Is it that Turning test you guys are trying on me with? I used to believe Turning test is, as the name implies, about seeing if the entity is able to turn around a few times without falling over. Which is obviously something no robot has ever been able to do, and something every single real human person is able to do 100% time without failure.
Etymology of the day: bâton -- Inherited from Old French baston, probably from a Vulgar Latin bastōnem, itself a modification of Late Latin bastum, or possibly noun use of the verb *bastāre, from Ancient Greek βαστάζω (bastázō). Compare Italian bastone.
@NickAlexeev Interesting, it's a French leave in English, Spanish, Portuguese and partially in German but an English leave in Russian, Czech, Hungarian, Italian, Polish, Romanian, Ukranian.
@user402514 OMG it's the Tuning test. There's a interface that you see if the other person, well if they're a person or not by how well they can stay in tune. That's what AI -means-.
@jlliagre awesome health care for those.making it to >= 80
This passage is from the book IT by Stephen king
As Mellon and Hagarty passed, each with his arm linked about the other's waist, Webby
Garton yelled out: 'I ought to make you eat that hat, you fucking ass-bandit!'
Mellon turned toward Garton, fluttered his eyes flirtatiously, and said: 'If you w...
I don't think it's offensive, but I think the asker just wants to ask about sex because they're 13 and think it's hilarious to pretend to be confused about this.
Alternatively, I'm sure there's some EFL teacher who thought It would be a good reading assignment. Better than Dickens, who (going by ELL questions) seems to forced upon every student at some point.
@alphabet Speaking of fuses in the heads. I've repaired a Chinese laser cutter once. It had a 5mm steel dowel instead of the fuse. When I tried to take it out, it has melted the plastic holder that it was in.
@MichaelRybkin A well written program properly handles many exceptions so they are kind of part of the plan. Unlike checked exceptions, unexpected exceptions are things that happen but were not anticipated, like actually trying to divide by zero.
@MichaelRybkin First, you almost always want to say 'according to plan' (no article) unless your context really specifies a particular literal plan.
Next, the statement is fine and idiomatic English -but- not the usual way you would say it.
The normal way to say it is "Exceptions are things that don't happen according to plan."
Saying "happen not according" is as I said natural English but -poor- English, not exactly uneducated but as though you didn't think through the sentence before hand but somehow realized what you had to say in the middle and fixed things up at the last moment.
One could make a case that the sentence you gave is intentionally saying 'happen not according' to delay the negation for effect, but that is just not as common as saying it 'don't happen according'.
I hope that makes sense.
It's just a more detailed example of what I said before, that there are degrees of grammaticality.
Which is to say that your sentence (without 'the') is grammatical (sounds fine), but it is -more- grammatical to say 'don't happen according to plan' (or at least more natural).
@Vikas Actually "Exceptions are the things..." and "Exceptions are things" while having minutely barely distinguishable meanings, are both equally (and very) acceptable. (ie the reasoning for 'the plan' vs just 'plan' is not the same). I don't feel any reference to anything specific or referred to prior with 'the things'.
@MichaelRybkin It's fine, either in speech or writing. There are many different ways to say this, but anyone here who hears or reads that sentence in the proper context would not raise an eyebrow at it.
@jlliagre I mean the explanation works in the US where there are only railroad stations in the very center of high population density which heavily favors the left.
Word of the morrow (two years hence): semiquincentennialn half of five hundred years. It will be how old the US will be on July 4, 2026 — if there is a US by then, that is.
I've seen so many clips of Jensen Huang (NVidia) and so many graphs of their value passing Apple and Tesla and the economy of India that I don't think that can be sustained.
@Robusto They're covering a lot of stuff, like the 'enshittification of the internet'.
@Mitch Well, it's definitely true. What happens when the world wakes up to the fact that the Web is no longer 1) new and exciting, 2) actually useful beyond question, 3) always growing in utility and value, and 4) actually worth the trouble?
Walker X excels in flexibility and motion control, performing intricate movements with precise balance. It can handle up to 22 pounds (10 kilograms) and walk while carrying 6.6 pounds (3 kilograms) in each hand.
dia- + arthrosis
diarthrosis (plural diarthroses)
(anatomy) A joint that can move freely in various planes
Synonyms: abarticulation, synovial joint
Hyponyms: cyclarthrosis, enarthrosis, ginglymus
diarthrotic