« first day (4430 days earlier)      last day (787 days later) » 

02:07
Bonnie Tu, director of Giant, the largest producer of bicycles in the world.
Yes, Giant makes just about all the frames for the other manufacturers.
02:54
@Cerberus 🙏
I find that so hard to remember. It just doesn't seem very... latinate.
What's the deal now with the left side of the former Czecholslovakia?
In English is it Czech Republic or is it Czechia?
Czechia is what should logically happen, but it has really bad mouth-feel in English.
But Czech Republic is so ... formal sounding and way too long.
Is it OK to say Czechia now?
We should normalize saying Czechia
> The Czech government directed use of Czechia as the official English short name in 2016.[28] The short name has been listed by the United Nations[29] and is used by other organizations such as the European Union,[30] NATO,[31] the CIA,[32] and Google Maps.[33]
03:14
@Mitch I think Czechia is better, but Czech Republic is used almost everywhere.
In English, I mean.
In Dutch, we say Tsjechië.
@forest Yes, but nobody actually says it that way in English.
@Cerberus Exactly.
I think there is something about it that puts off English speakers.
As Fowler says, idiom is preferred over regularity if available.
And Czech Republic is odd enough versus Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, Russia, Bulgaria, Romania, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Albania, Austria, Hungaria, Germania...
(Half an hour ago)
You really want an -ia word—but, no your subconscious thinks: that would be too easy, so it must be wrong.
03:29
check ee uh
or che /x/ ia, which us very unenglish
Not polite to clear your throat in front of strangers.
@Cerberus Narnia works just fine
India
Asia
Apia (capital of Samoa)
Exactly.
Is there one with only 3 letters?
Kia
You can try Chechland then.
@Cerberus Czech Republia
03:44
Perfect.
 
1 hour later…
05:04
> Indian police are investigating the sudden death of a wealthy Russian politician who reportedly criticised Moscow’s war in Ukraine as well as the unexpected death of one of his travelling companions, authorities said.
> The body of Pavel Antov, 65, was found on Saturday in a pool of blood outside his lodgings at a luxury hotel in India’s eastern state of Odisha, where he was on holiday with three other Russian nationals.
05:16
> Harry Potter can’t tell the difference between his cooking pot and his best mate.
They are both cauldron.
06:02
World's largest wind turbine will soon have all its blades installed.
If all goes well, they will launch serial production of 15 MW turbines, this is amazing.
@Vikas Probably boozed a lot
My first cousin's husband once went to some tropical islands, and boozed for a whole week, barely left his hut.
Although he is a good person.
It was kind of tradition for Russian men to drink heavily, and this has been changing rapidly the last couple decades. I guess along with the whole world.
The older generation still keeps the tradition alive, and thus occasionally fail to keep themselves alive.
06:42
@M.A.R. Is it so? 🤔 Don't people recommended this posture?
@CowperKettle Maybe but his companion also died.
@CowperKettle Oh.
Weather is very good today.
> Strange women lying in ponds dispensing swords is not a basis for a system of government
Why is Czechia sounding bad but Chechnya sounding good? O_O
Probably because of the n.
@Vikas Same here, compared with the subsequent days
AI engines have reportedly improved greatly in terms of answering medical questions, from 2020 to 2022.
This was assessed by humans.
07:50
Word of the day: predictome pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36574598
> The proposed model acquired 92% (p < .0001) accuracy in schizophrenia prediction, outperforming several other state-of-the-art models applied to unimodal or multimodal data. Post hoc feature analyses uncovered critical neural features and genes/biological pathways associated with schizophrenia.
08:27
Wordle 557 6/6

⬜🟨⬜⬜🟨
⬜⬜⬜🟨⬜
⬜⬜⬜🟨⬜
🟨🟨🟨🟩⬜
🟨🟨🟨⬜🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
08:52
Daily Octordle #338
4️⃣🕚
5️⃣6️⃣
7️⃣8️⃣
9️⃣🕛
Score: 62
 
1 hour later…
10:12
I wonder how early people become aware of being gay.
10:55
Wordle 557 4/6

⬜⬜🟨⬜⬜
🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜
🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
Daily Quordle 338
3️⃣7️⃣
5️⃣6️⃣
quordle.com
Daily Octordle #338
4️⃣🕚
6️⃣5️⃣
7️⃣8️⃣
9️⃣🕛
Score: 62
@Xanne Tie with almost the same order!
 
4 hours later…
14:31
@jlliagre haha exactly.
They (who are Czech), writing in English, essentially blame the Czech media when giving things in English.
> Myth No. 2 "Czech state institutions have solely used 'Czech Republic' in English... the one word equivalent of Czechia has been used in all Germanic languages except for English"
Weirdness or difficulty pronouncing it is no excuse (that is definitely my excuse).
English has cough, though, through tough, hiccough... I think it can handle a little Czechia.
But...
grep -e "^[^A-Z].*[aeiou]chia$" /usr/share/dict/words
abrachia
achromotrichia
alochia
atrichia
blepharosynechia
cacotrichia
centauromachia
hyperglycorrhachia
lochia
macrobrachia
microbrachia
naumachia
oligometochia
oligotrichia
poetomachia
polymetochia
polytrichia
pycnometochia
schizotrichia
sporodochia
synechia
theomachia
trichia
To be frank, honest, open, and with great candor, I admit that this is the first time I've seen any of those words.
But I will try my best to insert 'centauromachia' into a conversation today.
I already have a strategy
Just wait for it.
> cacotrichia
Type Of Speech (noun, verb,...)
1
Definition
No Definitions / Meaning Found for cacotrichia

We couldn't find definitions for cacotrichia you were looking for
Next up: Persian vs Farsi
15:10
#Worldle #341 1/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
Flagged again.
🌎 Dec 28, 2022 🌍
🔥 119 | Avg. Guesses: 5.18
⬜🟥🟥🟩 = 4

globle-game.com
#globle
I got adjacent after the second guess, but puttered around.
Wordle 557 4/6

⬜⬜🟨🟩⬜
⬜⬜⬜⬜⬜
⬜🟨⬜🟩⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
@Mitch You can pronounce "Czech", "Check" and "Slovakia", don't you? I believe it's more of a spelling issue than a pronunciation one. Just do like the French, adapt it to something more friendly. We write it Tchéquie.
15:25
Daily Quordle 338
6️⃣7️⃣
9️⃣4️⃣
quordle.com
@jlliagre And pronounce it shay? ;-)
@Robusto /ʃaj/ ?
@jlliagre Close enough. ^_^
Daily Octordle #338
4️⃣8️⃣
🔟5️⃣
6️⃣7️⃣
9️⃣🕚
Score: 60
@CowperKettle They killed Kenny?
mac(tchrist)% uninames '^\w+[aeiouy]chia\b'
› anterior synechia, posterior synechia ← synechia
‖ Aristolochia [n.]
‖ Batrachia [n. pl.]
chechia [n.]
fechia [n.]
koilonychia [n.]
lepidoˈtrichia ← lepido-
‖ lochia [n. pl.]
‖ lysimachia [n.]
macroˈtrichia ← macro-
‖ matachia [n.]
megalopsychia [n.]
microˈtrichia ← micro-
monomachia [n.]
‖ naumachia [n.]
oligomeˈtochia ← oligo-
‖ onychia [n.]
ophiobaˈtrachia [n. pl.] ← ophio-
‖ pao-chia [n.]
‖ paronychia [n.]
‖ perionychia [n.]
‖ petechia [n.]
‖ poetomachia [n.]
@Mitch You can pronounce IKEA, can't you?
15:40
Gigantomachia?
In Greek and Roman mythology, the Giants, also called Gigantes (Greek: Γίγαντες, Gígantes, singular: Γίγας, Gígas), were a race of great strength and aggression, though not necessarily of great size. They were known for the Gigantomachy (or Gigantomachia), their battle with the Olympian gods. According to Hesiod, the Giants were the offspring of Gaia (Earth), born from the blood that fell when Uranus (Sky) was castrated by his Titan son Cronus.Archaic and Classical representations show Gigantes as man-sized hoplites (heavily armed ancient Greek foot soldiers) fully human in form. Later repr...
@Robusto Yes :)
> alectoromachy [n.]
alectryomachy [n.]
† angeˈlomachy [n.]
batrachomyomachy ← ˈbatracho-
† chiˈromachy [n.]
cynarctomachy [n.]
× demonomachy → demono-
† demoˈnomachy ← demono-
duomachy [n.]
gigantomachy [n.]
† hieromachy [n.]
hiˈppomachy ← hippo-
iconomachy [n.]
logomachy [n.]
monomachy [n.]
† ˈnaumachy [n.]
-omachy ← -machy
† oˈstomachy [n.]
Pneumaˈtomachy ← Pneumatomachian
× pseuchomachy → psychomachia
† ˈpygmachy [n.]
× pyromachy → pyro-
† pyˈromachy ← pyro-
sciamachy [n.]
× sciomachy → sciamachy
Logomachy.
stomach-achey
Coprotaurologomachy.
16:02
@Robusto We pronounce it /t͡ʃeki/.
@tchrist Fighting bullshit with words?
16:19
or fighting bullshit words.
@jlliagre Sure, I was just joking.
Sorry, I don't do jokes.
@Cerberus Or fighting words with bullshit.
@jlliagre You're joking now.
@Robusto All possible, I suppose.
Fighting bulls with word shit.
@Robusto Chez qui ?
16:25
@jlliagre Bulls fighting with shit words.
Bulls shitting with fight words.
16:41
@Robusto Yes. Icky-uh
@Mitch Icky-huh?
Ee-quay-ah
Che?
His sister, Kay Guevara.
More of a Karen
kinda bossy
Cui?
If the frontman for U2 married someone with that name she would be Cui Bono?
Main character for my next murder mystery.
16:49
Good idea.
"What a beautiful name. Is that a family name?"
@Robusto Wait, is Bono his first name or last name?
We didn't get bread in our house unless we helped make it. This was on a knead-to-gnaw basis.
@Mitch Yes.
His "real" name is Paul Hewson.
@Robusto "Mr. Bono? Can I call you just Bono?"
@Robusto oh
it all makes sense now
Hitler
Stalin
@Mitch "Not until I know you better."
16:52
Bono
I know this is six years late to the game but I'm sensing that others found Obama a little thirsty.
re your observances yesterday
@Mitch So "Happy Birthday" fell of the list?
@Mitch Gaius is a man's name.
17:15
I wonder why Bono didn't keep his Steinhegvanhuysenolegbangbangbang nickname.
@tchrist Urgulanilla is a woman's name.
@jlliagre They wanted him to pay for it by the letter.
Make sense
Also cents.
Pennies
or pence
17:18
We don't have pennies in the US. They are properly called cents. But everybody calls them pennies anyway.
Make pence
Mike Pence?
See? It says "ONE CENT" ... not "ONE PENNY"
And WHY the fuck do we still have pennies?
Round everything off to the nearest dollar for cash, I say. Or use a credit card.
If you can't buy anything with one coin, that coin is not necessary.
Nobody says "ONE EUROCENT" and in France, we say 1 CENTIME.
@jlliagre Francly speaking, centimes are kaput.
I haven't been to France since the Euro was adopted. I need to get back there. I was actually going to go in 2020, but then the pandemic struck.
And hasn't really stopped.
Ninth wave here.
17:28
The ninth wave is supposed to be the worst.
The Ninth Wave (Russian: Девятый вал, Dyevyatiy val) is an 1850 painting by Russian-Armenian marine painter Ivan Aivazovsky. It is his best-known work.The title refers to an old sailing expression referring to a wave of incredible size that comes after a succession of incrementally larger waves.It depicts a sea after a night storm and people facing death attempting to save themselves by clinging to debris from a wrecked ship. The debris, in the shape of the cross, appears to be a Christian metaphor for salvation from the earthly sin. The painting has warm tones, which reduce the sea's apparent...
> For the stronger we our houses do build,
The less chance we have of being killed.
> The title refers to an old sailing expression referring to a wave of incredible size that comes after a succession of incrementally larger waves.
@Mitch I was listening to John Hiatt during my runs, and then discovered that George Bush Jr. also had John Hiatt in his jogging mp3 player :)
John Robert Hiatt (born August 20, 1952) is an American singer-songwriter. He has played a variety of musical styles on his albums, including new wave, blues, and country. Hiatt has been nominated for nine Grammy Awards and has been awarded a variety of other distinctions in the music industry. Hiatt was working as a songwriter for Tree International, a record label in Nashville, Tennessee, when his song "Sure As I'm Sittin' Here" was covered by Three Dog Night. The song became a Top 40 hit, earning Hiatt a recording contract with Epic Records. Since then he has released 22 studio albums, t...
@Robusto Most people do not care that much now. There are still many cases but this wave peak seem over. Covid-19 is considered like some kind of flu, not something special anymore. Millions of people got it, more are vaccinated. Many people no more do tests when they are sick with covid symptoms, they just wait to recover and don't tell anyone. Statistics likely underestimate the actual figures.
17:43
No doubt.
I tested positive for Covid but never felt very sick.
18:18
@jlliagre Same here.
18:33
@Robusto I was surprised to hear Elena Herraiz saying La maratón de Madrid, French says Le marathon and it's also masculine for the RAE.
@CowperKettle I don't have a music play list for anything. So no president can claim to be listening to the same things as me.
@jlliagre Multiple people -have- to have done a study of gender of nouns and how they changed or did not among all the varieties of Romance.
eg 'manus (m)' in Latin but la mano (SP), la main (FR)
but I can't think of any others.
though surely every language class has a section on getting gender right and has a list of these (eg between all pairs of FR/SP/LA)
7
Q: Why do many French and Spanish noun cognates have opposing grammatical gender?

user5306While most French/Spanish noun cognates share the same gender (both descending from the same vulgar latin root), there are many exceptions having opposing genders (e.g. la couleur / el color; la douleur / el dolor). What explains this divergence? 1. This Quora answer, Dan Lenski (BA Linguis...

in the usual SO fashion, not giving an actual answer
@Mitch My point was that in that case, that's a gender change in progress. Maratón is still listed as masculine in Spanish dictionaries.
@Mitch Well, you have the Greek influence for /ma/-ending words like idioma which are masculine, and these even extend to words like problema.
19:07
@Mitch Manus is feminine.
@Mitch Are you on drugs? It's also la libido because of course libido is a third-declension feminine noun.
Gender is built into the word. Disregard its outer appearances.
Manus is not strictly of the third declension, though.
Quite.
But libido is.
Indeed.
19:25
Other weird feminines include humus in the second, rus and tellus in the third, and domus wandering all over the place.
Not so clear in this one! ^_^
Jajajaja!
I've always thought of the third as something of a junk declension they used because they just gave up and threw everything else into it whenever something didn't quite fit into the first or second. :) Yet they still needed two more declensions than Ancient Greek, and many exceptions to boot.
@Robusto So she's teaching you that curses should be mumbled. :)
@tchrist Even beeped!
It reminds me La casa de papel. Real life vocabulary.
19:39
@jlliagre If only we'd had little green maratonianos marcianos in that race!
@tchrist ¡Diego Maratona!
20:02
Maratonianos son marcianos, maratonistas son venusianas.
@Cerberus oh. um. hm. Mea culpus. It looks really masculine. Manus manum lavat and all that.
@tchrist looks askance If I don't answer that, is it tacit admission or tacit denial?
Probably a more likely to be accurate guess is that I made a mistake.
Publius Cornelius Tacitus, known simply as Tacitus ( TASS-it-əs, Latin: [ˈtakɪtʊs]; c. AD 56 – c. 120), was a Roman historian and politician. Tacitus is widely regarded as one of the greatest Roman historians by modern scholars.The surviving portions of his two major works—the Annals (Latin: Annales) and the Histories (Latin: Historiae)—examine the reigns of the emperors Tiberius, Claudius, Nero, and those who reigned in the Year of the Four Emperors (69 AD). These two works span the history of the Roman Empire from the death of Augustus (14 AD) to the death of Domitian (96 AD), although there...
20:18
Tacitus should have kept his mouth shut.
"Por qué no tacitus"
tsk tsk
20:41
Sta zittus!
> tacitus (Latin) "that is passed over in silence, done without words, assumed as a matter of course, silent"
@Robusto Yes, it evolved to Sta zitto in modern Italian.
Verb: stare zitto
  1. (intransitive) to be quiet, to shut up
21:00
I've got a sneaky suspicion that trump is doing to try and use chatGPT to get re-elected.
ChatGPT Party
21:39
@user4539917 But ... but ... ChatGPT actually puts coherent sentences together. That is so off-brand for Trump.
@user4539917 How?
True, true, but coherency could be part of his bluff. @Robusto
@Cerberus why don't we put one in here and experiment?
21:59
One what?
ChatGPT bot.
22:24
I didn't follow the Trump bit.
iirc he used bots on twitter
Yeah, teachers will have pay close attention.
And only give out assignments on sensible topics.
Bring back the in-class essay.
22:34
Teachers have a pretty good idea of how their students write. If someone who can't put two sentences together in a coherent manner suddenly starts using ChatGPT, it will be noticed.
I don't think teachers will always know this about all of their pupils.
No, but in the main they will discover the bulk of the cheaters.
Enough to prevent some from blithely assuming ChatGPT is the answer.
I don't know.
There is no foolproof method of catching all cheats all the time, it is true. But writing styles are like fingerprints: each has unique characteristics. Recognizing that is one way that helped catch the Unabomber.
>
In early 1996, an investigator working with Bisceglie contacted former FBI hostage negotiator and criminal profiler Clinton R. Van Zandt. Bisceglie asked him to compare the manifesto to typewritten copies of handwritten letters David had received from his brother. Van Zandt's initial analysis determined that there was better than a 60 percent chance that the same person had written the manifesto, which had been in public circulation for half a year. Van Zandt's second analytical team determined a higher likelihood. He recommended Bisceglie's client contact the FBI immediately.
Yes, and there already is a website where you can check whether a text was written by this particular bot.
But I think it is still a problem for a certain kind of high-school assignments.
Writing about a subject in a superficial way.
22:48
There will always be problems.
@Cerberus What sort of sensible topics would you suggest?
The topics should be specific.
Not: write about the pros and cons of legalising hard drugs.
But: explain to what extent this text by Ovid was influenced by politics, pointing to specific passages.
23:06
Requiring citations with explanations sounds good.
23:20
@Robusto Just require all writing assignments to be written in cursive longhand on actual paper.
The only way is by having them write the essay in class.
That's how we make sure they aren't cheating on exams.
Of course.
So writing in class is the easiest way, but it will take up teaching time.
I'm sorry, but I have nothing but uttermost contempt for academic misconduct.
What do you apologize for?
Though I mentioned high school, not academia.
23:29
I'm a throwback. It's considered normal now.
I think it is less of a problem in serious academic disciplines.
I won't stand for it. You cheat, you get sent to the poor farm for life.
Very American.
> We will not lie, steal, or cheat, nor tolerate among us anyone who does.
When someone commits a sin, destroy him.
Meanwhile:
> A malfunction led to the aircraft landing in the desert, and President Obama briefly considered sending in a Navy SEAL team to blow it up before it fell into the hands of Iranian engineers, senior officials later reported. He decided not to take the risk, and within days the Iranians paraded the drone through the streets of Tehran, a propaganda victory.

But American intelligence officials later concluded that the aircraft likely proved a bonanza for Iranian drone designers, who could reverse engineer the craft.
23:33
The customary penalty for cheating is expulsion. Is it not so at your institution?
In the finals, quite possibly.
But, in any other test, it will be a less severe sanction.
> Edgesource has donated about $2 million in systems, including one called Windtalkers, to help Ukraine locate, identify and track incoming hostile drones more than 20 miles away, while at the same time identifying Ukraine’s own drones in the same airspace, said Joseph Urbaniak, the company’s chief operating officer.

The United States has provided Ukraine with other technology to counter drones, most recently as part of a $275 million shipment of arms and equipment the Pentagon announced on Dec. 9. But American officials have declined to provide details on the specific assistance, citing o
> How common is cheating in high school?

According to the McCabe study, the percentage of cheaters in high school is very high. 95% of respondents (of which there were around 70,000) admitted to breaking the honor code of their institution. 64% of them confessed to cheating during tests and 58% admitted to committing plagiarism.
That's what I mean.
A national failure and indelible disgrace upon the character of the entire nation.
If 95% of them are cheaters, why the fuck bother? Who wants to work with cheaters? Would you want to hire one?
Or have one repair your home, or be your doctor? Trust is impossible.
What horrible families they must come from to produce this!

« first day (4430 days earlier)      last day (787 days later) »