@TannerSwett "The egg Sandra ate" is OSV. OSV will often sound like it should serve as a subject with a relative clause in a larger sentence: "The egg Sandra ate was scrambled." SOV doesn't do this - "Sandra the egg ate." I make sense of that sentence by understanding that more people eat eggs than eggs eat people.
"It was" is merely a particle creating a cleft sentence, then "him" is the object, and "I saw" the subject and verb.
@TaliesinMerlin If I came across the sentence "Sandra the egg ate," I would probably understand it as SOV, but I can't really think of where you'd use such a sentence.
This is why we should all speak Polish. "Sandra jajko zjadła" - Sandra the egg ate (she ate it). "Sandrę jajko zjadło" - Sandra the egg ate (it ate her).
You know, it's really ironic that Polish has very free word order, while Polish notation is very strict.
I think I read that there's a hypothesis that in Proto-Indo-European, neuter nouns had no nominative form. Eventually people said "to hell with that" and used the accusative as the nominative.
And even nowadays, in Proto-Indo-European languages, the nominative form of a neuter noun is usually identical to the accusative.
Dogs (psy) and eggs (jajka) are also the same in nominative and accusative, so if you say "Jajka lubią psy," it's technically ambiguous whether you're saying that eggs like dogs or vice versa.
I believe there are no exceptions to this rule. That's what I have always read, and I have never encountered any, neither in Greek nor in Latin, nor even in German.
There is an hypothesis about the cause of this phenomenon. Neuter words were historically limited to inanimate objects or things th...
@TannerSwett Modern Dutch doesn't have many case endings either, but, in older Dutch, it was the same way.
So if all of Western Germanic, Latin, Greek, and Polish have this, I'd say that is a strong clue.
But who knows?
We should ask @Færd. Does Persian have neuter nouns? And does it have cases? If so, are nominative and accusative case endings identical for neuter nouns? And in old/ancient Persian?
(which may be different from me but you seem to know more than I do)
Thanks. Visiting that link all the way to the end says ["Page not found We're sorry, we couldn't find the page you requested."](https://english.stackexchange.com/users/358641/jasper-van-looij)
what you need to do to convince him is create an enemy for him to focus on and say that the enemy stands against your (Mitch's) point of view. He'll agree with you in no time
what you need to do to convince him is create an enemy for him to focus on and say that the enemy stands against your (Mitch's) point of view. He'll agree with you in no time
and all I can think sullenly is "Hey, I'm like that"
, and then immediately brighten up because if my memory were so bad I wouldn't even realize that.
Then I get pessimistic because I know that there are different kinds of memory and the memory that remembers that you saw a TV show about memory recently may not be the same kind of memory as forgetting all those other things (which I can't remember because otherwise I'd tell you!)
But we weren't talking about memory, it was something else.
@Mitch I find the comments difficult to follow. Was the other poster saying that Merriam-Webster cannot be trusted because it's not associated with a university?
@MattE.Эллен Lesion sounds so... well, it could be -anything- really. Not particularly troublesome. Maybe troublesome, but not particularly so. But then it could be an alien mold spore eating out half your brain. Or maybe not.
@TaliesinMerlin Yeah mostly. Sort of. But particularly, MW isn't -as- trustworthy because it doesn't have the weight of a larger institution behind it.
I'm not convinced by either (because so much else is going on), even though -I- went through the motions of a rebuttal. Both arguments are just as strong.
@MattE.Эллен I'd point out the fallacy. Fallacy of authority? He sounds like someone who fancies himself a logical expert, so pointing out the disconnect - authority doesn't mean quality - with a fancy fallacy name might help.
@TaliesinMerlin Well, I was actually trying to get him to consider myself an authority of actual use. Which I suppose is not as authoritative as something printed (on a screen). But he -did- come here to ask.
Aequorin is a calcium-activated photoprotein isolated from the hydrozoan Aequorea victoria. Though the bioluminescence was studied decades before, the protein was originally isolated from the animal by Osamu Shimomura. In the animals, the protein occurs together with the green fluorescent protein to produce green light by resonant energy transfer, while aequorin by itself generates blue light.
Discussions of "jellyfish DNA" to make "glowing" animals often refer to transgenic animals which express the green fluorescent protein, not aequorin, although both originally derived from the same animal...
...it takes the article quite a while to get to the memory thing.
ugh
final got to the part about memory
for which it basically says, yeah it totally helps memory if you tel some one that it helps memory while you give them a sugar pill.
Pester them with service
Continuously come up to them and ask them if they need anything else. You'll either make more sales (good!) or (hopefully) they'll get the hint that your space and tables are for active customers. You will also come off as friendly and a good host if you do this well.
...
what you need to do to convince him is create an enemy for him to focus on and say that the enemy stands against your (Mitch's) point of view. He'll agree with you in no time
and make sure that supposed enemy is outside your store and they need to go there to battle.
uh oh. The enemy just came in to look around for a new shirt.
Not-phrases... What are they? Adjectival, or adverbial? And are they a type of shortened non-finite phrase, or something different? "It was me, not him, who did it." "Bob stole it, not me."
@Mitch Apoaequorin, a unit of aequorin, is an ingredient in the dietary supplement Prevagen. The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has charged the maker with false advertising for its memory improvement claims.
I see this ad frequently on channels with certain demographics.
P.S. I don’t think you dictionary guy wants to know anything, he just wants to argue.