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02:38
@Mitch Agree.
03:21
Esto no provee una respuesta a la pregunta. En cuanto tengas suficiente reputación podrás comentar en cualquier publicación. Mejor es proveer respuestas que no requieran clarificación de la persona que hizo la pregunta. ¿Y cómo es que no te has dado cuenta de que ya te encuentras en un sitio dedicado al inglés y no al castellano? ¡No hay nadie que te entienda por aquí! :) — tchrist ♦ 1 min ago
We need more options on our low quality review choices. :)
> Porque no ponen más preguntas con how many por favor pongan más preguntas con how many
Note that that was on English Language & Usage, not on Spanish Language or Stack Overflow en español or whatnot.
 
3 hours later…
06:44
Does anybody else here have trouble pronouncing corroboration or is it just me?
Thank goodness I am not alone. I feel like my Rs are transforming into Ls or Ws.
After repeating it several times it gets a bit easier for me.
Especially fast :-)
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in body, bad keyword in title, blacklisted website in body: If you know exactly what the course red radley bag use your bag by radlelgl on english.SE
 
1 hour later…
08:00
@Cerberus I short, I had an idealistic approach to language learning. I saw perfection in knowing everything and then being able to fill anyone’s shoes (write a journalist’s report, make a politician’s speech, etc). I know that’s silly, but I subconsciously thought I must work toward that goal. I was in awe of people who had all the clichéd phrases at their fingertips and could crank out profuse jargon without a break, not because I saw any virtue in that, but only because I couldn’t do that.
Then I see Orwell’s list of banalities, meaningless words and dying metaphors, and I realize I already don’t know more than half of them. Should I really set out to learn them all only to be able to avoid them? That is not to say I don't need to learn idiomatic phrases and long words at all. I’m just questioning the perfectionistic attitude that says my knowledge of a language should uniformly encompass virtually everything.
08:23
So I say to myself: With a practical approach and a little patience, you can find your own way from under the soil and flourish to your full capacity. No need to constantly compare yourself to everybody else and nag about your insecurities.
This was just a reflection. I thought writing it down might help sort it out in my head. You don't have to respond to it. :)
Sounds good to me :)
08:37
@skillpatrol Says the night owl. ;) I wonder what time it is now where you are!
09:34
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 thanks for the info :-)
Corroboration, quite a tongue twister.
10:00
Why don't I have any problem pronouncing that?
Successive r's and l's can trip me up, as in Rural girls' glares are regularly alluring gorillas.
Or the regular girl-gorilla's glare.
 
2 hours later…
12:24
@aediaλ Congratulations!!!!!
12:35
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Pattern-matching website in answer, username similar to website in answer: How to degender "separate the men from the boys"? by Playingcards India on english.SE
12:53
Hi all, where can I post a question? Or can I ask you guys directly?
Which one is correct: "You need you and your partner's documents." vs "You need your and your partner's National Insurance numbers"? Thanks!
@Arman both are correct.
Depending on whether you think of it as {you and your partner} or {you} and {your partner}.
Something about the seafood collaboration dinner comes to mind.
You can avoid it by rephrasing: You need the documents/NINs for both you and your partner.
@AndrewLeach haha, yes. My wife and I's.
104
Q: "My wife and I's seafood collaboration dinner"

RegDwigнtI just stumbled upon a Reddit post titled: My wife and I's seafood collaboration dinner. How does it look? Sure enough, the top comment immediately points out that it should be "my wife's and my". However, a cross-post to the Grammar subreddit produced the following comment: It's fine a...

13:09
We have no good way to say these. The only path that risks neither confusion nor offence is a rewrite.
I want for French to have a verb chatter.
@tchrist tu me fais chiener
And no one questions 'seafood collaboration'? — Mitch 21 secs ago
13:33
@tchrist It does. Colloquial French does, anyway, inasmuch as it is used in informal speech.
I doubt the Académie is too fond of it, but it does exist and is even common.
Although they're not too sure about the spelling:
Not surprisingly, it is a word(s) that took off recently:
These two (chatter & tchatcher) are in at least one online dictionary:
14:23
@Færd That depends upon a few factors. One is how commonly you'll encounter the idiom. Even if you'll never use it, you need to make an effort to comprehend what other people are trying to communicate. The other thing is that if you plan to write any fiction, each of the characters should communicate in a way that matches their personalities, and not everybody has the eloquence of Patrick Henry.
It should be noted that Mr. Orwell is perhaps most famous for writing the sort of language he would personally resent and discourage.
Also it is practically impossible to use language without using some sort of dead metaphor. You would have to drop almost every instance of a preposition from your statements, as they liken the connection between certain words to positions and movements that are rarely considered with any conscious effort on the part of the speaker.
Hence Mr. Orwell's advice to break any of his rules, before writing anything barbaric, is probably quite sound advice.
2
 
2 hours later…
@TRiG that's so bazaar
@Tonepoet Although I totally agree with the essay's general message, I didn't mean to corroborate all the details. Particularly, I think such strong obsession with dismissing all hackneyed figures of speech is with good cause only if you've altogether mistaken them for aesthetic features that will give your language an authentic feel. They will not, and that is not where creativity happens. But that doesn't mean using any dead metaphor will necessarily blemish your whole composition.
There may be some other minor points in the essay with which I disagree; I'd have to read it again to be able to be accurate in criticizing them. But in all fairness to him, he does advice against using those rules blindly (as you quoted), and he does admit to breaking them himself in that essay.
And, well, non of these were the central point of my messages up there. :) I just wanted to declare that I gave up the intention to memorize the whole ODO, or something to that effect.
16:45
@Færd dead metaphors are not the problem he is railing against. It is cliches which tend to be metaphors.
most words are dead metaphors anyway, or metonymy or synecdoche or non-literal semantic drift from the original.
dead metaphor is a dead metaphor
Yeah. But he singles out those too.
nothing has literally died, but also there is not conception of something that has metaphorically died unless you point it out.
@Færd oh. I can't remember
> Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.
that's not talking about dead metaphor
he's basically saying 'don't be hackneyed'
I think he intends to disillusion people who think they are being creative and original but they are not.
16:50
one way to do that is by using a metaphor that somebody else has. like 'jackboot' for thuggish behavior.
@Tonepoet I have never heard that ever or even things in that direction.
> Orwell's admonition to avoid using the passive voice has also been criticised, Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage refers to three statistical studies of passive versus active sentences in various periodicals, stating: "the highest incidence of passive constructions was 13 percent. Orwell runs to a little over 20 percent in "Politics and the English Language". Clearly he found the construction useful in spite of his advice to avoid it as much as possible".
It's just like Strunk and White. It's just style advice.
But yes, a little hypocritical
Orwell didn't care for use of the passive by politicians as a way of deflecting blame. 'Mistakes were made' is classic.
I don't think Orwell is hiding blame with his passives.
Yeah. That criticism may not be too fair.
It's not like he says never ever use the passive.
S&W are criticized for that exact same thing, they say don't use the passive and yet use it a lot themselves.
supposedly
I've never read that. Have you?
16:58
@Mitch Not only do they use the passive, but the sentences they give as examples of the passive aren't even passive.
So I don't understand why people would continue to use a book that gives useless advice that it doesn't even understand.
Again it's a matter of style. S&W were giving writing advice to undergrads who are just starting to write a lot, and beginners at that stage often resort to certain habits, overuse of the passive supposedly being one of them.
@Færd a long time ago, and pieces of it when discussion like this come up.
@Mitch Even if that's their purpose, they are shit at achieving it. "Don't use the passive: for example, don't write these sentences" (followed by non passive sentences).
It's terrible advice, given terribly.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 OK.
Good advice would be "don't overuse the passive"
I can't remember.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 'Don't give commands'
17:00
> The passive is not to be overused.
haha
I'll pass.
Next
Also, if the problem is hiding agency, then they should just say that. "Don't hide agency"
17:01
hm...
but that's fancy talk
So is "don't use the passive"
i think agency is fancier than the passive
you would
apparently the passive voice is so fancy even S&W don't know how it works
"Don't hide agency" also hides agency by totally abstracting the notion of doer and done to.
not that passive doesn't either but...
17:02
I don't know about S&W, but "Don't overuse the passive, because ..." is more particular and practical.
nah, it's an imperative.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 haha. it's got doilies.
@Færd But you can't just say that. You need to explain A) what it is, B) when to avoid it, and probably C) when you should use it
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 I know other famous writers who didn't get that right too.
lots.
writers are generally not very good linguists
17:04
I mean the very concept of passive.
They write stuff, people read it, they like it, and then the writers assume they must know everything about the language, so they put their feelings down as a grammar/style book
Yeah. Happens to non-writers too. Singers, actors, etc.
Trump.
category error: segfault
Oh, he is a writer.
17:06
oh I think you're very mistaken
Trump? He can't even read, let alone write
I think he can read
He's published a book, I think?
It was ghost written
the writer interviewed him
there was a documentary about it
and owns a university.
17:07
about how hard it was to interview him for more than fifteen minutes, before he got distracted.
@skullpetrol haha
and he's a surgeon because he sold meat.
Such a learned figure.
It took him three tries to spell "hereby" in a tweet
okay. deep breath. disengage. Not going to talk about Trump.
Good idea.
well, making fun of him for being intellectually challenged is like shooting fish in a barel
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Fluffy bunnies
unicorns that fart rainbows
17:09
@Mitch I've never understood that saying. Why would people shoot fish anywhere?
let alone a barrel.
Aug 15 '16 at 4:40, by Færd
Here's an internationally famous writer for you, not knowing the difference between the passive and the progressive: https://youtu.be/R66eQLLOins?t=364
isn't shooting anything in a barrel easy?
The barrel doesn't move
Depends on the barrel.
And the shooting device.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 I figure you're lazy and don't want to try to catch them with your hands because they're fast? shooting them slows them down
That^ is the point of the saying.
17:11
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 I don't know. Shooting apples in a barrel seems overdoing it.
@Færd aw. I like John Green and when he makes mistakes it makes me sad.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Oh yeah? Try shooting an olive in a barrel. And not just any one of them, that small one with the bruise.
@terdon Just put the gun right up to it
@terdon probably deserves being shot
The idiom isn't "Shooting fish in a barrel half a mile away with a 40mph cross-wind"
the barrel is presumably right there
just walk up to it and shoot it
17:12
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Whenever he talks about physics (quantum mechanics, relativity, etc) in his books I just get furious. Dude! Why do you have to talk about something you don't know?!
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 It's not?
@Færd heh. I've never read his books. I just watch him on youtube.
Well, that too. Watch his Big Bang video.
will it make me sad?
That's the only one I watched. Maybe his other physics videos too.
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Yeah, I think.
17:14
This is easier than shooting fish in a barrel. @Mr.ShinyandNew安宇
I don't know. Depends on the viewer's knowledge too.
Aug 15 '16 at 4:40, by Færd
I cannot even finish watching this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tq6be-CZJ3w&feature=youtu.be&t=364 Dude! talking about a complex thing in a simple yet accurate way is not necessarily simple enough for a layman like yourself to do!
@Færd hm. usually his more scientific brother, or someone else, does the hard-sciency videos.
I don't know his brother that well. He talks about bio and psycho and stuff, I guess. Not physics.
I'm watching his American History videos though. So far so good. I haven't developed a critical mind in history though.
I think for "big history" that explanation of the big bang is probably close enough
there's someone else doing "crash course physics" btw
Ah. Good.
17:20
What I like about his crash course videos is that he frequently mentions the implications of the facts he's talking about.
how certain historical events affected people, and not just "great men"
or terrible men
it's always some dude
@Færd haha 'the thing that was banging'
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 I've been thinking about the 'for want of nail problem lately'.
life is multicausal. it is rare that... oops I gotta hangnail
> It was literally the moment when both time and space were created. The thing that was banging was the universe itself. It was expanding from an unimaginably tiny point to an unimaginably large universe, unimaginably quickly.
Well, that's not right. Physics cannot talk about the moment Big Bang happened. And the idea of the tiny point is incorrect and inaccurate.
And I'm off to dinner.
17:45
@Færd Tsk, what a shame. One of these days I'll convince one of you lot of folk to read through A.D.E.L. if not for the quality of writing. Noah Webster's definitions often take the form of full paragraphs, which is quite a rarity among the dictionaries of today. His definition of magic and science would give whole new meaning to Arthur C. Clarke's third law, if they were not so old.
^only
 
1 hour later…
19:06
@Færd It's not accurate from a physics perspective. But it's close enough for a "history" video. IMHO.
Nov 9 '15 at 16:25, by Mitch
close enough for jazz
 
2 hours later…
20:57
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 If you want to change the names and redefine them too (read: have your cake and eat it too), then sure.
 
2 hours later…
22:56
Something like "leave me alone so that I can eat my darn banana in peace before you have me do this aimless task" >_>...

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