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00:08
is saying "upload something to there" illegitimate?
It could sound better.
I can't tell because there isn't enough context.
I suspect "to" cannot be put immediately in front of "there".
but saying "upload something there" sounds strange, because one usually says "upload A to B".
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Few unique characters in answer, repeating words in answer (173): Why is Lord Alfred Tennyson often written as Alfred Lord Tennyson? by user331001 on english.SE
I upload my letter to the webpage.
In addition, I also upload my certificate to there.
 
2 hours later…
02:24
@RegDwigнt You're oversimplifying the rainbow issue so that it sounds too black-and-white.
@Cerberus There's your grab at the brass ring: hip-hop mnemonics!
 
5 hours later…
07:12
@Robusto I am sick of people, telling me that or not.
 
2 hours later…
09:30
@Robusto black and white? Whoa, easy, I need a mnemonic for that.
 
3 hours later…
12:41
@Tonepoet I try to be an enigmatic fellow, though I'm also not an active contributor.
I'm mostly here for the knowledge and conversation. Gets the tea and biscuits down easier.
 
2 hours later…
14:43
I really want to bring up the "NYT crossword scandal about hispanic slur" by asking a question, but ...
1) the selection of ELUers is not particularly well represented by non-Anglos
2) I highly suspect it would draw in 'political correctness' diatribes.
3) even if those are avoided, I can't expect subtlety
but here goes anyway here:(and see if it can be asked anywhere on SE appropriately and expect reasonable answers):
- the clue was "Pitch to the head, informally.”
- the expected answer is 'beaner'
- the literal correct answer is 'beanball'
- xwords always take liberties to fit things (they make up stuff all the time)
- 'beaner' is definitely an epithet
My question is whether it is as strong as a slur.
It's definitely inappropriate in a respectable newspaper.
But so is 'fart'.
There are degrees of pejoration (as well as vulgarity)
And 'beaner' always seemed a little lame.
The ELU main question I would ask is what is the degree of pejoration of 'beaner'.
15:07
@Mitch I probably wouldn't vote to close such a question myself, but I would expect it to be closed as P.O.B. Degree of register questions already have a tendency to be closed for that reason, and while we do tolerate pejorative language questions through use/mention distinction, the extra layer of potential contention mitigates more towards that finding. This is not to mention that the code of conduct may bias the admissible answers somewhat. I was on Politics S.E. and saw this recently:
4
A: Does an impartial discussion of bigotry as it relates to politics violate the code of conduct?

PhilippBigotted viewpoints can be discussed by attributing them to the people who make these statements and not to the posters themselves and by putting their statements into an appropriate context. Example: Question: The political doctrine of Antifelinism believes that all kittens should be eradica...

While I wouldn't dream of writing the bad answer, the good answer seems a little too censorious to me.
I'm not sure what the point of withholding a link to a referenced resource would be.
 
1 hour later…
16:31
@Tonepoet Sure. I guess I feel the some POB questions are ones that should still be answerable here. It seems to me that the SE requirement is a weak excuse here for something that should be here. Frankly that would make any question here POB because the system allows more than one answer. Any nuance on any dictionary meaning would be verboten. I don't think that's right.
16:42
I figured it would be better to discuss logical punctuation here. I have been researching a lot recently to find peace, in my mind, with a style of punctuation with quotation marks and punctuation's place along side them. This is what I have arrived at, three systems: "The British System/Logical System", "The American System," and the "even more so logical system".

I have found a couple of posts on here that talks of the latter system, which is very ugly by most standards but seems to be the most logical. here are some examples of this third "system":
Thoughts?
The system, as I said, is based on logic. Things in quotations have their own layer which is embedded.
17:28
@Mitch There's good and bad subjective. Bad subjective should be closed POB. Good subjective should not be closed.
But the question of how pejorative "beaner" is, that's not even subjective. That can be answered using data.
@MetaEd Oh? How is that? What data?
17:54
@Mitch I don't mean there's actual data. I mean that's a question of fact.
If there's no data available it can at least be answered "there's no data available".
18:05
Any bites?
Input?!
18:57
@MetaEd Oh I get it. You're saying it's not POV because one could -hypothetically- gather data about its pejorativity, right?
I'm guess I'm asking for that data?
@AllexKramer I'm pretty sure that the American system and the British system are well recognized (you don' have to go reinventing the wheel). As to your third system, you haven't really explained how it is different from the British system.
But I'm in total agreement with you that being strict as to use and mention and quoting is the way to go. I don't know if the British system goes as far as you expecting.
19:25
@Mitch The British is close to the third one, but different in a few. For example, with the first example, they would've done it like this: "I love bread," she said. Because it's a full sentence, it gets the comma. However, if it wasn't the comma would be outside the quotation marks. In the third system, the logic is so strict that it doesn't ever count punctuation in or out of the quotations as for the whole sentence.
@Mitch so in the first example, it uses a full stop to show that it has ended in quotations. If I adhered to the comma-between-tags rule, the example would have been written as:
"I love bread.", she said.
Furthermore, with the third "system", you would have sentences like this:
She says "I love bread.".
If the quotation was a full sentence, that is.
19:51
@Mitch Right. We can't label a question as arbitrary/opinion based just because there are no facts available.
20:20
Opinion based questions are questions that won't lead to definitive answers because they're soliciting opinions. For example "double negatives suck, amirite?" or "what's your favorite adverb?"
"What are some words I can use to insult my TA?"
That being said, subjective questions are on topic if the request is expert-level, unique, particularly interesting and thought-provoking, shows substantial effort and research, and demands responses that meet the same standards. See: “Good Subjective, Bad Subjective – SE Blog”; “Real Questions Have Answers – SE Blog”.
So what is intended here is subject-matter experts asking other subject-matter experts high-level interesting questions that don't have easy answers.
@MetaEd I am new to the site, so don't judge, but is there options to post opinion-based questions?
@AllexKramer Yes, as I said above, if the question is expert-level, unique, particularly interesting, and thought-provoking.
This is true not just here but across the SE network.
Basically it's a tool for experts.
@MetaEd Is there a way to put opinion pieces out there without it being in the form of a question?
@AllexKramer It is intelligible, but I wouldn't use it in a nice text.
20:35
@Cerberus Would you agree that it is the most logical, however?
@AllexKramer Like I said, I am totally for your 'logical' punctuation. If you quote something, you quote it as verbatim as possible including all punctuation and that goes inside the quote. But then your own sentence, which is doing the quoting, has its own punctuation and the two things, inside the quote and outside, are blind to each other.
@AllexKramer In a way, I suppose.
@AllexKramer There has to be a question and an answer. You can answer your own question. What sort of opinion piece are you considering?
@AllexKramer That I'm sure is off-topic. The things submitted must be question like. They can't be WIlliam Safire-like essays on a word you like. Sure, you could rearrange things to be question like and then answer the question yourself. That is allowed, and depending on the situation, very acceptable (depending of course). But it will be closed/etc if it's transparently an excuse to have a rant.
However, a quotation generally does not quote the text exactly as it was written, but rather as a phrase, or as spoken language.
So the punctuation of the original should not be brought along unless it fits its new context.
20:44
@MetaEd Thanks. That makes sense to me (and verbalizes thoughts I had). But I think in each case a case must be made. It's not always so obvious to people that lack of facts doesn't mean it's not knowable.
@Cerberus That's a good point. However, then, we run into consistency problems. If you have a direct speech quotation with multiple sentences, you end up with having to import punctuation, and with exclamation and question marks, you treat them with sense. If we treat words as just words that exist in some other realm once they fall into quotation marks, I think that's messier than logic.
@Cerberus That is, unless, however, you take quotation marks as an entity in itself that doesn't conform to the same logic that falls on the feet of the syntax around the inverted little devils.
20:59
@AllexKramer Yes, very true.
In that case, we either have a problem, or we should put the quotation in its own little paragraph.
@AllexKramer Yes, it would be possible, but noöne uses such a system, so it is generally considered incorrect, alas.
> You heard it wrong, dear fellow. "a green evening-gown" is what she said.
This is what your system would lead to, if we assume that "a green evening gown" was not the beginning of a sentence in the original.
@Cerberus Are you saying the "most logical system" would lead to that or the "entity in itself system"?
But every sentence must start with a capital: the above is quite ugly.
@Cerberus Hm... that's actually what's done by copy editors who do and know about such things, right?
@AllexKramer I don't understand the distinction.
@Mitch It depends. Or they just use the style that Allex calls "inconsistent".
I' getting all confused now. My evening gown is not green.
21:07
The most logical system was pre-existing my message that mentioned the "you take quotation marks as an entity in itself", which established the system where words are just words. laughs
@AllexKramer Either you use the conventional systems, in which case you can capitalise the first letter of the quotation if necessary, even though it wasn't capitalised in the original; or you use the "most logical" system you suggested, in which case you get the ugly sentence in my quotation block above.
Okay, now we are on the same page.
And you make valid points.
But, if that's the case, that means we have more issues than we originally thought.
That means quotations and the sentence around it can go back and forth from being governed by the same rules. In some instances, you capitalize because it is the start of the sentence, even if it is a fragment, but in others, you do not, because its in the middle. Furthermore, if you move to punctuate the inner sentence because it appears at the ends, you are crossing lines, in the same way that you would be avoiding them if you didn't.
for example,
If you say the first letter has to be capital, even if it's in a quote, because it falls into the beginning of the sentence, that means the end-punctuation always must fall within the quote if the quote falls at the end of the sentence.
So, therefore, for my "most logical" system to work, I must consider quotations and all that is in them a separate entity.
Following me?
laughs
21:17
@AllexKramer No, because the full stop can be moved outside the quotation marks, while the capital cannot: that's the difference.
We would move the capital outside the quotation if we could, but we cannot.
> [capital mark] "a green evening-gown" is what she said.
We don't have a capital mark.
@AllexKramer But doing that implies that you won't change anything inside the quotation, not even to avoid beginning the main sentence with a minuscle, doesn't it?
@Cerberus Might be pushing here, but if that's the case, then the quotations, no matter what, are considered to abide by the rules of the outer sentence no matter what. I am not discounting this.
@AllexKramer Yes, well, up to a point.
> She said, "I hate you!".
@Cerberus up to the point of punctuation.
OK.
I suppose the only issues here are punctuation and capitalisation anyway, aren't they?
I hope so.
The problem with capitalization would be dialogue in which one character finishes the sentence of antoehr
another
21:23
How do you mean?
Bob said "I want to go to--"
"school. That's what you were going to say!"
interrupted Jackie
That's ugly, I should say.
@Cerberus It is. But, is it correct?
> Bob said, "I want to go to"—
"School. That's what you were going to say!", interrupted Jackie.
@AllexKramer I'd say, "no".
So, with my logical system that I am developing, you believe I should make sure that capitalization always rules, but my punctuation rules can stand to be completely logical?
21:37
Not with respect to double punction: .". is rarely a good idea.
> She said, "I won't go.".
Bob said "I want to go to--".
"School. That's what you were going to say.", interrupted Jackie.
Ahh see! Then the logic is thrown away, good sir!
Certainly!
I actually think the I want to go to ending is the most complicated issue here, one to which I don't have a definitive answer.
Trust me. My best selling novella will certainly be written in the American usage, but for peace of mind, I have to know the logical way!
That is even worse!
See, logically, in my mind, I believe the I want to go to ending has to be written as I did, because the punctuation on the inside is operating on a different level than that of the outside.
21:41
I think the rule of thumb is: be as logical as possible, except when it's super ugly.
Yes, but we must do what we must do to survive.
@AllexKramer Yes, there is something to be said for your version.
Quote me here: The Kramer system. Tag me whenever appropriate.
Give me the credit deserved.
The only thing is that the main sentence itself could be said to be unfinished as well, which is why I wanted the dash in the main sentence and not in the quotation (for there couldn't be two dashes).
But I would not object to your version.
There are some good arguments that speak for it.
Understandable, but again, it depends on what levels you consider the ins and outs of quotations and how they work.
While we are talking of dashes...,
how do you feel about them in normal sentences when theyre alongside other punctuation?
21:44
I use dash comma where appropriate.
Good to hear
And by all means use exclamation marks inside dashes.
The dash is the lazy mark.
You can use it anywhere, in any way.
Which is good and bad.
Do you use spaces around your dashes or snug them into text? I am starting to see the former happen more and more often.
which is problematic.
In English, snug.
Because I like the way it looks.
With an m-dash.
In Dutch, it's n-dashes with spaces.
it has always bothered me that they are one of the few punctuation marks that are punctuated differently from the others, and I can't seem to find out why exactly with tug some marks and not others.
Ellipsis, commas, periods, etc.
21:47
I'm not sure I can parse that...
"With tug"?
we* instead of with
Did you know you could edit previous lines?
and tug probably should've been snug
now I do
Press the "up" key on your keyboard a few times (when the cursor is inside the empty text area).
You can edit up to 2 minutes in the past, I think.
Good to know
First time using chat was today
21:49
Yay!
Anyways, do you have a reason for such placement of punctuation?
In French, question marks and cola and such are preceded by spaces.
What placement?
And it was only a handful of years ago I learned about how English can put two spaces after a full stop.
Somehow, I had never noticed this before.
Why do we snug commas and periods and such to the words on their left? Why is there differences between them and other punctuation marks
And why does it depend on the language?
Those are, I believe, fairly recent conventions.
Two spaces after a full stop... preposterous.
exactly
21:53
Preposterous?
But are aware of this practice?
I thought it was the "old way".
I thought it was abandoned.
Not quite, I think.
insteresting
what about your ellipsis?
how do you space yours?
Err I don't know.
no one does
I honestly prefer... this way.
21:57
That is, I don't use spaces between them, but I don't have a definite opinion on that.
In English, though...I use this way.
In Dutch... this way.
Reasoning?
I agree that the English way looks odd, and I don't have a reason, but I believe it to be conventional.
I think Fowler says so.
gotcha
I follow a couple of people-- journalists-- that punctuate their em dashes like so.
How odd.
it interesting, and I asked one of them once about it, and they claim they like to keep their punctuation spacing as uniform as can be.
21:59
But there are some people-the rascals-who do it like this.
With single hyphens.
No spaces.
Super annoying.
makes sense, I guess. but with the space afterwards, it looks odd to add a comma in there
I have this feeling that conversations such as these won't even exist in a couple of decades, as people will abandon all logic, convention, etc..
I don't think the style of those journalists is conventional at all. I wouldn't use it.
@AllexKramer I'm sure Plato said words to a similar effect...
The bad thing is, I couldn't come up with an argument against the usage of em-dashes in such fashion.
except it looks bad
unless that is, you have one. so I can convince him to remove the article he wrote this morning... hah
The main argument should be that it is contrary to convention.
But you are right that they also make it difficult to add a comma immediately after.
And unfortunately, they said that "convention is only convention".
22:04
Alas.
mmhmm
this is how I lose sleep at night. These trivial matters
Such is life.
If one only had an infinity gauntlet to deal with such things.
Anyways, I will be signing off now. If you ever want to help the Kramer System, feel free to tag me. Hasta Manana, me amigo!
Adios!
Glad you have discovered the chat room.

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