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00:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

00:02
Congratulations!
Thirty euro, in coins of five cents?
The ruckus didn't alert you?
 
2 hours later…
02:27
Word fatigue is a thing. I can only learn so many words a day. And if I push too hard, my head may be out of order for a couple days.
Switching the language could be refreshing and increase the capacity, but not always.
I may have a nervous condition.
03:00
Congrats E&E!
I wish for a united Africa, united Middle East, united Europe, ... united World. May that dream come true in my lifetime.
(it most probably won't)
03:17
@Færd Are you actively learning new words?
@Færd Yes, things have been going well in Aethiopia!
And Eritrea was willing!
It's still a horrible police state with decades of forced labour for young people, but it's progress.
@Færd Do they really have to be united?
Can't they remain but coöperate closely?
@Cerberus Yeah. I savor every good news I can get from anywhere.
@Cerberus I dunno. Not at war and not exploiting each other unfairly, at least.
Right!
Not harboring deep grudges based on random differences.
@Cerberus Yeah, from several languages now.
Well, I would say Europe, North America, Australia, and most of South America are fairly peaceful on their own continents, and there isn't that much exploitation of other countries, again within their own continents.
@Færd Cool, which?
@Færd That will take some more time...
@Cerberus The ones I constantly talk about here! English, German, French, Esperanto, Arabic, and of course Farsi.
It's hard to keep count now.
03:24
So many!
Can you think of any new words you learned in English?
The problem is that my brain breaks down after a period of hard work.
This being the English room.
@Færd What source and what method do you use to learn those new words?
Well, in English I'm mostly laboring to realize and remember the nuances between synonymous words, among other things.
Any examples?
Which counts as learning words still.
Like beg, implore, plead, etc.
03:26
Ah, OK.
I had this word list I started like 15 years ago.
Basically any list sequence of words in your thesaurus goes.
@Cerberus How does it work?
@Cerberus I try to keep it diverse: dictionaries, videos, podcasts, books, etc.
> cudgel knuppel

obtuse dom, stomp

pewter piauter [legering lood-tin]

torpor loomheid
-languor
-lassitude
-listlessness

alack-a-day
(lackadaisical) sentimenteel

languish kwijnen
-pine (pijnboom)

sundry allerlei

apprehend vrezen; vatten

tenet grondstelling

rant hoogdravend uitvaren

rail heftig uitvaren
-inveigh
-fulminate (donderen, exploderen)

peal donderen, klinken

harangue donderpreek

bluster snoeverij; geraas, gedonder; uitvaren

lambast iemand op zijn donder geven

lambent glinsterend
It begins thus.
There are about 1500 or 2000 words in it.
All taken from texts I was reading at the time.
But I last edited it in 2011, I see now.
Interesting!
They are mostly alien to me.
How much of it do you think you've kept alive in your head?
Well, I'd have to look though the list...but I think I have a general idea of the large majority of them.
As to how many I would use actively, I don't know.
And many of them have several different subtly different uses that I'm probably not super familiar with.
The goal was to be able to understand them in context, which I think I am mostly capable of now.
Yeah. You need constant revision to keep them fresh.
@Cerberus Yes, that's more readily achievable.
03:34
Just through regular reading; I don't think I spent much time actually memorizing the list. But writing down those words and looking them up, thinking about them, helped, so they stuck more easily upon repeated 'occurrence' later in my reading.
>
seasonable

sobriety

dionysiac

betimes

haemorrhage

outlay

inset

apparent

clamp down

take a dim view

thrall

prostrate

reprisal

crenelate

pole

rickety

alarums

orta

excruciate

preamble

whirl

deplore

round-up

malleability

scuppers
This is the bottom.
That word pole, for example, I must have added because it was used in a weird way, as the ordinary us of the word is well known to me.
Orta, I have no idea what that means.
Hmm. Nice.
Inset, maybe I could guess.
The rest I can come up with meanings for, but they may be used in ways I am not familiar with. Most are not words I would ever actively use.
there are common basic rules for how our minds learn and remember things, and each has its peculiarities too.
For example, maybe I read heir apparent and wondered what apparent meant in that context. I don't remember.
@Færd No doubt!
What works best for you?
By intense focusing on such lists, I'd say your mind learns how to pigeonhole new input and learn them.
So you may not continue the same practice, but the effect remains with you.
@Cerberus I need context, as I think all of us do.
03:39
Quite possibly!
@Færd Yes, absolutely.
I took all of those words from a context.
And I need several reviews dispersed over a period of maybe 10 days at least.
What if you encounter the same word elsewhere, in a text you happen to be reading, or after the ten days but several more times?
And I need fun and diversity. I need to switch from film to text to audiobooks to whatnot.
@Cerberus Do you mean that's a problem? I don't understand.
And I need to take notes. Writing things down with the plain old pen and paper is really helpful.
@Cerberus Something set in?
@Cerberus Yeah, even the simplest words have odd or obsolete uses.
@Færd So reading a novel alone doesn't help you?
@Færd Oh, I meant, does it still help when it goes like that?
@Færd I remember!
@Cerberus I can't sit down and do the same thing for too long. Like, I'm mentally unable to. Unless I'm pressed to do so by a deadline or something. It's strange.
03:46
@Færd Yeah, like maybe a jewel set in a silver ring, or I don't know.
@Færd Not even when the novel is super exciting and you can't wait to read what happens next?
@Cerberus Sure. But I find too much repetition to have a numbing effect. You need to revise what you learn when it requires some effort to dig and brush it up.
@Cerberus Maybe, but in that case I won't focus on individual words, but on the storyline.
You have to force yourself to stop and jot down words you're unsure about.
It could get really tiring after a while. I dread the nervous fatigue.
Hmm.
The worst that might happen to me is that I forgot to write down any words when I'm really absorbed.
But at least then I will still learn to some degree.
Good for you!
03:53
As I am sure you would!
Yes. I meant your worst-case scenario is not too bad.
Right.
04:35
0
Q: Is there a word for "unable to communicate with"?

Jakob LawrenceAs in if you learn a language, then you're now able to speak with someone that you otherwise wouldn't be able to communicate with. I'm writing a paper and that word as an adjective would be very useful. Using that whole phrase sounds clunky in an already lengthy sentence. Thanks!

 
5 hours later…
09:16
@Cerberus which part of "notes" do you not understand that you have to ask if they were coins? :-D
And no, the notes made no ruckus.
Also I don't sit anywhere next to my washing machine. It's not even on the same floor. So yeah you could use it as a cement mixer, I wouldn't notice.
in Language Overflow, yesterday, by snailboat
The 2018 ELL moderator election has begun! https://ell.meta.stackexchange.com/q/4737/230
PSA
:-)
09:36
0
Q: what do we call something we do just to show off we are doing it?

محسن رحمانیwhat do we call something we do just to show off we are doing it? when there is no real intention in doing it, and it has no meaning to us. for example, everyone is writing about women rights, so our organization tries not to fall behind and prepares a manifest. they do not really mean what they...

[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Few unique characters in body, no whitespace in body, repeating characters in body, repeating characters in title, title has only one unique char: hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh by Adam on english.SE
10:17
Where is everyone, anyway?
Oh, never mind, found y'all.
Toutlemonde est une commune française située dans le département de Maine-et-Loire, en région Pays de la Loire. La commune est créée en 1864. Ses habitants sont appelés les Toutlemondais. == Géographie == Commune angevine des Mauges, Toutlemonde se situe à la périphérie de Cholet, sur les routes D 158, Cholet, D 148, Nuaillé / Yzernay, et D 158, Chanteloup-les-Bois. Elle est juxtaposée aux communes de Cholet, de Mazières-en-Mauges, de Maulévrier, de Vezins, de Chanteloup-les-Bois et de Nuaillé. == Toponymie == == Histoire == === Ancien Régime === Bien que mentionné dans certains doc...
When did you move to France. And why.
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Link at end of answer, potentially bad keyword in answer: Hello Friend Please Suggest Me the Best Assignment Site? by Sellina John on english.SE
10:32
@RegDwigнt I moved there when I realised they would win the world cup and I couldn't speak french, so I wouldn't understand what they were talking about, but I'd know.
@CupFever which is more important: the world cup or the ELL mod elections?
11:11
You misspelled "which is least important".
11:27
You misspelt "that's the same thing backwards"
12:13
0
Q: How to rephrase "will become easier"

Alex GyoshevIs there a word that can shorten "will become easier"? For example in this context: Moving boulders will become easier as better wheelcarts become available.

13:00
@MattE.Эллен that is a patent lie. Never once in my life have I misspelled ƃuıɥʇ ǝɯɐs ǝɥʇ s,ʇɐɥʇ.
13:16
Some funny questions on the main site again today.
13:30
what's your favourite right now?
The one that goes along the lines of 'I looked up cat in a dictionary, and it said that it means "cat", but I don't like how that implies "dog". Is there a better word for cat that does not imply "dog"?'
And im liek duuuuuuuuude
@RegDwigнt ??? link? I mean there are some dumb questions about cats but none involving dogs.
Like 'Why a cat?'
That's a dumb question.
I am obviously paraphrasing precisely so as not to single someone out.
Oh no. You have to name names
It's Donald Trump.
13:38
otherwise this will devolve into aggressively passive aggressive passivity
And he's posting idiot questions on ELU.
But I didn't want to say.
@RegDwigнt I wish you had listened to yourself and not me
I always listen to myself. That's my job.
Nobody has ever composed any music by listening to you.
Well except maybe Beethoven.
Hey! I thought I killed that fly yesterday. And now there are two. Darn.
It's called procreating.
It has been ordained in the Bible.
13:41
Not that fly stuff. Flies are not mentioned in the Bible.
The only thing that helps against it is flooding the world entire.
But they are in the Odyssey
You should get on it if you want to be done by tea time.
So that explains a lot that no one cares about
Most things that are explained, nobody cares about.
13:42
@RegDwigнt Screw tea time. I'm having some right now.
Flood the world with tea, then. Cut the middleman.
@RegDwigнt Thanks. A lot.
I looked up the definition of "explain" in a dictionary and it said "to make manifest or intelligible; to clear of obscurity; to illustrate the meaning of". But I don't like how that implies "shit no one cares about". Is there a better word for "explain" that does not imply "shit that no one cares about"?
I still don't see no dog question
Seriously though. They explain "explain" by using fucking manifest, intelligible, and obscurity. That's like the opposite of explaining it.
13:47
You should see how they explain 'manifest'
it's a mess
I don't like how "manifest" implies a mess. Is there a less-Christian word for "manifest"?
Anyway, dictionaries are not your mom.
You expect a dictionary to pull up your pants?
Make you hot chocolate?
I dunno what you're on about, mate, your mom never pulls my pants up.
haha. that's funny because you don't know my mom and what she's never done.
mmm... tea
Ohh... did you mean 'luck' when you said 'dog'?
That makes no sense. If I really didn't know your mom, then I could name an unlimited amount of things she's never done. Ergo, concordantly, and also thus, I must know your mom very well.
@Mitch hey I'm talking about your mom, don't interrupt.
We're not done here.
That's what she said.
13:53
Said the bishop to the vicar
Fun fact: in German "vicar" is pronounced the same as "ficker", which means "fucker".
Hilarious those Germans
Which is probably why they opted to have bishops instead.
Though really I personally prefer straight shops.
Ooh... I have a joke about Germany.
Something something Hitler Hitler.
13:54
Why do Germans have no sense of humor?
It was taken away as part of war reparations.
Sоmething something Hitler Hitler.
ha ha ha hah aha ha
It was told to me by a German.
Fuck this chat. I spent the last ten seconds frantically trying to post "Something something Hitler Hitler" but it wouldn't let me because I'd already posted that.
Now that I think about it, it's not funny
goddamit
There I found a cheat.
13:56
@RegDwigнt It does that for your own good. Unlike your mom.
Yeah except it doesn't work. Ask @tchrist. It just never works. The moment you start matching "fuck", people just write "fuсk" instead, and you're back to square one.
Which is precisely what I went and done above now, mind.
@Mitch there are lots of flies in the bible: Plague of flies
14:16
@MattE.Эллен What?
@Mitch you said they weren't mentioned
But thanks for reminding me. That goddam fly just popped up and I have to go kill it again.
@MattE.Эллен You would trust a fly over me?
@MattE.Эллен I hate those ones that drill into your skin to lay ova there that turn into larvae that wriggle and jiggle and tickle inside you. Nastest of all plagues.
OK. I get that.
@tchrist those are the worst.
14:18
@tchrist Not the plague of flying face-eating badgers?
@Mitch flies are too dumb to lie
I'd really hate that plague more
@Mitch only when rabid
@MattE.Эллен I graciously accept your compliment
I saw one repeatedly fly into the same spot on the window, then land on the window, where it had been hitting its head, then after a brief rest, resume trying to break the window.
14:19
@tchrist nice touch. all that slobber would really make things that much more intolerable.
@MattE.Эллен That's called fly-tenacity
or flyacity as Reg's mom used to say
She's funny like that
@tchrist This ain't no seder. Which plague is worse?
Lice is a different plague than flies? I'd call that double dipping.
lice can't fly! why kind of hellscape dystopia are you from?????
0
Q: is "predatory capitalism" a correct word for turbo capitalism?

Fyodor GlebovJean Ziegler invented the German word Raubtierkapitalismus for huge companies without ethics and morality. For example Amazon, Google and Facebook. What are similar words in English?

14:50
@Mitch Lice are a different plague. Lies are, too.
And rooks.
15:06
I think God was pretty realistic when he came up with these plagues. All very plausible but very uncomfortable.
Except for fire and hail both at the same time. That's just not realistic
And darkness? kinda lame. Inconvenient yes, but still lame.
0
Q: A secular version of fate/destiny?

user3306356The Wikipedia page for destiny states: Destiny, sometimes referred to as fate (from Latin fatum – destiny), is a predetermined course of events. It may be conceived as a predetermined future, whether in general or of an individual. Both destiny and fate are usually used in a more religious ...

Maybe he was running out of ideas, just phoning it in. "Oh yeah, and public trans will go on strike, but just for the morning commute"
@Mitch was the darkness before or after the fire? because if after, I mean, that's not even a plague
15:35
@Mitch So you're saying that this was an Act of God a few days ago here when South Park was saved from the raging wildfire by an attack of a killer tornado sent to save Kenny? weather.com/news/weather/video/…
@MattE.Эллен Or if the fire was during the darkness, that seems just like a good idea.
@tchrist Sure, whatever. I may be saying that, but I'm not saying I'm saying that.
16:16
I'm looking for adjective nouns that could be used with or without the addition of "(e)d" that makes them look like a participle.
The best example I've come up with is middle-age(d):
> 1. a middle-aged man
2. a middle-age man
3. during my middle-age years
(Although 2 rings abnormal, so not a good example)
Can you think of other, better examples?
Argh.
People who don't get it.
It's like stubbing your toe.
You do everything to avoid it (having people understand) but door swung just a tiny bit in one direction and you aren't wearing shoes and walking to fast and AUGH my little pinkie toe! ARGH!
It's like they insist on not understanding.
OW.
I tried it again and I stubbed my toe again.
@Færd glass. as in "I have a glass vase"
That metaphor is a bit lame.
milk bottle
but because I stubbed my toe again, SO AM I!
16:29
giraffe enclosure
@Mitch noooooooooooooooooooooooooo!
table cloth
table mat
table leg
chaise longue
tea cakes
or is it tea and cake?
mmmm tea cakes
tea cakes with tea?
both
what's in a tea cake?
16:31
I think it's like a hot-cross bun without the cross
are they like skowenes
whoa dude, that's pretty vampire stuff. are there really crosses on those buns? I've only ever heard the song
um...
yeah the song
there's a hotcrossbun song?
16:33
@Mitch Well, what is it? one a penny or two a penny?
the first one was awful. like they had heard of this human thing called 'music' and thought they'd try it. like, throw in these things called notes and see what happens.
@MattE.Эллен Thanks. But glassed vase is not really possible.
@MattE.Эллен the bigger ones are 2 a penny. Wait... that can't be right
@Færd ah, I didn't understand what you want
16:35
I should've said and in place of or.
Worst occasion to confuse the two. Sorry.
no worries! that's English for you
@Færd or sometimes does mean and. No kidding. the OED has it as one of its entries
but you really don't say 'middle-age man'. that sounds weird.
Yeah or could be confusing sometimes.
so you want words that could be 'X-ed Noun', but also could be 'X Noun'?
@Mitch so any other examples that really work?
@Mitch yup
16:38
thinking
> lattice(d) chair
?
It doesn't sound crazy, but I'm just trying to think of some verbs first, then -ed them, then take off the -ed and see if that works.
@Færd maybe not so great, but that's in the right direction. the noun can be verbed
or the other way
Hmm.
The blackened fish: the black fish... not really
You're cheating there.
16:40
The patient had yellowy eyes/yellow eyes
@Færd I'm trying to make progress
Cheating is regress.
Okay, back on laptop.
@RegDwigнt Oh, huh. Mislooked.
impugn abjure suborn
Excuse me, which one is correct? I have dog or I have cat? Thank you!
@Robusto Did you see the haboob?
16:50
What kind of boob is a haboob?
Was that anywhere near you all?
@Robusto Depends on the species one belongs to.
Dinna see no boobs, ha or otherwise.
@Mitch Shopped /nod
16:52
@Mitch Thanks Mitch for the try. I'm thinking that may not be possible.
@Robusto It was probably a state or two away, but on the offhand chance I asked
I would not live in a red state. Dust storms are not the worst thing they have. How about their shit storms?
Isn't the reason because that's the word in Arabic for those billowly low storm cloud thingies?
And 'thingy' isn't specific enough?
What, they look like boobs?
I prefer firmer boobs, for the record.
noted in the register
16:57
What's in a haboob? Poop and Valley Fever spores See, I was right. A veritable shit storm.
ew
This is why I don't ride in high winds (among other reasons). Whenever the desert becomes windborne, that grit that gets in your teeth is not all that healthy. Fortunately you can ride up to ~25 mph wind speed before that happens.
I'm waiting for an ELU question "Why does 'When the shit hits the fan' mean bad things are happening?"
How about "When the fit hits the shan"?
That doesn't make as much sense
@Robusto Protip: go with the wind
Also, only ride downhill
Also, only eat, never poop.
17:01
@Mitch Then why did David Mamet write that line of dialogue for William H. Macy to say in Wag the Dog?
@Robusto As people are constantly telling me not to say, because he's retarded
I just listened to that and I didn't hear poop or dogs wagging or nothing
@Robusto Or that other guy. Your choice
Or the whole movie
Jul 4 at 20:14, by Robusto
Fuck it, Dude, let's go bowling.
Oh. Bowling is for retards
That's pretty obvious
One moment...
17:04
Dude ...
Got it. Flies have a lot of protein in them
also cholesterol
but if you're eating flies, cholesterol is probably not high on the concern list
Lotsa fiber too
Helps with regularity
whatever that means
Jul 4 at 20:47, by Robusto
There are too many hungry minds to feed.
Makes you more likely to get to appointments on time?
probably
 
2 hours later…
19:07
I think it'd be better for everyone if Croatia won
19:35
Wut? You don't wanna see France crush England in the final? Tsk, tsk.
Is it France v England in the final??? Fuck me, what has this world come to.
@Robusto oh hey, Roy Rogers. I wrote a song about him once. It kinda sucked. But hey, I needed some filler for an album that was otherwise spectacular.
"... sniffin' for tidbits like you on the ground ..."
@Robusto Yeah. If you put a friggin Goodbye Yellow Brick Road on an album and it's not even in the top 3 songs on it, that's saying something.
These were the days, my friend. We thought they'd never end.
We'd sing and laugh forever and a day.
That's the stupidest text McCartney has ever written.
The Russian original is so much mo bettah.
Actually wait, he didn't write the text. He only produced the song.
And it lost to his own Hey Jude.
LOLOL.
19:52
@Cerberus It's the large artery that comes of of your heart. You only have one of them so it's a orta.
It's an orta, pineapple.
Doctors spend their time studying keeping you alive, so give them some slack with the vocabulary
and the grammtic
@RegDwigнt if I'm an anana, then you're an anan ass.
I just saw the map in france for where who says /a na na/ vs /a na nas/
What were you doing in France.
19:54
and only a few dumb southerners say /a na nas/
so ashamed
@RegDwigнt I'm not going to answer that.
BUt I did see the answer on line
maybe the ma was in France. maybe not. no judgement
@Mitch Do not panic, pineapple can be useful in the treatment of sports injuries.
@Gigili smash the (about to be) victim's head with it, all pain gone.
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