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02:47
0
Q: Is there a name for a "product" but that you don't buy?

RayOfHopeIn doing non-profit work, I want to describe something that can be arbitrarily selected and provides practical utility beyond simply "object" and is not bought and sold, rather granted. But, it functions in physical terms only through natural physical dynamics (not renewable energy) like a filter...

 
2 hours later…
04:45
-1
Q: What do you call it when an ethnic slur has lost its offensive sense?

cocoOr when the supposed target of the slur claim it as an unoffensive word and treat like something of a term of endearment among themselves.

 
1 hour later…
05:53
0
Q: What is the English culinary term for the meat in a dish?

AsiaFor example, the ground meat in Bolognese that is absent in Puttanesca. Or when you decided to make salad "sinful" you added pork rinds to it.

 
3 hours later…
08:46
Why the downvote?
-1
Q: In reference to Vs with reference to

MYGzWhat is the difference between "in reference to" vs "with reference to". For eg. If had a discussion with someone and I want to quote it in a mail, which one is more appropriate from the below 2 sentences? "In reference to your discussion with Mr. X, ...." VS "With reference to your discussion ...

 
2 hours later…
11:11
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Blacklisted website in answer: Meaning of "quick reply" by Ramon on english.SE
 
2 hours later…
12:50
0
Q: The name of the method in translation that insists on accordance to the source language?

SasanI cannot find the right word for this approach in translation theory. I was told that some translation theorists, for example Antoin Berman, say that a translator should have full accordance to the the source language, that is, the language they are translating from. What is that view called?

13:17
There's a bird somewhere nearby which I can't locate whose call is like a wonky metronome. It sounds a loud ticking noise at somewhat regular intervals. As soon as you get the beat, 4 or 5 ticks, there's the slightest of hesitations, then back again then missing a beat altogether.
tick...tick...tick...tick....tick...tick..tick...tick....tick.. .. ..tick...tick...tick.tick.
Gah... keep the effing beat you stupid bird
sounds like a metrognome with a limp
13:35
@tchrist: I encountered this expression: ¡Ahora sí te habrán servido los guantes! Is it a common idiom equivalent to the English idiom "Now you've thrown down the gauntlet" (or perhaps "Now the gloves come off")?
@Mitch A tickbird is quite something else:
The oxpeckers are two species of bird which make up the family Buphagidae. The oxpeckers were formerly usually treated as a subfamily, Buphaginae, within the starling family, Sturnidae, but molecular phylogenetic studies have consistently shown that they form a separate lineage that is basal to the sister clades containing the Sturnidae and the Mimidae (mockingbirds, thrashers, and allies). Oxpeckers are endemic to the savanna of Sub-Saharan Africa. Both the English and scientific names arise from their habit of perching on large mammals (both wild and domesticated) such as cattle, zebras, impalas...
@Robusto I don't know how "common" it necessarily is, but its meaning is clear. Although that one looks like they'll've thrown down the gloves at you, rather than you at them.
Ah. I guess the agency wasn't clear to me.
@Robusto That bird pecks ticks. The bird I hear ticks off.
Ticks is ticks.
1
Q: Word to describe a company that pretends to do the right thing?

CVandergriftWhat word(s) would you use to describe a business or company that pretends to do the legal/right thing regarding employees, but in reality the company does not care. This issue pertains to legalities in the workplace, and the company in question is barely doing what is "legal" about this problem...

13:41
Birds that pluck ticks tick off birds that tick clocks
Birds that tick tocks tick clocks.
Or vice-versa.
Oxpecker has a certain charm, a certain je ne sais quoi.
Or a vague specificity
Would make a good insult: "You oxpecker!"
How dare you, you mouse pecker!
but back to ks
Oxpecker chicks pick ticks on ox's backs
But do the tick chicks pick thick ticks? Maybe the tick chicks nix thick ticks chicks' pix picks.
13:47
Ticks oxpeckers pick suck sacks of ox crap
Whoa, you're morphing vowel sounds now. Totally not allowed, especially aloud.
@Robusto Who would know aught of art, must learn, act, then take his ease.
A round the world tour of the mouth. Unfortunately not by lexical sets
"Skank's boxes of slick snacks basks in casks of absinthe?", asks Mstislav Krushchev.
and fifths
-1
Q: A better word than "Response"

Vivek Rao NipaniI am writing a logline for a story which deals with the Global immigration crisis and the Catholic Churchs' response to it. I feel like the word, 'response' here would have a negative connotation and when the story talks about the help the church is doing towards the stranded-helpless migrants. ...

 
1 hour later…
15:02
Just had to pop back in and give @Mitch kudos for this answer:
3
A: Why is the latin classification of the Armadillo translate into English as "Gorilla"?

MitchThough your ostensible question is a bit rarefied, there is a lot to follow on. 'Armadillo' is borrowed into English from Spanish. The Spanish word is literally 'little armored one' The Latin word 'Dasypus' was given to the armadillo in the 1800's by biologists following the Linnaean binomial c...

So what amusement park are you talking about? I thought you lived in Newton or Brookline or something like that.
Also, I thought all those amusement parks were up in New Hampshire or toward the Cape. Bunch of creaky, antiquated rides you only put your kids on because they're screaming to do it, but as a parent you shudder with horror. I remember taking the kids to Edaville and thinking how horribly shabby everything looked. Well, that's New England for you.
15:53
0
Q: Single beautiful word for "feeling alive"?

ChrzhugoLooking for one word for the actual feeling of feeling alive... if that makes sense. "Alive" itself is not descriptive enough as it could just mean to "exist". Need something more beautiful and meaningful.

 
2 hours later…
17:41
2
Q: Any word for the sound of ripple?

James WolpertHere is what, I am in dire need of a single word, that denotes a meaning of the sound pertaining to ripple. Explicitly asking, is there any word for the sound produced when a drop of water hits on the surface of large body of water?

18:34
@Mitch Yes, the world may not be ready for kindergarten Spanish, but I'm going to give it my best shot.
19:27
1
Q: Adverb form of "outlier"

nanogruI'm looking for an adverb form or synonym of the word "outlier." An example of usage: This datapoint is _____ positive. I've thought of disproportionately, but that word carries additional connotations that may not apply to all use cases. Thanks for any input you may have.

0
Q: Word for slowly blowing air through an open mouth

Evangelos MylonasIs there a word for slowing exhaling through an open mouth like when it's cold and you're trying to warm up your hands? As in; He [word] into his hands but failed to warm them up.

20:18
Hi
do we say :
I have spoken with Mrs X about tomorrow's Lecture, she told me that Mr Y will replace her, Then, we will have only him for tomorrow.
 
2 hours later…
22:03
Is Usage of present perfect legitime in this case?
22:39
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Few unique characters in answer, repeating characters in answer: I thought blah blah blah, and I was right. Is the comma correct? by zoth on english.SE
@Educ in which case? Which verb in those two sentences do you want present perfect? Can you write it with present perfect?
22:55
@Robusto google for the sentence
@Robusto there have been small traveling summer carnivals that set up in the parks around here.
@tchrist did someone have a tantrum and leave in a huff? Or was it less voluntary?
23:32
@Mitch whut whut now?
23:52
@tchrist elasticcgirl wrote a meta question about an old subjunctive qn "if I were vs if I was" and strongly requested that a 93 pt answer be deleted.

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