> On May 20, 1875, following a trial, a jury committed her to a private asylum in Batavia, Illinois.[56] After the court proceedings, she was so despondent that she attempted suicide. She went to several pharmacies and ordered enough laudanum to kill herself, but an alert pharmacist frustrated her attempts and finally gave her a placebo.
Some people think she might have had low B12 levels
Nowadays, psychiatrists routinely order B12 tests for depressed people over the age of 50.
> Since the war began in February, the narrative has morphed from “Ukraine must disappear so that Russia can calm down” to “Ukraine must surrender so that Europe can stay warm.” Now the narrative has become “Ukraine must stop liberating its territories to prevent a new world war.”
I remember back in school, one boy loved to grab two chairs and run across the classroom, yelling трансформируюсь! (I'm transforming!), like in the Trasnformers cartoon. As if his hands were turning into chairs.
a. intransitive. To undergo transformation as if by morphing. 1992 i-D July 27/1 Behind the screen are performers, actors and operatic singers, who ‘morph’ in and out of these virtual worlds. 1993 Spin Apr. 44/3 Industrial is about as nebulous a term as you can find for a genre of music that's constantly morphing. 1994 Guardian 31 Aug. i. 1/2 A series about a group of teenagers able to ‘morph’ into crime-fighting Power Rangers. 2000 Times 12 Jan. i. 2/7 As the session proceeded my suspicion grew that we were hallucinating and Keith Hill would morph in…
> b. transitive. To change (a person or thing) into something different, esp. though a series of rapid transitional phases. 1996 Face Sept. 199/1 Her compulsive exercising and surgery to morph her body into whatever shape is required..point to her need to belong.
> "He stood, and heard the steeple Sprinkle the quarters on the morning town. One, two, three, four, to market place and people It tossed them down." (Housman)
> In 1868, she wrote a friend: “Tell your wife, whom I have always loved so much, that I intend gathering all the needles that are now running through my body, & send them to her, in a handsome, European pincushion” sci-hub.se/https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27397049
> Shall they return to beatings of great bells In wild trainloads? A few, a few, too few for drums and yells, May creep back, silent, to still village wells Up half-known roads.
@Cerberus there's this TPRS method they advocate that involves IIRC mostly just focusing on one passage after another, instead of, say, learning a certain grammatical pattern by studying example sentences and coming up with your own.
I remember a guy who advocated learning a new language by walking in the nature and declaming words and phrases aloud while walking. I don't remember his name. It's on the tip of my tongue, but I can't quite recall it.
They pretend like it's the cure for cancer but (also IIRC, I may be wrong) as far as I've seen the few comparative studies that exist compare the method to how languages are taught at schools, not how they're taught at private institutes or methods people employ for self-study.
There was a video of that guy walking in the park and declaming some Chinese phrases. And then later he was able to converse with a Chinese person, after a very short stint at self-studying.
> TPR Storytelling is a method of teaching foreign languages. TPRS lessons use a mixture of reading and storytelling to help students learn a foreign language in a classroom setting.
Once again, at best it's useful for intermediate learners.
But people swear by it, so I've probably missed something
TPR Storytelling (Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling or TPRS) is a method of teaching foreign languages. TPRS lessons use a mixture of reading and storytelling to help students learn a foreign language in a classroom setting. The method works in three steps: in step one the new vocabulary structures to be learned are taught using a combination of translation, gestures, and personalized questions; in step two those structures are used in a spoken class story; and finally, in step three, these same structures are used in a class reading. Throughout these three steps, the teacher...
Russian propagandist Anton Krasovsky told in live air that Ukrainian-supporting Russian-speaking kids in Ukraine back in the early 1990s "should have been drowned or torched" twitter.com/ru2ch/status/1584086886829940737
His companion on the TV program, Russian sci-fi writer Lukyanenko, said that he is against such methods, and that simple flogging would have helped to straighten up such kids and put them on the right path.
This Krasovsky is too hysterical.
I'm afraid he will end up badly. He is very intelligent, and may commit suicide if he suddenly realizes what he was saying.
@Cerberus Yes, of course it makes it smaller. That was a joke showing how a single statistic (CO2 released during weight loss) could lead to an incorrect conclusion. When the whole carbon balance is taken into account, the footprint is obviously smaller.
Note also that as far as sand is concerned, loosing weight will make one's footprint shallower ;-)
Sergei Vasilievich Lukyanenko (Russian: Серге́й Васи́льевич Лукья́ненко, IPA: [sʲɪrˈɡʲej vɐˈsʲilʲjɪvʲɪtɕ lʊˈkʲjænʲɪnkə]; born 11 April 1968) is a Russian science fiction and fantasy author, writing in Russian. His works often feature intense action-packed plots, interwoven with the moral dilemma of keeping one's humanity while being strong.
Some of his works have been adapted into film productions, for which he wrote the screenplays.
== Biography ==
Lukyanenko was born in Karatau, Kazakhstan, then a part of the Soviet Union. After graduating from school, he moved to Alma-Ata, and enrolled at the...
@CowperKettle Actually not all that amazing, considering that the ureter is where kidney stones get caught and cause no end of trouble. It just kind of logically follows.
A smart pipe that adjusts its diameter to the flow of the liquid inside it
But a pipe
@CowperKettle you'd think the Russian Media Monitor would crack by now
It's really painful to admit our monstrous media have been subtler than Russian state TV
They treat all the morally questionable conflicts with some reverent distance. Then you're fed a few lines of propaganda from somewhere. You don't know what Iranian soldiers have been doing in Syria, not one word. Then after a while every sycophant on TV pretends to know all that's going on there and that they're heroes, no doubt
@robusto Perhaps due to people of Indian origin? The popularity of fútbol / soccer in the United States is probably mainly due to the presence of Latin Americans there.
@jlliagre No, soccer is actually quite popular here. I myself watch it when I want to take a nap on the couch with a drone in the background uninterrupted by commercials.
@M.A.R. If so they are Indian ... oh,wait, you said North Dakota. Indian families are too smart to move there.
Indian families live where the tech companies are.
I sold my house in Massachusetts to an Indian family.
Jiminy Cricket is the Disney version of the "Talking Cricket" (Italian: Il Grillo Parlante), a fictional character created by Italian writer Carlo Collodi for his 1883 children's book The Adventures of Pinocchio, which Walt Disney adapted into the animated film Pinocchio in 1940. Originally an unnamed, minor character in Collodi's novel who is killed by Pinocchio before returning as a ghost, he was transformed for the Disney adaptation into a comical and wisecracking partner who accompanies Pinocchio on his adventures, having been appointed by the Blue Fairy (known in the book as the "Fairy with...
This will require most of a day’s free work, so good luck and godspeed to whoever attempts this: anyone who believes this question can be suitably answered in our format will need to synthesize information contained within the OED entries for burg and burgh and borough, and the letter ‹g› and the ‹gh› digraph, as well as Wikipedia page on the Etymology of Edinburgh. — tchrist ♦1 min ago
Anybody who has nothing else to do than contribute 4 to 6 hours of their time gratis answering that question is perfectly free to do so. Some of us ain't got time for that, though.
Why is the Scottish capital Edinburgh pronounced as Edinbruh?
It is not clear to me why the letter "u" is silent, so that the "b" is followed directly by the "r". Then a soft "u" is inserted. Next the "gh" is treated as silent. Strange choices. On the other hand, if this pronunciation is deemed a...
I just wasted more than two hours of my Sunday trying to write it up, but I've given up. My time is worth more than that, and I have promises to keep. No, that's not text from the CW post I deleted; it was something else again.
By the way, I have nothing to do today (waaay too windy to ride, gonna be close to 30 mph soon), and I can't imagine wasting my idleness on crafting such an answer.
@tchrist At the very least it gives a very important resonance to issues of spelling that keep cropping up here.
@tchrist I voted to undelete. Not sure how that works, or how many votes it takes. But your vote would close the deal.
> Russia's Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu on Sunday discussed Ukraine with Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin, the Russian defence ministry said, in their second call in less than a week.
@Vikas Sure, he wants to negotiate forever keeping what he's unilaterally declared himself the owner of before Ukraine takes them back from him and makes him look bad.
He's trying to save himself from greater disaster.
The self-inflicted blow to his own country smarts. You can't snatch up 300,000 men from their jobs and chase another 300,000 of them out of the country without the national economy suffering tremendously. That isn't even counting all the casualties.
For chase, read scare.
He's just trying to talk the West out of continuing to help Ukraine. That's his idea of negotiating.
Personally I don't see anything happening right now that would suggest a concrete offramp path, but I'm terribly uninformed.
> Following talks between the UK and Russia, the UK defence secretary, Ben Wallace, refuted claims made by the Russian defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, that Ukraine, facilitated by western counties including UK, was planning to escalate the conflict. During the earlier call, Shoigu told Wallace that Russia was concerned Kyiv could be preparing to use a “dirty bomb” in Ukraine – a claim he also made in calls with the French and Turkish defence ministers earlier on Sunday.