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00:00
merengue ≠ meringue
We say jugement par contumace, related but not the same meaning.
We say jugement par contumace, related but not the same meaning.
Hey, I only posted once.
merengue ≠ meringue
Space-time glitch.
Yup, saw that.
The egg-whites and sugar thing you put on pie is spelled with an I.
> Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French meringue.
Etymology: < French meringue (1691); further etymology uncertain.
Perhaps related to post-classical Latin meringa (in an undated document from Artois cited in Du Cange), and classical Latin merenda (see merenda n.; compare merienda n.), both of which mean ‘afternoon meal’ (without, however, any connotations of delicacy or luxury). For a summary of these and of other explanations which have been advanced see Trésor de la langue française s.v. meringue.
But it's related to merienda, which is kind of snacky.
Like I said, they get to French and give up.
== Français == === Étymologie === (1692) Apparait dans le livre de cuisine Nouvelle instruction pour les confitures, les liqueurs et les fruits par François Massialot. L’origine du mot est controversée [1] : Le polonais murzynka (« négresse ») aurait désigné à l’origine une « meringue au chocolat », est peu probable ; L’hypothèse allemande Meringel, un moment défendue, doit être rejetée car il est établi que c’est Meringel qui vient de meringue ; La filière latine, meringa, terme du bas-latin et forme altérée du latin merenda (« collation du soir »), qui aurait transité par le néerlandai...
I can't read about desserts. Must make supper.
00:25
00:52
> En allemand, une meringue se nomme Baiser (sauf en Suisse) ; le mot est neutre, on dit « das Baiser » ou Küsschen9. Les Luxemburgerli suisses se nommaient originellement des Baisers de Mousse.
The same in Russian.
01:23
@CowperKettle The famous Bons Baisers de Russie :-)
01:58
> - Is it true that all British dishes taste bad?
- Only if prepared in the proper way.
02:21
> A 1930 cartoon by David Low showing in the Irish Free State in 1931 a man arrested for having possession of Marie Stopes literature on birth control-followed by his wife and many children
@jlliagre It's much too late for Sunday dinner. Plus I'm eating alone and it's not on nice dishes.
@CowperKettle "Bad cess to the dirty shpalpeen"
WTS
What could that possibly mean?
I think one of the people is a shpalpeen, and maybe he has a cess that is not particularly good?
> Irish spailpín, a low or mean fellow, orig. a casual farm labourer
The refrain bad cess to someone is like bad luck to or woe unto or may evil take him in Anglo-Irish.
A spailpín (Irish: [ˈsˠpˠalʲpʲiːnʲ]), anglicised as spailpeen or spalpeen, or "wandering landless labourer" was an itinerant or seasonal farmworker in Ireland from the 17th to the early 21st century with the title being personified by Shane O’Neil, a ballybrown man. The term derived from the Irish spailp, meaning "turn, spell, bout."Conditions for such workers were very harsh. They endured hard physical labour, low wages and maltreatment by landowners. According to the Encyclopedia of Irish History and Culture, "(t)heir numbers were greatest during the difficult years of the 1820s and 1830s. On...
02:31
It might be chopped off of success, but they're not sure.
Smelly peons.
cess- pool?
No.
> Etymology: ? for success n., or < cess n.1 2.

Anglo-Irish.

In phrase bad cess to = ‘bad luck to, evil befall’.
1859 Punch 17 Dec. Carlisle and Russell—bad cess to their clan!
1860 S. Lover Legends & Stories Ireland (ed. 10) 313 Bad cess to you, can't you say what you're bid.
1887 H. Caine Deemster II. xxviii. 267 Bad sess to the women, the idle, shoulderin' craythurs.
1995 E. Brophy Sunday Tribune 6 Aug. in B. Share Slanguage 9/2 ‘Dinny : Well, bad cess to them anywa', sure they haven't even topped the TAMs once yet and we're [the TV serial Glenroe] always doing it!’
> "I am sorry that there should be propaganda in favour of miscegenation in North America as I am sure it can do nothing but harm. Is it beyond human endeavour to give and justly administer equal rights to all citizens without fooling ourselves that these are equivalent items?" (Ronald Fisher, founder of modern statistics)
> †2. Ireland. The obligation to supply the soldiers and the household of the lord deputy with provisions at prices ‘assessed’ or fixed by government; hence loosely used for military exactions generally. Obsolete exc. Historical.
@CowperKettle One wonders which terms those would be.
@CowperKettle link? (Fisher was not a -founder-, he was definitely a giant)
(and well known ... bigot)
02:36
Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher (17 February 1890 – 29 July 1962) was a British polymath who was active as a mathematician, statistician, biologist, geneticist, and academic. For his work in statistics, he has been described as "a genius who almost single-handedly created the foundations for modern statistical science" and "the single most important figure in 20th century statistics". In genetics, his work used mathematics to combine Mendelian genetics and natural selection; this contributed to the revival of Darwinism in the early 20th-century revision of the theory of evolution known as the modern...
I was reading the Wiki article :0)
All quotes from there
He was for fair and equal rights to all.
But he thought that different groups of people must differ in their gene variations.
Which is logical.
Probably not the ways he was thinking though.
@CowperKettle OK the wiki text seems OK.
He was just trying to view it from a statistician's viewpoint.
"Revival" of Darwin? What happened to him?
But that phrasing seems hyperbolic: "(Ronald Fisher, founder of modern statistics)"
02:40
Oh, that's because I'm not a specialist in statistics :)
I see in the refs of that article that a someone uses that phrasing in the title of an article. It's very jarring.
I just came across his name many times while translating medical texts
It'd be like saying that Chomsky is the founder of modern linguistics.
@CowperKettle Oh, he a a big deal.
A genius
and really the main guy
1500 BC, Susa, Iraq
A hedgehog on his own carriage.
@tchrist neo darwinism, darwinism supported by the mechanism of genetics.
02:46
> Anders Hald called Fisher "a genius who almost single-handedly created the foundations for modern statistical science",[7] while Richard Dawkins named him "the greatest biologist since Darwin":
he was a big deal.
he was the one that came up with the threshold of p<.05 for 'statistically significant'
(because statistician's couldn't figure out what to do with p-values, so he sort of dumbed it down for them)
@tchrist's comments made me look up t-voicing (which for many AmE speakers makes "latter" and "ladder" homophones). It's actually not that /t/ sometimes gets replaced with /d/, it's that sometimes both /t/ and /d/ get replaced with /ɾ/, a tap/flap instead of a stop.
@alphabet That sounds right.
At least for most speakers (including myself, paying closer attention).
Anyway, that is why "that is" and "Dad is" have the same second consonant sound for me--it's not really that I say /d/ in "that is," since there's no actual stop there. It's that I say /ɾ/ in both--the second "d" in "Dad is" also isn't /d/.
03:10
It's not just America. It's just drawn more attention here.
Even King Charles flaps his forties.
There no unvoiced stop there in the middle of that word when he says it. Nor you.
A recording of /ˈlætɚ ˈlædɚ ˈlæɾɚ/: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
Greek to me.
An ambulance call record, from Twitter. "Just back from the war; thinks that he is still at war; wants to cut off someone's head; transfer to no. 102, Romanteyeva on duty"
It also displays the house and the apartment number, but I cut that out.
Oh I hope nobody gets in trouble for the war thing.
It's from a Twitter account of a former ambulance nurse. She posted this and said "Phew! I quit my job just in time!"
Yeah, people often fail to come back from wars compos mentis.
Or at all.
04:07
It was reposted by a psychiatrist in Moscow, with a comment "I feel like it's just the beginning".
I'm surprised the ambulance nurse is a girl. Often they give those jobs to guys here.
@CowperKettle I bet he's right.
Here, only psychiatry ambulances are predominantly male, and the males are 2 meters high there.
This nurse was having a lot of problems, with the pay just enough to rent a room in Moscow.
@CowperKettle I can see why.
So she left nursing and took some other job, despite being in love with nurse work.
Nursing is constantly underpaid everywhere.
But that sounded like a psychiatric ambulance call.
Or should have been.
04:11
Yes, probably a friend leaked the call to her.
I know more than one person personally who's come back from war deployments quite altered.
We were having a bicycling picnic in 2015, and there was one man who formerly was in the Chechen War. Somebody brought along an air gun to shoot at random things, and when the former soldier looked at how people were playing with the air gun, he went into some delirious state for a while. Murmuring something.
I also know some who are ok.
Those in the Navy, mainly.
Infantry and marines, not so much.
Chumming (military, aviation, historical) The use of a lit aeroplane to draw enemy fire so that the enemy can be destroyed by another aeroplane whose lights are off.
> A recent Pew Research study has found that 63% of men under 30 describe themselves as single, compared with 34% of women in the same age bracket. Cue a lot of dramatic headlines about, as the Hill put it, the “larger breakdown in the social, romantic and sexual life of the American male”. I imagine the Hill is referring to the heterosexual American male here, but Pew also looked at people who identify as LGB and found 62% of LGB men report being single compared to 37% of LGB women.
I'm pretty sure I no longer understand English.
What's a lesbian man?
That's from the Guardian. I should go to bed.
04:23
Lesbian-Gay-Bisexual
LGB is just easier to type, probably.
Some 70% of men with sex-chromosome aneuploidy remain undiagnosed, due to unspecific features and symptoms.
I just don't think men get to be lesbian. Lesbians are gay women, not gay men.
Or were in the small fishing village where I grew up 500 years ago.
The Siwa Oasis (Arabic: واحة سيوة, Wāḥat Sīwah, IPA: [ˈwæːħet ˈsiːwæ]) is an urban oasis in Egypt; between the Qattara Depression and the Great Sand Sea in the Western Desert, 50 km (30 mi) east of the Libyan border, and 560 km (348 mi) from the capital. Its fame primarily from its ancient role as the home to an oracle of Ammon, the ruins of which are a popular tourist attraction which gave the oasis its ancient name Oasis of Amun Ra, a major Egyptian deity. == Geography == The Siwa oasis is in a deep depression that reaches below sea level, to about −19 metres (−62 ft). To the west the Jaghbub...
> Siwa is of special interest to anthropologists and sociologists because of its historical acceptance of male homosexuality and even rituals celebrating same-sex marriage - traditions that the Egyptian authorities have sought to repress.
Oh weird, never heard of it.
04:27
> The German egyptologist Georg Steindorff explored the Oasis in 1900 and reported that homosexual relations were common and often extended to a form of marriage: "The feast of marrying a boy was celebrated with great pomp, and the money paid for a boy sometimes amounted to fifteen pounds, while the money paid for a woman was a little over one pound."
@tchrist There are, in fact, about 40,000 Lesbian men: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lesbos
@alphabet Oh Hillary you're always hilarious!
> The Ancient Egyptian name of the oasis was sḫt jꜣmw, meaning "Field of Trees".
> During his campaign to conquer the Persian Empire, Alexander the Great reached the oasis, supposedly by following birds across the desert.
Maybe something left behind by Alexander. :)
Jinx!!!
> For that same groan doth put this in my mind,
My grief lies onward, and my joy behind.
04:33
Welcome to life.
I always confuse epiphysis, metaphysis, and diaphysis
"meta" means "in the midst of", but it can mean also "after", like in metaphrase
> I'm somewhat dull still in the manly art
Of phrase and metaphrase. Why, any man
Can carve a score of white Loves out of snow,
As Buonarroti down in Florence there,
And set them on the wall in some safe shade
05:16
Also, other word of the day: metaphysician: someone who studies metaphysics. For some reason, the term isn't metaphysicist, even though physics and metaphysics share the same root. Argh.
Source of this problem: "metaphysician" is a much older term than "physicist." When physics became a major discipline of its own, "physician" was already taken, so they had to go with "physicist" instead: etymonline.com/word/physicist
 
2 hours later…
07:08
Wordle 618 4/6

⬜⬜🟨⬜🟩
⬜🟨⬜⬜⬜
🟨🟨⬜⬜⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
 
1 hour later…
09:32
@alphabet Etymologians got it right.
 
1 hour later…
10:42
> 'A True Taste of India': German Chancellor Scholz Enjoys 'Delicious' Cup of Chai at Street Corner in Delhi
@CowperKettle Cool
I saw a documentary in which Indians drank tea from disposable cups made of some clay, so they could be thrown out the train's window when no longer needed, and did not pollute the environment.
I believe it was aired on BBC World many years ago
@Vikas Behemoth loves to lie on his back
I think I drank in that type of cup.
Clay cup.
@CowperKettle Fortunately, trains don't go too fast in India, but I still wouldn't like to receive such a cup in my face while walking near a railway...
 
1 hour later…
12:07
@Robusto interesting behavior
 
2 hours later…
14:14
@Vikas Does that mean that you vaguely remember drinking tea once in a clay cup?
14:45
@Mitch Yes.
Around ten years ago maybe.
My mom sometimes cooks Dal (lentils) in a clay pot.
15:28
#Worldle #402 1/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐⭐🪙
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
🌎 Feb 27, 2023 🌍
🔥 45 | Avg. Guesses: 4.86
⬜⬜🟥🟩 = 4

globle-game.com
#globle
Wordle 618 5/6

⬛⬛⬛🟨⬛
🟨⬛🟨🟨⬛
⬛🟩🟩🟩🟩
⬛🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
Why do I always pick the strangest words first in a one-letter fill?
Daily Quordle 399
2️⃣6️⃣
3️⃣9️⃣
quordle.com
Coulda been a contender.
@Robusto
@parz Aye.
I hate material girls.
You know how hallways are usually thin?
Just recently, or all your life?
All my life.
15:42
So ... not a Madonna fan.
As I was saying, | | is a hallway.
And these girls were walking side by side, arms interlocked…
so you can’t get past them, no?
and they were like |ooo|
@parz So ... you hate girls? Cuz that's how they roll.
Nah, most girls don’t do that.
And guess what they were doing?
THEY WERE GOSSIPING ABOUT SOMEONE RIGHT BEHIND THEM
15:44
So ... you hate high school.
Yep.
I don't blame you.
Fruitlands was a utopian agrarian commune established in Harvard, Massachusetts, by Amos Bronson Alcott and Charles Lane in the 1840s, based on transcendentalist principles. An account of its less-than-successful activities can be found in Transcendental Wild Oats by Alcott's daughter Louisa May Alcott.Lane purchased what was known as the Wyman farm and its 90 acres (36 ha), which also included a dilapidated house and barn. Residents of Fruitlands ate no animal substances, drank only water, bathed in unheated water and "no artificial light would prolong dark hours or cost them the brightness of...
Transcendentalists were weird.
The commune failed, presumably, because nobody wanted to be harnessed to a plow.
"I'll write the poetry!"
"I'll paint the landscapes!"
"But who will till the soil?"
"Oh ... that ..."
It's like programmers who don't like to write documentation and comments.
My comments get progressively less helpful as I code.
@CowperKettle Comments are only necessary when the code is unreadable. Which it shouldn't be.
I once lampooned a verbose fellow programmer by commenting every line in a piece of his code. Things like "increment one" and so forth. The humor was lost on him.
15:51
Eurovision Rankings
And this is the consensus.
(or at least, the consensus of people I know)
> Telogen mania represents obsessive-compulsive fits of fierce hair brushing in women.
user image
2
> The biggest challenge at Fruitlands was farming. The community had arrived at the farm a month behind the planting schedule and only about 11 acres (4.5 ha) of land were arable.
The decision not to use animal labor on the farm proved to be the undoing of the commune, combined with the fact that many of the men of the commune spent their days teaching or philosophizing instead of working in the field. Using only their own hands, the Fruitlands residents were incapable of growing a sufficient amount of food to get them through the winter.
Bunch of insufferable vegans.
Daily Octordle #399
6️⃣🕛
7️⃣3️⃣
4️⃣8️⃣
9️⃣🕐
Score: 62
Coulda been really good.
16:32
@Vikas That's really interesting because I've seen a similar thing to @CowperKettle. It makes it look like people all day long in India are drinking tea then smashing their clay cups.
I'm exaggerating for fun but the impression (not being in India) is that it is a fairly common occurrence there. Do you think it is more common in rural areas, or more common in say a public market (with a tea stall) so that only people who go to the market and get a tea to go get the clay cup?
(I would expect that at home, people keep there cups for as long as possible)
@Mitch hiya
@Robusto It's too bad the starboard doesn't display the image, only the boring link.
@parz Ahoy!
As Alexander Graham Bell would have preferred we answer our phones with.
I ranked Eurovision songs!
@Mitch You're so picky.
45 mins ago, by parz
user image
Can I quote a quote?
16:39
@CowperKettle Do you want Nabokov to write a critique of his own books?
Actually... he probably would have liked to do that.
@parz Try it
@parz Wait, that ranking was by you?
I thought it was by voting.
The EU government is formed by a representative election, not unilateral choice.
@Robusto "The community was short-lived and lasted only seven months" - they gave up too quickly.
They should have tried a few winters first.
@Mitch They would have starved to death.
Lost half of their group to 1) death 2) desertion, 3) philosophy
@Robusto Have you heard about "literate programming"? Basically: all of the code is a comment by default.
@alphabet That's how I always coded. I can't recall hearing the term.
You still have to be able to read code, however.
It was an invention of Don Knuth's
So you could write your code with comments in LaTeX so that you could compile to an executable -and- to a PDF of the docs with the same text.
It has not exactly taken the world by storm
16:48
@Mitch Yeah, I fell asleep in the middle of that sentence.
@Robusto As do most people reading comments.
I only ever comment when something goes against expectation.
Which is rare.
A maxim states that it's harder to read code than to write it. I'm not so sure about that.
@parz So what is the problem with those countries that have not submitted yet?
Also, why hasn't any country made an entry of dixie land jazz?
Or hip hop?
Hmm, Spelling Bee accepts nouvelle but not nacelle? How dare they!
Or country western?
@Robusto Yeah that was weird.
'nouvelle' ain't English.
16:53
@Mitch Because Europeans always clap on the beat. They're kinda simple in that way.
We should form a demonstration in front of the NYT building
Word.
We'll threaten them with our NPR mugs
Don't forget the tote bags!
And write a strongly worded letter
@Robusto What do you think we brought those mugs in?
16:55
@Mitch Strongly worded but unfailingly polite.
@Robusto We're not heathens
Or philistines
or troglodytes
Or Republicans.
flagged
shudders at the thought
SB should accept warlady and darkwarlady.
Funny, just writing those down made a pangram spring into my head.
@Mitch You know everything, right? So why does Google keep asking me for my birth date? Why can't they just stop bothering me?
@Robusto bleep
bloop
Yes bleep I know bloop everything.
ding
@Robusto What -is- your birthdate?
Also the last four digits of your SSN.
We already know the first 12
Also we already know your entire family tree. You thought that Ancestry.com DNA test was for -you-?
haha ha ahahahha ha
haha
17:07
@Mitch Well, that's the point, isn't it? Google already knows everything about me.
@Robusto But you already know the answer to that.
Yes. It was an academic question.
In the form you're filling out, the DOB has not been given a class id label.
So it is not autofilling it for you.
So if you're filling it out again, it's because google wants to make sure that -you- know it still.
stubbornly resists
Sometimes on websites that I have no idea about that make you register, I'll put in a bogus DOB
which of course I can't remember
I think I did that with facebook?
It may have caused problems.
But like any self-respecting teenager, I haven't visited FB after I became a teenager.
17:11
@Mitch Yeah, so do I. I make myself 21 and ROT-13 my birthday (well, not really, but I do transpose it by six months so that I can remember it). There should be an option to select "NOYFB" ...
from the ages of 9 to 12 -everybody- wants facebook. Then once it becomes 'legal', totally uncool man.
@Robusto None Of Your FaceBook
None of your effing bidness.
@Robusto I sometimes think really hard about algorithmically manipulating PHI in documents in order to anonymize them but preserve the rough correlations.
Then then I stop. I'm not sure there's a good reason to bother.
Maybe to fool the training algorithm, but not induce spurious correlations?
I don't care if Google has a bunch of spurious correlations.
I imagine their databases are full of those.
@Robusto "Of course I'm concerned"
17:17
I had a facebook account for a couple years, then deleted it with extreme prejudice.
@Mitch yes, it’s by me
and the countries that haven’t submitted yet haven’t finished their national selections
Didn't Darwin write a treatise on national selection?
2
@Robusto Just so you know, they don't care if you've deleted it or not. They still -have- the info. -You- just can't access it anymore.
Survival of the fittest for EV songs?
@Mitch I know, I know.
In fact, the fact that you've deleted it has put you on their list of malcontents.
17:20
They'd have had it anyway, because my wife is still on FB.
Whoa, SB doesn't accept "laddy"? How dare they!
Malcontentment is soon to be criminalized (that word has been removed from Spelling Bee's dictionary)
@Robusto Oh, they dare.
Nouvelle is fine but laddy is a bridge too far. Fine.
Let's remember that "dadly" is the opposite of "deadly" ... ok?
I'm pretty sure no one is curating their dictionary.
@Robusto it's not momly?
@Mitch That too.
I still like darkwarlady. Very evocative.
@Mitch It's not that common actually. Seen in a particular place only. At that time I read about in a newspaper. And I probably encountered it when I was at a railway station.
(Not to be confused with metro station).
I mean long distance trains railway station.
Elon Musk is busy sharing memes on Twitter.
17:33
See? There's your darkwarlady.
Bayonetta, mi amor.
She's like a librarian who kills you if your books are overdue.
I presume the feathers are a kind of camouflage.
@Vikas Got it.
Got it.
17:50
@Mitch Nice.
See, darkwarlady is a thing.
Sometimes I think the only one who really understands me is DALL-E.
and those examples are pretty much what we imagine with the (non)word.
@Robusto You're not the only one who think they're the only one.
@Mitch Yes.
I think we should write that strongly worded letter to NYT now.
"What's wrong with darkwarlady? Is it because she's black?"
snort
They can't say it's not a word because that would be triggering.
Exactly.
To all the darkwarladies
Also their comrades, the darkwarladles
What else are the darkwarladies going to serve their soup with?
17:55
Darkwarladies have servants who serve the soup.
Well paid serv ers
I suppose calling them "idiot-servants" would be triggering too.
haha we're like Waldorf and Astoria telling kids to get a job.
OK, but I get to be Astoria. Waldorf is kind of a dunce.
@Robusto I'm proud of being an idiot. So you're triggering me by assuming people would be triggered by it.
17:58
pulls trigger but gun just goes click
@Robusto He's in his salad days
He's kind of a Walnut himself.
@Robusto The gun was triggered
Let's not go off half-cocked.
pass
Now your turn again
18:13
Sorry, I had a momentary lapse of piano playing.
I have a lesson/coaching session today, so I need to be loose but not overworked. Just a play-through so I'll make sure when I forget something important it won't be because I didn't work at it.
19:31
@Robusto I like how Nature titles always sound like boring empty clickbait BS that promise something crazy is true, and that when you delve further into the articles, they become much more interesting but not making the original claim quite true
Thanks Goku I guess
"State of Pennsylvania" => "Commonwealth of Pennsylvania" — shoover Feb 23 at 16:56
I don't get it. What's so important about referring to it as "Commonwealth"?
@Robusto I have 1/100th of her hair and it never looks that tidy
20:09
@Robusto So basically docs are gonna say it's all your fault.
@M.A.R. Forget it Jake, it's ELU town.
All Stackexchange (and the internet) is a place to be pedantic and trivia-mongering. Pennsylvania happens to be officially referred to a 'commonwealth' as opposed to a 'state'. I'm sure there are some legal ramifications but I have no idea what those could possibly be. Some more pedants over at wikipedia probably will tell you everything you wish you didn't know. But leaving out the parts that would actually answer you question.
Have you seen Chinatown?
1) It's a sordid film noir shot during the day
2) You learn a lot about the intricacies of water rights.
If only the Israelis and Palestinians would watch that movie together.
 
1 hour later…
21:27
@Mitch That's only about 25% correct, or possibly its square. Both thence and therefrom are from OED Frequency Band 5, which is hardly rare by any stretch of imagination. The OED says that thence is (Now chiefly literary), but therefrom they call formal or archaic. Only once you threw out all literature and court-like formalities would these be unseen, so the only place they would both be rare is in casual or spoken contexts. — tchrist ♦ 42 mins ago
@Mitch I'm linking that ^^^^ comment shown above here because I'm going to delete it.
22:17
@Mitch Of course.
> Different brain areas become myelinated at different times. For example, the brain’s language areas undergo myelination during the first 13 years. Completed insulation of the axons consolidates these language skills but makes it more difficult to learn a second language. With greater myelination, however, comes diminished plasticity as a myelin coating inhibits the growth of new connections (Dobbs, 2012).
Nothing we didn't already know. Except for the myelination part.
@M.A.R. Yeah. All titles are required to be clickbait now, I guess.
@M.A.R. You need to see Darkwarlady's stylist, clearly.
22:39
@tchrist 1) My library discontinued their free online access to OED, so I don't see which band these words are in.
1a) Actually...even though they state the definition of the bands, do they have in their online viewer a statement of the band? Oh, yes, if memory serves, but they give some dots with dots filled in up to their band.
1b) anyway, that should be universal (at least on par with IPA for pronunciation)
2) I was playing fast and loose (as though those are different) with both terms (archaic/rare, which also I vaguely remember OED being a little loose on, maybe fast too). THere's only so many characters in a comment to get across an idea quickly.
Which direction are the bands? Is 1 the most frequent and 7 or 8 the least? or is band 1 like words that were used once and then never again?
@Mitch 1 is the rarest
And I thought I have a link that always works.

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