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12:45 AM
@William How about King Lear? His tragic flaws certainly led to his daughter's (Cordelia's) death (among other things).
 
Looking it up now thank you
 
 
2 hours later…
2:39 AM
> beshit v. (also beshite) [Old English bescítan] = becack vb. (Obsolete in polite use, but common in Middle English and early modern English literature).
a1000 in B. A. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. 507 Caccabatum, besciten.
a1300 K. Alis. 5485 Bishiten and bydagged foule.
1681 J. Oldham Satyrs upon Jesuits 84 Flies which would the Deity beshite.
1716 Pope Further Acct. E. Curll 15 I have been frighted, pump'd, kick'd..and beshitten.
O how much more euphonious is becacked than beshitten!
I guess the poster’s bescumber synonym is less obvious than either of those.
 
0
Q: A word to describe things that reduce control

SimonGI'm writing about the concept of "that which may prevent the intended or desired result". I refer to it frequently and it's very inconvenient to define it every time so I need to find a phrase or (preferably) single word to use as a label for it. I've considered terms like "obstacle" or "challen...

0
Q: Informal and maybe even childish word for "warranted"?

Jonathan LeeIn the context, What warranted such a punishment? what is another word for warranted that is particularly informal or juvenile, and stresses that characteristic?

 
Unpleasantness abounds in that comment chain.
 
on't
 
3:43 AM
0
Q: Is there a word for theoretically informed action?

user3293056Is there a word for theoretically informed action? Apologies if obvious, not from google. I want to say "theoretically informed action is action" (I know it sounds like a trivial assertion).

 
3:55 AM
The English singular noun "door" translates into Polish as "drzwi", which is a plural noun with no singular form (or whose singular form is not used).
To me, as an English speaker, a door is clearly a single object that does not break down into components in any obvious way.
Does English have any nouns which use a plural form to refer to a single object, where an English speaker would not think of it as having multiple parts that are being referred to?
Some non-examples are scissors, pants, and sunglasses. It seems clear to me what a scissor, a pant, and a sunglass would be.
(Indeed, I recently used the phrase "a sunglass" to mean "a lens from a pair of sunglasses".)
More non-examples are bellows and gallows; those are both singular forms.
The best example I've found so far is bowels.
As far as I know, a person's bowels are just one thing, and it's not clear at all what a bowel would be.
But, on the other hand, Wiktionary seems to suggest that her bowels means her small intestine and her large intestine, and so a bowel of hers would mean either just the small one or just the large one.
There are things such as the measles and the blues, but those aren't actually objects.
Aha, I think I've finally found a perfect example. Remains, meaning corpse.
A person's remains are never referred to as a remain or a remains, and they're a singular physical object, and there is no clear possibility for what a remain could be.
I'm guessing that the reason English doesn't seem to have many of these words is that whenever it does have one, people will want to refer to it in the singular, and so they will use the word as a singular noun.
"Remains" may have resisted this because whenever you want to refer to one of those in the singular, you can call it "a corpse" rather than "a remains".
 
 
3 hours later…
7:51 AM
Hi guys
I have a question
A: "Hey Jack. How were your classes this semester?"
B: "They were not too bad. I really liked my poli-sci class."
A: "Would you consider it your favorite class?"
B: "I don't know if I would call it my favorite, but it ranks up there."
What is the mean of it "ranks up there"
the last phrase
 
8:34 AM
@HamreenAhmad when ranking the classes in terms of how much B likes each one, ploi-sci is near the top, i.e. up there
 
9:29 AM
0
Q: What is the English word an overly skinny person?

IvanIn Russian there is a jargon word "дрищ" (~ dreeshch) that usually (depending on the context) means either diarrhea or an extremely lean, usually undermuscled person, something like the one on the picture below (not necessarily undermuscled this severely). Is there an analogous word in English?

 
10:10 AM
thanks @MattE.Эллен
 
10:59 AM
0
Q: A word or phrase for someone who is sure of himself

akbar hussainIs there a word or phrase for someone who is sure of himself, someone who acts like everything they say is a fact even when it's not.

 
11:30 AM
0
Q: Word meaning vulnerable to the elements

Arash HowaidaI would like to see what is the closest word I can get that means vulnerable to the elements. One word is preferred, as opposed to a phrase. Here is a basic example: Steel is ____________, but titanium is not ____________. Ideally the word is not only relevant to corrosion like in the above...

 
 
2 hours later…
1:31 PM
0
Q: Word that that merges the categories of "repair" and "manipulation"

Arash HowaidaI am tasked with choosing a word that contains both the domains of repairing a mechanical device and mechanical manipulation. There are cases where something is not broken (not needing repair) but it can still be manipulated. "Wrenches are tools that provide ______ functionality." We can r...

 
@TannerSwett pluralia tantum, but for the full breadth of plurality see: [](books.google.com/books?dq=glasses+pants+bellows+grammar)
 
It's a shame people are downvoting this answer. They are certainly not doing so based on its content. The english.stackexchange.com culture is a strange one. Re: submitting the citation to OED, I will once I figure out how. — rojo 5 mins ago
 
@TannerSwett maybe in Poland there was at one time the habit of building entrances to rooms using two parts one on each side (analogous to 'pants' or 'scissors'), and the word for that just became the popular word for any entrance mechanism and kept the plural marker even though it's not generically plural. Hypotheticlly.
@JBis There are no stupid questions. For examples:

At what temperature does the number seven melt?

It doesn't, it sublim-eights.
 
2:46 PM
0
Q: Is there a word or term for always saying you're going to do something, but then not doing it?

ShannyMFor example, my SO always talks about getting all of these tattoos, but then never does. Or, I talk about how I want to go on all of these world-travelling adventures, but then never do. Looking for more than "lacking follow-through."

 
 
1 hour later…
4:07 PM
@Mitch See my stupid question below :p :
0
Q: "We" when referring to a team of 1

JBisWhen contacting different departments of companies many will end an email/letter with something like Sincerely, The [Company Name] Support Team. additionally they will refer to themselves as "we" We don't have any further information on this. We are working on a fix. If th...

 
4:29 PM
my new gratitude platitude: thankkkk
 
@MattE.Эллен True story: my MiL was telling us about how when one time she was visiting some place in the South, that she same across a store front that had a sign for a KKK meeting place or something like that. The thing is she referred to it as 'triple K'. As in, "You know, those triple K members are not all terrible people. It's an excuse to have friends get together.".
 
For cultural relevance, there's a company, AAA, I think the American Automobile Association, that is always called 'triple A'.
 
Ah! That's what was niggling at my brain
 
Well, that and 'triple X' are the only patterns of that kind.
Like old people getting the kids language embarassingly wrong.
Have I ruined the joke entirely be explaining it?
Because I can go on.
 
4:44 PM
don't let me stop you, but I wouldn't want you to waste your time
-2
Q: please check to me my grammar and give me some better structure . thankkkk

dung quangTopic: Buying things on the Internet, such as books, air tickets and groceries, is becoming more and more popular. Nowad...

 
@MattE.Эллен Excellent. Continuing...
It's like when an old person says, handing you their phone, "Hey can you help me take a selfie?"
“I saw this great segment on 60 Minutes.”
(BTW, 60 minutes was never not an old people thing. that's how long it's been around)
((that was not a bad use of language by old people. But it was funny to me, so it fits my entire agenda))
laughs quietly to self
 
what was it a segment of?
 
Hey @MattE.Эллен
 
> They were a matched set, like March hares and marzipan, the Cassini Gap and the Cumberland Gap, St. Paul’s and Mrs. Paul’s, lighting bugs and lightning. Who can think of one without the other?
I have a question. Is there some hidden humour in "St. Paul's and Mrs. Paul's"?
 
4:50 PM
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in answer: What is the English word an overly skinny person? by Rod on english.SE
 
@MattE.Эллен all of them. I'll tell you about them after my 2nd nap
@CowperKettle link please
 
@CowperKettle none that I can think of
 
This is "The Devil's Whatever" by Andy Duncan
 
does "Mrs Paul's" hold any special significance?
 
@SmokeDetector false
 
5:00 PM
yeah, smokey threw us a dud
 
@MattE.Эллен Been awhile since I've interacted with it. Apparently have to do the reply at CHQ, not here.
 
@MetaEd oh! is that how you report a false positive?
 
@MattE.Эллен It's one way. I understand some folks have a client.
 
IKIA
IKAE
IAALT
 
5:06 PM
Too many glasses of wine at IKEA?
 
5:22 PM
@CowperKettle all those examples aren't particularly funny, just strange juxtapositions.
But I think of 'st paul and mrs paul' as actually having some slightest bit more of humor than the others.
if St. Paul were married, the what would you call his wife? Mrs. Paul of course. Also there is a brand of fish sticks that's called 'Mrs. Pauls'
I don't get the March hare/marzipan one, those are barely connected even sound-wise
but lightning and lighting bug is from a famous quote by Mark Twain about choosing the right word.
 
@Mitch yeah, I don't get that either
maybe it's a list of things that people don't associate together but the narrator does? Some kind of narrator who sees things in a weird way?
 
5:44 PM
@MetaEd For real?
And since you asked, the first one is an acronym for I Knew It Already
 
6:17 PM
@Gigili me too. I really would have to look ll those up.
IKAE = I Know About Everything?
IAALT = I Am A Lateral Thinker?
 
I, Knut, Eat Artichokes
 
7:07 PM
@MattE.Эллен Did you... wait... that's some coincidence. Today in history, in 1034, Cnut did give a royal charter to particular farmers to grow the things.
How it became its own acronym though... oh.. obviously... reddit
On a more important note, it's taken until early-mid 21st century to recognize that it is "DATA IS"
 
0
Q: Word that means married but also includes pre-marriage relationship?

Roger SinasohnFirst, some background. My wife and I dated for 9 years before we got married. We've been married 19 years, so we've been together for a total of 28 years. I am running for my local school board and needed to come up with a candidate statement to be printed in the voter guide. There is a stri...

 
7:42 PM
@Gigili I Keep Eating Ants
 
8:17 PM
0
Q: What is the only word that contains the letters A&E IOU and Y

GalaxyPegasus BabladeUnqUEstIOnAblY Unquestionably is the only word in the dictionary That contains the letters A&E IOU and Y

 
8:54 PM
@Robusto that is a new way? I for one learned to improvise on the violin before I learned to read the sheet music.
I understand that guy's frustration very well. Spending all your life only playing other people's notes is best left to robots. The purpose of humans is to create, not recite. The current education system does fail to reflect that, but it's not just the current education system. It's been that way for two hundred years now. A bummer, yes.
 
9:11 PM
@Mitch what? You're making it up!
 
 
1 hour later…
10:32 PM
@MattE.Эллен What? I never make things up. Check the reference.
What I did do is learn that Cnut was 1) the father of the guys who screwed up things before the Normans invaded (Why did the Normans speaking French instead of Norse/Viking? ... don't answer that. it could lead to things), and 2) he was greater than Alfred the Great because Cnut was king of England, then he added on King of Denmark, then he added on King of Norway, all when under the age of 40. That was Great.
3) Cnut and Alfred were separated by hundreds of years, or rather about a hundred so while I didn't actually think they were friends I though maybe one might have been at the others baptism or something.
 
Because they came from Normandy, which has been conquered by the Vikings in the 9th century but had been Gallicised in the meantime.
 
What I did not learn today was that Cnut is a weird name in English. I had always known that.
@Cerberus That was super quick for an invading force to take on the language of the conquered
 
Fowler has a very nice article on metaphors in which Cnut appears several times.
@Mitch Well, two centuries.
I'm sure they could have done it much quicker.
 
@Cerberus Probably metaphors that would annoy the most lenient of pedants
@Cerberus Sure, with Duolingo
@Cerberus did I mess up my math? Alfred died 899, Cnut born 995.
 
@Mitch The most lenient of pedants...is that like the shortest of the tall?
 
10:46 PM
@MetaEd OK, what is the quote in your avatar now?
 
> The Vikings started to raid the Seine valley during the middle of the 9th century. As early as 841, a Viking fleet appeared at the mouth of the Seine, the principal route by which they entered the kingdom.[7] After attacking and destroying monasteries, including one at Jumièges, they took advantage of the power vacuum created by the disintegration of Charlemagne's empire to take northern France.
The fiefdom of Normandy was created for the Viking leader Hrólfr Ragnvaldsson, or Rollo (also known as Robert of Normandy). Rollo had besieged Paris but in 911 entered vassalage to the king of the
@Mitch Exactly.
 
"Me so horny, Glenda, Quimba, Alan was"
 
@Mitch No, I was answering this question of yours:
> Why did the Normans speak French instead of Norse/Viking? ... don't answer that.
Since you told me not to answer it.
 
@Cerberus So what I'm saying is that they were all weak leaders and should have the title 'Great' stripped from them. All their empires fell after they died. Cnut the Pretty Good. Charlepasmagnemaispassipetit. They had good marketing, I'll grant that.
@Cerberus Oh. You could answer it if you want. I don't think anyone will be embarrassed.
not much
 
@Mitch Hah. But it's really Latin!
@Mitch I already have, since you told me not to.
But earlier they had at least temporarily conquered large parts of northern Europe and Russia.
Oh, look, the Vikings even sacked Baku!
 
11:18 PM
What do you do when the majority are wrong?
 
Sell them into slavery?
Who are they?
 
People who feel that one-liner dictionary spam without an explanation is a fine ELU answer.
I don't care if they're the majority. They're wrong.
 
0
Q: A person who has a hard time throwing away unnecessary things

EngurooWhat would we call a person who has a hard time throwing away unnecessary things, and, as a result, has a home cluttered with stuff? This person is not just untidy. What causes the clutter is their urge to buy things they don't need and not being able to get rid of things they don't use. I thi...

 
11:40 PM
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/jest
The original sense was ‘heroic deed’, hence ‘a narrative of such deeds’
What did they mean by this 'hence "a narrative of such deeds"'? Is it a common phrase? Does some common phrase mean this? Or what?

I guess I could've asked on ELL but it's a bit too vague a question
 

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