Just wondering, today I got -26 reputation, and it said user deleted. I know upvoted answers give you +10, accepted answers give you +15. That amounts to 25 points. But I got -26. Is the extra one point just for the hell of it?
speaking of animals, did i mention how many words are recognised by dictionaries beginning with an animal and ending in like, unhyphenated that is, doglike, cowlike, antlike, whalelike, but not dolphinlike
there was a guy who lived in the wild with bears for a while, and got footage of them fighting, they're awesome fighters, it's like watching bears do MMA, it's amazing
Grizzly Man is a 2005 American documentary film by German director Werner Herzog. It chronicles the life and death of bear enthusiast Timothy Treadwell. The film includes some of Treadwell's own footage of his interactions with grizzly bears before 2003, and of interviews with people who knew, or were involved with Treadwell, as well as professionals dealing with wild bears.
He and his girlfriend Amie Huguenard were mauled, killed and eaten by a grizzly bear on October 6, 2003. Treadwell's footage was found after his death. The bear that killed Treadwell and Huguenard was later encountered and...
i seen footage of a bear, he was a film/stunt/performing bear, so he was used to people and that, and they got it into a playful wrestling match with this expeienced guy. at one point the bear got a little enthusiastic and was putting its weight on the way, when the trainers panicked just a little, they shouted at the beat to get him off, and then they made a big mistake of whacking it with a stick, really hard
when that happened the bear bit straight into the jugular, or carotid of the guy... and he was done
the guy stood up holding his neck, but that was it for him, he bled out....
so weird, they got that instinct, that animal, killer instinct, they know exactly what to go for
@Mitch anyway, just wondering... I lost 26 reputation today.... and it said deleted user....
i posted further up about it, i'll copy and paste " I know upvoted answers give you +10, accepted answers give you +15. That amounts to 25 points. But I got -26. Is the extra one point just for the hell of it?"
@Mitch yeah i heard stories, like one story about a commercial producer, they had to get this wolf to snarl, and so what they had to do was to show it meat, and then take it away from it, to get it to snarl for the commercial, and the trainer was like "once we do this, it's a wrap", there's no going on, once you get the wolf in that state, it's home time.
@Zebrafish I'd expect there's no randomness at all. It could be like you said afterwards, 3 up voted answers and two down votes against. or you did 4 down votes. or some other combination. The interface doesn't display who exactly deleted themselves.
it might be possible if you r memory is good, to look through your daily rep (it tells you what was an up or down vote against you when, and also what you downvoted and you can visit everything and see if any attached names have been grayed out.
fair enough. oh well, i'll survive, don't worry about little old me, i'll just bleed reputation points and take it like a man, no need for pity, i'm an adult, i won't go on about this needlessly, the fact that points were taken away from me unfairly for no fault of my own, no siree I won't complain, or continue to bring up the topic
@Zebrafish I don't want to know what they're doing to babies in movies to get them to cry. that's also a one shot thing. Baby crying, _somebody's gotta deal with that for 10 meinutes at least.
@Zebrafish people deleting is annoying. rep is playing with your psychology, it doesn't have any meaning beyond you spend time on here and try to answer/ask stuff.
it somehow seems so evil, but at the same time babies cry all the time so I'm sure people justify it by saying to themselves "If i don't make em cry now they'll be crying within the hour anyway." That's how these people sleep at night
dunno. What pissed me off the most is he came out of nowhere, downvoted both answers, completely ignoring the dictionary definition, and saying he was right
that's what made me continue to argue against him, i was just going by what the dictionary says
Sometimes there's different points of view, sometimes the other person just doesn't know the things you do (they may know less, they may know a different direction. Also, some people just like to talk and/or argue. Just because somebody says something, there may not actually mean it. Not lying, but just words coming out.
yeah i feel a complete no downvote policy isn't good.... oh well, i just didn't wan't to seem petty downvoting because they downvoting me
yeah but... but... this is what i mean, it's so subjective, like who was right?
So like modern grammars don't recognise them as adjectives, and they say don't use the dictionaries for this purpose, yet I checked the most recent revisions of some dictionaries, many of them have their newest edition in 2012 onwards.... meaning, that if grammarians decided all of a sudden that this or that word is X and not Y, seems to be plenty of time for dictionaries to absorb that info
@Zebrafish oh. that's weird. that's similar to the problem of edit wars. a person says something, let's say, wrong in a question, and you edit it to 'clarify', but the OP edits it back. it's real hard to not feel entitled to tell the person 'GTH' and re-edit. but I feel like going back and forth is not worth the trouble.
@Zebrafish dictionaries have problems, but they're not that bad
dictionaries, good ones, tend to be a little conservative. They are constantly editing things to update and to fix, but there are more words than editors.
there's no such thing as a 'grammarian' (unless it is a school English teacher). there are linguists whose specialty might be English syntax.
some arguments are just weird, i remember one about whether you can grudgingly concur. Someone was saying you can grudgingly agree but can't grudgingly concur, I disagreed...
@Zebrafish i don't think it has much to do exactly with baseball, just it's a metaphor for any subgroup with it's own jargon and rules that may not mean much to outsiders.
So saying 'an' is not an adjective it's an article, is like saying a golden retriever is not a mammal, it's a dog.
@Zebrafish no. those are just baseball metaphors. You don't really need to know baseball to appreciate those metaphors. You actually don't need to know about baseball to get the idea of 'inside baseball' either
i don't know, and really i don't care that much outside of this site. I can't imagine in my normal having to identify accurately what part of the sentence a word is... hardly anyone is required to do that, so my interest is just.... extracurricular and for the sake of itself, probably out of boredom
something that is literally inside baseball is the infield pop-up rule, if a hitter pops up the ball in the infield, then... oh I have no idea...it is too inside baseball for me.
@Zebrafish language learners care because it gives them an easier way to make correct sentences. You learn a rule and then can substitute in words that match the parameters of the rule.
@Zebrafish haha. if you squint, cricket and baseball are equivalent.
@Mitch Yeah ok, good point, language learners do. But I have a feeling I'd be confusing them more by saying this is an adjective, but be careful because a lot of people will disagree, starting around 2000 grammarians decided that this is a determiner, or no longer the subjunctive mood
haha, no they both have arcane rules about where the ball is and if you touch it and what the why is that guy so happy when I thought that was an out or an inning or a sticky wicket or whatever.
because some pedant seems to have misinterpreted my point, I want to change a line in my answer, but also like to strikethrough it to show what I had shown before, cause, you know, i'm a fair guy, and saintly, and angelic, and just a nice guy overall....
@Mitch Right. Two problems there: marrying the constituency's interest more effectively to election results, and good education to inform people about that marriage.
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So some people allow connecting two short sentences by means of a comma, right?
> Don't take a taxi, just wait for me.
I wouldn't do that unless in conventional cases, like with tag questions, yes/no, addresses, etc:
> The comma splice is sometimes used in literary writing to convey a particular mood of informality. Otherwise, it is usually considered an error.
I do it all the time here in chat. But if I were writing something that other people would read, I would either: 1) replace with a colon. 2) replace with a period and have better transition (extra words or conjunction 3) reword to avoid.
@Færd But, and this is my point, many people are so disengaged/uncaring/anti-thought that education does not register.
@Færd Wait...so in two years you just got to the letter Q? Which dictionary are you using?
@Færd I wouldn't call that slow. It's not a particular fluent read.
also what are you reading for? To have exposure or to learn each for use?
Sleep which was never so ghastly an experience as it has become now...
Why did someone use the indefinite article 'an' here in what should have been a preposition 'in'.
Is it correct or not? Please suggest.
@Jasper I was expecting a video, too. I have a whole bunch of things semi-prepared, actually. Alas, I've been somewhat occupied with composing new things instead. And teaching. And then my teacher asked me to arrange a 4-minute orchestral piece for two violins. So yeah that's what I'm actually doing right now.
@Mitch well as I said. Great title. I immediately clicked.
@Mitch yeah melody wise it's exceptionally straightforward. That's not the challenge. The challenge is picking the key so her accompaniment has room to breathe underneath the melody. But there is very little room, because the student can only play a few notes in first position, so I can't just go arbitrarily high.
Like, the first four bars alone span several octaves. He can't play that. So I have to transpose midway through it, or switch his part with hers, or just rewrite from scratch.
@Mitch I actually searched for something like that a while back, but no, there is no such thing. No app can listen to an orchestra, or even just a singer with a guitar, and spell out the notes.
@Mitch I do things like that for myself. But this is a piece specifically requested by someone else, so yeah they get to pick.
@RegDwigнt I distinctly remember going to some PC applications conference (or some conference where there were those kinds of exhibitors) and watched a demo of some guy, totally improvising some riff on a piano, and the app 'scored' it, the melody and some chords, capturing the 'off-beat' notes and triples and everything.
Anyway. I've previously arranged orchestral pieces for two violins, or a violin and a viola, or two violins and a piano. The more you do it, the easier it gets and the better you become.
Tonight, I will meet a friend returning from overseas, and tomorrow I will meet another friend returning from overseas. I am gonna talk to them and see how they can help me with my problems.
To be honest, I have used XP and Vista and 10. I thought 10 is the best and Vista is the worst, but now thinking again, I think they are all very similar.
In most situations in which people use PDFs, it isn't necessary. They might as well have copy-pasted it into an e-mail or attached the page as an image file, put it online in html, or publushed it as EPUB, DOC, etc.
The only reason why I might not want to buy an AMD processor for my new computer is that it's the smaller platform: ceteris paribus, it's always best to use the largest platform there is.
@RegDwigнt The first 'program' by Ada, Lady Byron, was to compute arbitrary sequence of Bernouilli numbers. Send me to the math hater's dungeon, but that ain't some great thing either.
Aphantasia is the suggested name for a condition where one does not possess a functioning mind's eye and cannot voluntarily visualize imagery. The phenomenon was first described by Francis Galton in 1880 but has since remained largely unstudied. Interest in the phenomenon renewed after the publication of a study in 2015 conducted by a team led by Professor Adam Zeman of the University of Exeter, which also coined the term aphantasia. Research is scarce. Further studies are planned.
== History ==
The phenomenon was first described by Francis Galton in 1880 in a statistical study about mental imagery...
I need a good mouse with lots of buttons, a large, strong keyboard with lots of buttons, a large screen that can also do portrait mode, a computer that isn't easily damaged, and parts that can easily be replaced. None of those things a laptop can give you. In addition, laptop hardware is a lot more expensive for the same power.
@Mitch not on YouTube it hasn't. Every other video on YouTube be like "hey guys look at this cool word I discovered, and it's the same word that every other video on YouTube has discovered"
@Cerberus There's a scene fro 'The Expanse' where this guy takes... well it ends up not going so well for the people who walked in.
@Cerberus I want a new drug, one that won't make me sick, one that won't make me crash my car or make me feel too thick, one that won't hurt my head, one that won't make my mouth too dry or make my eyes too red.