 'asking for an answer in comments'), where the substance of your question was about 'answers in comments' (last portion).
@Tonepoet Among other reasons, I think this arose from a spate of meta questions, accompanied by down-votes and strongly-worded comments to answers (on main), to the effect of "Don't even answer this question, or else! ... But feel free to post answers in comments instead." (cont'd)
(cont'd) Some people don't want to go through the bother of properly substantiating answers, so post what they have as comments, with the full expectation that others are free to use those comments as the basis for their 'proper' answers, with whatever rep movements that might entail.
Yeah, I understand most of that, aside from the last bit perhaps. It takes on the taint of plagiarism to just elaborate once a correct answer has already been suggested, the questioner probably loses interest and it's just less satisfying to seem derivative rather than original. XP
(cont'd) Some other communities have a strong edit to improve culture. ELU has a delete to improve faction (i.e. preserve the database by deleting low-quality posts instead of editing to raise the quality of those posts). This has had a side-effect of shifting the more experienced users to the comments, while people who don't have any idea of the site's norms sometimes feel free to post whatever they like in answers.
Part of the reason for that is that there's a high noise to signal ratio. I can't help but feel that sometimes we're too quick to close answers just because they can be though. I'm growing annoyed at the Morton's fork Gen. Ref. and the P.O.B. close reasons seem to have created.
If word questions can't be answered by the dictionary immediately, they're considered too subjective to be answered.
I probably won't write too much though, because I'm trying to figure out if there's any name for applying a suffix to the wrong word class for an answer I'm writing. The best I can find is stacking constraint/restriction but that seems like a broader category.
@NVZ To have somebody do something most commonly means to cause somebody to do something (eg, ask, force, pay). But can I use it like this way about my broken laptop? I had someone repair it for me. meaning, I paid someone to repair it for me?
Since you're eager to learn English, checking out English Language Learners would be good for you. :)
I am from south of India and that's how I know Malayalam and Tamil. Hindi and English are taught in school. I picked up Arabic and Urdu from my years spent in the Middle East.
Yes. I've been there before. I think it's very kind of the people who try to respond to your questions, but most of the times, my questions are very strange and subtle! So I prefer to ask them from someone online.
So you have a lot of experience! and presumably you're around 30. :)
@Tonepoet I'm still not understanding this attitude. An answer in a comment should have the obvious implication that the question was not worth a real answer, and probably is a LMGTFY, or 'don't go away angry when this is closed real soon' flag.
@Cerberus by 'not really' you mean 'not at all', like Turkey or Pakistan
@Cerberus by the same logic, Persia had conquered most of the Arab countries at some point, likewise penetrated their culture, and provided, through Zoroastrianism, the scaffolding for the monotheistic Abrahamic religions.
So also defensible to call everyone in the middle east Persian. to the same extent
it's not defensible. Yes, it is a common mistake to conflate Arab and Muslim.
yes, but it morphed quite a lot, first the Abbassid's were Persian rulers (so you could at that point stop calling it Arabic and start calling it Persian).
Scholars debate what exactly constitutes an empire. Generally, they may define an empire as a state that extends dominion over areas and populations distinct culturally and ethnically from the culture/ethnicity at the center of power.
This list is intended to show some of the States, Empires, or Dynasties that were ruled by a Muslim elite, or were in some way central to or a part of the Empire. Many Muslim empires had strong influences on the visual arts, architecture, music and food.
== History ==
In the centuries after the life of Muhammad, Muslim armies poured out into all surrounding areas...
But, in a way, there is something to be said for calling the entire former Arab empire "Arab" where they still have the originally Arab religion and script.
Not that I would call it that.
@Mitch I think it is more wrong that right. But it's not absurd.
I corrected someone who called Persia "Arab". I never call it that, and I said it was mostly wrong. But, when pressed, I added that it was not absurd and to some degree defensible.
@Mitch Good.
The historic discipline is all about continuity and discontinuity.
There might be some ethnic arabs in the far south. Or maybe I'm confusing that with Persians who are Sunni in that area. But that's the only real overlap. to use an ethnic name, Arab, to apply to an a people of another distinct non-overlapping ethnicity is an error. Both sides would agree that they are not the other.
@Cerberus I'm not sure. Algeria is mixed, with a large indigenous population of Berbers, but mostly ethnically arabic. I'd guess Morocco would be similar but not sure.
I've always wondered about Egypt. They're ethnically related to Arabs (unlike Turks/Persians) but I'm not sure if they 'are' Arabs.
If you feel e.g. French or Berber or Arab, then I think that is an important part of belonging to a people, although it is indeed absolutely not the only part.
You added "ethnically" to make sure it couldn't be misunderstood to mean "people who live in Arabia proper".
Or "people who live in the country called something with Arabia", like Saudi Arabia or the Arab Emirates.
You can be French in that you have the French nationality or live in France, but be ethnically Vietnamese, if you e.g. mostly speak Vietnamese and live by Vietnamese customs.
"Ethnically" is often used to distinguish between "country" and "people".
@Adi A preconceived belief is basically an opinion that's formed before checking out the facts. E.g. someone sees a course whose name has a term they associate with dread (maths, or history, or whatever). If, before taking a single class, they take the position that the course must be really tough, that position is a preconception.
@Lawrence The question specifically asks why skilling isn't a word and I want to say it's because you're applying -ing to a noun (noting that there are some exceptions as par Websters New International 2nd ed.)
@Tonepoet That particular construction is known colloquially as verbing nouns - i.e. turning nouns into verbs, and I suppose nominalising them again by adding -ing.