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00:00
1
A: (How) can I use a color as an adverb?

Janus Bahs JacquetNo, there is no such adverb Adverbs can have lots of different meanings depending on what they’re derived from, what constructions they’re used in, and many other factors. The names of colours do not readily lend themselves to adverbs in English at all. Words like redly and bluely are attested, b...

That merits higher marks. I bet people don't realize where he's coming from about "instrumental object".
Punctuation in Ethiopian:
፠ section mark
፡ word separator
። full stop (period)
፣ comma
፤ semicolon
፥ colon
፦ preface colon (introduces speech from a descriptive prefix)
፧ question mark
፨ paragraph separator
Sanskrit, Old English, Russian, and Finnish all have instrumental cases. PIE's mutated into Latin's ablative.
Hmm there is a lot of similarity to our marks.
U+1360 ‭ ፠  ETHIOPIC SECTION MARK
U+1361 ‭ ፡  ETHIOPIC WORDSPACE
U+1362 ‭ ።  ETHIOPIC FULL STOP
U+1363 ‭ ፣  ETHIOPIC COMMA
U+1364 ‭ ፤  ETHIOPIC SEMICOLON
U+1365 ‭ ፥  ETHIOPIC COLON
U+1366 ‭ ፦  ETHIOPIC PREFACE COLON
U+1367 ‭ ፧  ETHIOPIC QUESTION MARK
U+1368 ‭ ፨  ETHIOPIC PARAGRAPH SEPARATOR
Those are all the punctuation in the Unicode Ethiopic script. Yes, even the woldspace is Punctuation not Space.
U+037E ‭ ;  GREEK QUESTION MARK
U+0387 ‭ ·  GREEK ANO TELEIA
Isn't Greek question mark deprecated? IIRC, using plain ASCII semicolon instead is encouraged.
00:10
> The functions of the Proto-Indo-European instrumental case were taken over by the dative, so that the Greek dative has functions belonging to the Proto-Indo-European dative, instrumental, and locative. This is the case with the bare dative, and the dative with the preposition σύν sýn "with".
 ;  037E        GREEK QUESTION MARK
        = erotimatiko
        * sentence-final punctuation
        * 003B is the preferred character
        x (question mark - 003F)
        : 003B semicolon
Yes.
You can't stop people from not using the preferred characters.
 "  0022        QUOTATION MARK
        = double quote
        * neutral (vertical), used as opening or closing quotation mark
        * preferred characters in English for paired quotation marks are 201C & 201D
        * 05F4 is preferred for gershayim when writing Hebrew
 #  0023        NUMBER SIGN
        = pound sign (weight)
        = hashtag, hash
        = crosshatch, octothorpe
        * for denoting musical sharp 266F is preferred
 '  0027        APOSTROPHE
        = apostrophe-quote (1.0)
 ·  0387        GREEK ANO TELEIA
        * functions in Greek like a semicolon
        * 00B7 is the preferred character
        : 00B7 middle dot
 ’  2019        RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK
        = single comma quotation mark
        * this is the preferred character to use for apostrophe
 “  201C        LEFT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK
        = double turned comma quotation mark
        * this is the preferred character (as opposed to 201F)
 ₤  20A4        LIRA SIGN
        * intended for lira, but not widely used
        * preferred character for lira is 00A3
        x (pound sign - 00A3)
        x (turkish lira sign - 20BA)
 Ω  2126        OHM SIGN
 ㈞ 321E        PARENTHESIZED KOREAN CHARACTER O HU
        * preferred spelling for the name is ohu
        # 0028 110B 1169 1112 116E 0029
Yeah; Romanization of Korean texts shall conserve spaces.
 ꝥ  A765        LATIN SMALL LETTER THORN WITH STROKE
        * Old English, Old Norse
        * representative glyph is preferred in Old English text
        * Old Norse fonts show a more horizontal stroke
 〞 301E        DOUBLE PRIME QUOTATION MARK
        * this is a mistaken analogue to 201D; 301F is preferred
        x (right double quotation mark - 201D)
        x (double prime - 2033)
01:12
@tchrist Erotimatiko sounds like a math sex game or something ;-)
@jlliagre That’s the Greeks for you.
Erôtaô means ask.
Yes, no Eros here.
No, indeed.
Perhaps the two are related?
After all, desire means lack.
Perhaps ask means long for means desire?
> Etymology
The Greek ἔρως, éros meaning 'desire' (whence eroticism) comes from the verb ἔραμαι, éramai and in infinitive form ἐρᾶσθαι, erãsthai 'to desire, love', itself of uncertain etymology. R. S. P. Beekes speculates a Pre-Greek origin.
> ἐρωτάω
From Proto-Hellenic *erwomai, from Proto-Indo-European *h₁rou-neh₂-, which is probably related to Icelandic raun (“trial, test”).
01:23
Oh, well found, where did you find it?
I see.
01:50
Clay lies still but blood's a rover
Heh does it read like a dialogue to you?
 
1 hour later…
03:18
You know how everyone seems to call it twitter still?
So, if you follow that link even they still blink through the twitter.com domain name.
 
8 hours later…
11:13
Wordle 1,220 5/6

⬛⬛🟩🟨⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
11:55
@CowperKettle I've never thought of that word as regional (to Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, or anywhere).
12:52
@tchrist Was just reading this:
1
Q: Pronunciation: Incredulous vs incredulity

ryvantageI understand the word incredulous has a soft g in place of or augmenting the soft d. So, it's in-credge-you-less not in-cred-you-less Google (https://www.google.com/search?q=incredulous | /inˈkrejələs,iNGˈkrejələs/) agrees and the pronunciation has this soft g sound. But the word "incredulity,"...

@Araucaria-Him silly willies
And was wondering whether you have the affricate in incredulity
I can if I want to. :)
It's not a word that graces me lips so often as does incredulous.
Which clearly has the affricate.
Do you have the yod, usually?
Yes.
Oh you mean /dju/ or /du/.
12:54
@tchrist Yup
It can be hard not to affricate /dj/.
The historic trend from Latin is that /tj/ types palatalize.
@tchrist Yes, I think most of us on this side have the affricate there, but that's obviously because we've got the yod
Yod mutates almost anything it touches.
Which is why bastion rhymes with Sebastian, and neither has /t/.
I couldn't imagine not having the affricate in the second cluster of schedule.
It's very hard to say otherwise.
Yes, quite
Note that yod-mutation is hardly unique to English.
It's a weak point in the human articulation system.
I know Janet would know this, but I don't know what all you've studied yourself, but just look at what yod mutations have done from Classical Latin through to Modern Romance.
EG: L clavis > PT chave, ES llave, IT chiave versus FR clé.
Only French didn't palatalize that.
Well, at least in "spelling".
CL-, PL- went through a yod phase.
13:01
@tchrist I don't believe that.
I actually studied this in grad school.
Trolling through the stacks of Romance Philology journals for yod mutations.
@Mitch Cretchin!
@tchrist snort
French also didn't lose the PL- in pluie, pleuvoir but the rest did, passing L through yod and thence often to some palatalized and possibly affricated consonant.
I don't know that there's any theory for why what came to be called Standard French resisted yod here, but there are differences in this regard with Norman French IIRC.
Russian seems to resists strongly any palatalization... or rather half of the vowels get a yod beforehand and it doesn't force a change in the consonant (even though they call that palatalization).
Yes, the palatal version of things is a strong phonemic distinction to the Rus.
Whereas in English, it sometimes is and sometimes isn't, doncha know.
13:11
eg день (= day) is /djin/ not /dʒin/
I think
SEE ALSO: gaseous, ocean.
I kinda think that 'incredulity', since it has stress on -du- it's not very strongly /-dju-/. I tend towards /-du-/
But that would be stoopod.
How's the knee, pal? @tchrist
@tchrist But also very American
13:13
@Mitch Don't repeat myself.
Chewpidity.
Wait... is palatalization adding a jod or the conversion of the stop-yod pair into an affricate?
or both?
Innackrity battles Ackrisy.
These isyous have no coors.
Yod is a kanser!
For weak is the flesh and lax the spirit.
Ye old internet doth not strengthen thee?
Time is the rock tumbler that polishes off the pointy bits of our lexicon.
Nice
13:24
Repetition is the polisher of all stones.
Have you tried the GPT YouTube summarizer @Mitch
13:47
A rolling stone bathers no beatle.
@Araucaria-Him Somewhat apropos, is unpathed /ʌnˈpæðd/ or /ʌnˈpæθt/ for you?
@think_meaning_builds I think I've tried some kind of video summarizer but I can't remember which one.
My professional opinion is that they're 'OK'.
(And I don't care about minor matters of aspiration or lack of release on the final stop.)
@Mitch are those Schrodinger cats in your avatar?
@Mitch Yer ducats’re jisht shplendid!!
13:56
Which is to say the usual, if you don't know anything about the subject then the summarizer will do a not unreasonable job, but if you -do- know something, it makes all sorts of mistakes and can easily skip over very important details.
@think_meaning_builds Not at all. These cats are true, live, logical cats, not hypothetical cats.
@tchrist There are matters minor melodic and matters minor harmonic and matters minor natural. Of which do you speak?
In their world, -you- are in a closed box with a vial of poison gas, and if the cat opens the box and the bial doesn't break, they'll break the vial anyway.
@Mitch so it's a statement of set theory?
@Mitch Deine beiden Katzen?
@Robusto The demented sevenths are always the best!
@think_meaning_builds Ooooh. You're getting closer. The symbols on the outer box is a formula in a famous theorem of proof logic (do you recognize it @DannyuNDos?)
14:03
to say of nothing of the election
::says nothing::
::not:: ::a:: ::thing::
Pedantically, formal logic is considered to have 5 separate areas: proof theory (things like proof ordinals, Goedel's theorem, proof algorithms), model theory (compactness, stability, reverse mathematics), set theory (ZFC, cardinality), computability theory (Turing machines, P!=NP). But of course they all overlap considerably.
::no:: ::thing::
@tchrist Nah... I don't know how they got those cats in there. Easier to get a rich man into heaven or something.
I used to have two black cats, brothers, but that was in another lifetime.
@Mitch that's only four
14:12
#travle #677 +0 (Perfect)
✅✅✅✅
https://travle.earth
@think_meaning_builds He's not good at math. Leave him alone.
2
Actually, @Mitch knows the fifth branch of mathematics exists only in the fifth dimension, so you must speak with Marilyn McCoo.
Yes, sir.
The old 7 ± 2 strikes again!
Linguistics argues for 3 ± 1.
I wonder if there's an official register or database of known galaxies, and if there is, how many galaxies have been indexed there thus far
@think_meaning_builds That's arithmetic! Which I'm sure the set theorists would take credit for.
@CowperKettle Yes.
The old one used to be the Messier stellar object list but I think there are newer ones that list them out into the bajillions.
There are not that many with names.
@Mitch We should begin the process of naming all the galaxies discovered by the JWST. If we run out of Western mythological references, we can start on Indian and other theologies.
@CowperKettle Are you considering galactic tourism?
If you wait 4 billioon years, Andromeda Galaxy will 'collide' with the Milky Way.
So there's that to look forward to if you can't get away anytime soon.
@Mitch That's just a rumor. The Milky Way is not that into Andromeda, actually.
14:34
@Robusto I don't think they'd be good for each other, but gravity knows what it wants.
@Mitch If Andromeda makes a pass at her, I think she should call the cops.
By 'collide', that just means the galactic centers will come within the 'radius' of each other. I've read that almost no actual star collisions will occur.
Any blackholes in this story?
The large scal gravity (and angle of relative trajectory) will make parts of the arms fly out in weird shapes.
I don't know if the centers will keep going their own ways (slightly perturbed) or if the two galaxies will mostly merge.
I'm sure there's a youtube video that explains all this with fun pictures of colliding galaxy simulations.
@think_meaning_builds I'm glad you asked!
14:40
At the center of most traditional spiral galaxies, there's a supermassive black hole that tends to eat stars from that blob of stars around it (these stars in the blob revolve around the center black hole and sometimes they come just a tad too close and fall in).
@Robusto The cops are probably not going to take her side.
@Mitch Typical deep space behavior, they'll say. But they'll be wrong.
#WhenTaken #237 (21.10.2024)

I scored 651/1000 🎉

1️⃣ 📍 954 km - 🗓️ 18 yrs - ⚡ 132 / 200
2️⃣ 📍 1 km - 🗓️ 0 yrs - ⚡ 200 / 200
3️⃣ 📍 8235 km - 🗓️ 29 yrs - ⚡ 26 / 200
4️⃣ 📍 1213 km - 🗓️ 4 yrs - ⚡ 162 / 200
5️⃣ 📍 3 km - 🗓️ 26 yrs - ⚡ 131 / 200

https://whentaken.com
Wordle 1,220 4/6

🟨🟨🟨⬛⬛
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛⬛⬛🟨⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
@Mitch If I wait for 4 billion years, I will first see humanity disappear and some new species arise, and then also disappear, and another species arise, and this repeated thousands of times
@CowperKettle Yeah it'll be really cool to see all that.
@CowperKettle If humanity disappears, that would include you, wouldn't it? So you wouldn't see anything after that.
If I try to explain to these new species that there once was such a thing as "humanity" and that I even communicated with "humanity" via "the Internet"... would they even understand?
14:50
I thnk they'd be forgiving.
And I will explain that there was a website where people quarreled about how to properly position such things as "words" and properly use "punctuation"
and there was a section of this 'site' where different people would 'chat' in a way to 'communicate' 'with' 'each' 'other'.
And they will ask "did this punctuation thing happen before or after those things called dinosaurs, which you talked about earlier?"
Those dinosaurs really loved puns.
That's probably what did them in.
That, and lead pipes for drinking water.
I would say "it happened simultaneously! How many times must I repeat! Dinosaurs took part in that website, and voiced their opinions on punctuation"
14:56
Some of those dinosaurs opinions were actually not opinions but facts, and the other stupider dinosaurs couldn't recognize genius if it bit them in their shiny metal asses.
haha that was a Futurama reference.
If only I could get a Rick and Morty one in.
Before all this ChatGPT mania vomited out on the landscape at the end of 2022, there were smaller LLMs around the you could do entirely on you local system... one used the Rick and Morty scripts as training data and you could produce new 'episodes' of the show from it.
It was... OK.
Not an artistic achievement, but for like one or two pages it sounded like Rick and Morty.
@Mitch If Rick & Morty was written by chimps, maybe.
Really smart chimps who knew English pretty well.
But yeah, chimps.
But they had to wear diapers all the time or they would get chimp shit all over the chairs.
Chimps are pretty smart, but they really have a hard time with learning vocabulary.
> Joseph E. LeDoux (born December 7, 1949) is an American neuroscientist whose research is primarily focused on survival circuits, including their impacts on emotions such as fear and anxiety. .. He is also the lead singer and songwriter in the band The Amygdaloids.
15:01
@Mitch Or pooping in a toilet.
Also, I don't know if you've noticed this, but all those great apes, chimps and gorillas and orangutans, they're not very coordinated. Humans are like ballet dancers in comparison.
Ballet dancers who poop in toilets with no problem.
@Robusto Frankly cats can do that better.
But only if -they- choose to do so.
Frankly, they can.
@Robusto It's already on my resume.
15:03
#4. Can poop in toilet (you must provide toilet)
@Robusto Not to be a bother but can you provide it right now? It's kind of an emergency.
"I can tell by the little dance you're doing that you are in desperate need of a toilet. I'll allow it."
Also, very nice dancing, almost like a ballerina.
Congrats on new Avatar @Mitch
I shall also change soon.
J. Doyne Farmer (born 22 June 1952) is an American complex systems scientist and entrepreneur with interests in chaos theory, complexity and econophysics. He is Baillie Gifford Professor of Complex Systems Science at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, Oxford University, where he is also director of the Complexity Economics programme at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School. Additionally he is an external professor at the Santa Fe Institute. His current research is on complexity economics, focusing on systemic risk in financial markets and technological...
> Farmer hand-coded the three-kilobyte program for the computer in machine language. The program included a floating-point package, a sequencer to perform the calculation, and an operating system that functioned with toe inputs and vibrating outputs.
15:30
@tchrist Different vowel for us SSBE speakers. I think I'd use /ʌnpɑ:ðd/ probably with an /m/ instead of an /n/
@Vikas I don't know if congratulations are in order. It's not like I wanted to do it. Direct pressure by @Cerberus was put on me for some unfathomable esthetic reasons (recognizability? color-blind differentiation? A competitor to Windows 3.0's Hot dog stand palette?). Maybe you should give me condolences for giving in so easily.
Which is to say, with a new avatar, be very cognizant of the color choice and how it fits in with others here.
@CowperKettle Farmers wear boots, not shoes. To much sticky mud in the fields.
15:46
@Mitch What do you see in your avatar as a whole from 2 meters distance?
"It's difficult to see the picture when you are inside the frame."
16:07
Daily Octordle #1001
9️⃣5️⃣
4️⃣🕛
6️⃣7️⃣
🔟🕚
Score: 64
@Robusto He did say it, but he didn't say it first.
@MetaEd I said "best," not first. I don't care about first. Nobodyy says anything first.
@Robusto True. And Qoheleth said it first.
He heard it from others. Sayings arise organically from the swamps, where they are harvested by shamans who release them into crowds at the proper time.
10 days to go for pollution in India.
16:17
Daily Sequence Octordle #1001
3️⃣5️⃣
7️⃣8️⃣
🔟🕚
🕛🕐
Score: 69
@Robusto Very likely, but Qoheleth won by being the one whose words didn't get burned later
@MetaEd Were you there? Did you see the Flood? Did you blanch in horror as Abraham bound his son on the altar? Whoever wrote those words never said them first.
@Robusto "please allow me to introduce myself"
Tightrope, a daily trivia game | Britannica

Oct. 21, 2024

T I G H T R O P E
✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ 🎉

My Score: 2290
@MetaEd You'll get no sympathy from me.
16:33
#WhenTaken #237 (21.10.2024)

I scored 805/1000 🎉

1️⃣ 📍 1771 km - 🗓️ 4 yrs - ⚡ 151 / 200
2️⃣ 📍 396 km - 🗓️ 10 yrs - ⚡ 173 / 200
3️⃣ 📍 2 km - 🗓️ 1 yrs - ⚡ 199 / 200
4️⃣ 📍 1212 km - 🗓️ 20 yrs - ⚡ 121 / 200
5️⃣ 📍 3 km - 🗓️ 18 yrs - ⚡ 161 / 200

https://whentaken.com
@Araucaria-Him Thanks. I was just trying to understand the voicing. Me, I always voice things like that, like unhoused. I don't understand where people who don't do that are coming from.
#travle #677 +0
✅✅🟩✅
https://travle.earth
@Robusto The devil I won't.
The devil you know.
Tightrope, a daily trivia game | Britannica

Oct. 21, 2024

T I G H T R O P E
✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ 🎉

My Score: 2260
All right!
16:41
"Who would .. grunt and sweat under a weary life, but that the dread of something after death .. makes us rather bear those ills we have than fly to others that we know not of?"
17:04
@Robusto I got it from Agnes.
@Vikas I see the future and the past rolled into one. The possibilities of what can be and what cannot. A view from a thousand yards to the back of my own head. I see the truth and the lies but not which is which. I see it all.
Oh.
You mean if like I just squint?
Yeah it looks like two eyes.
@jlliagre Congrats.
17:21
@Mitch Only light pressure!
Your icon was less problematic than MAR v. ABC.
@CowperKettle Pretty cool.
> Their scheme took advantage of the fact that typically more than ten seconds elapse from the time the croupier releases the ball until bets are closed. During this time one person measured the position and velocity of the ball and rotor using his big toe to click a switch in his shoe. The computer used this information to predict the likely landing position of the ball. A signal was relayed to a second person, who quickly placed the bets.

They made over eleven trips to Las Vegas, Reno and Tahoe, and achieved a 20% advantage over the house, but suffered persistent hardware problems. This
> achieved a 20% advantage over the house, but suffered persistent hardware problems.
This is approximately typical of engineers' experiences with gaming the casinos.
I am not a full-fledged engineer, but of their ilk. I have never gone inside of a proper casino; but, in the hypothetical event that I would go and play, this is where the attraction would be.
Hypothetical
Yeah there is nothing interesting about gambling except upsetting the system.
17:42
I have a fast second-hand android phone (POCO) whose GPS sensors are failing to work. I wonder if I can use this second-hand phone during my on-bicycle delivery work in this way: install a kind of remote control soft on it, like the VNC used on PCs, and remotely operate my main phone via Bluetooth.
My main phone would be somewhere in a bag, so that it would not use a lot of electricity on its screen and thus work longer.
@Cerberus I was in Las Vegas not long ago for a show, and the last day of our stay we made a token casino visit. I stopped at the roulette table, placed a single bet on red (50/50 chance of winning), doubled my money, and left. To me that was interesting.
I was using this second-hand POCO phone as a map navigator to save the energy of the main phone, but now this POCO's GPS sensors are failing more and more often.
Can any honcho here tell me why this is happening? Every time I try to access my Linkedin account either through e-mail OR by going to the site, my google chrome shuts down. I have tried a few things found on the Internet but they don't work and I don't remember what they were.
@CowperKettle You can probably do that. It may work well enough if you have good mobile Internet access.
Like Team Viewer.
@MetaEd Well done!
What made it interesting to you?
@Lambie Oh, that is very strange. Is this in Windows or Android?
It means there is probably a problem with your Chrome installation.
17:58
#travle #677 +0 (Perfect)
✅✅✅✅
https://travle.earth
I suppose two optimal routes exist.
18:23
@Cerberus OMG. It was. I just updated my Chrome and now it works. Unbelievable. How did you know that? :) You da man.
@Cerberus the money.
@Lambie Well done!
That is kind of how current operating systems work.
@Cerberus It was driving me batters so I didn't go there for months and months. Not that that stupid site brings me any work because it doesn't. Thanks.
more specifically, how a casino gives me license to just walk in with money, see a random number generated, and walk away with more money.
@Lambie I don't often update either.
@MetaEd Sounds like many office jobs.
18:40
@Cerberus you lost me there
@MetaEd People doing mostly useless stuff and getting money for it.
Gosh, I'd go for one of those. :)
19:07
@Cerberus there may be "many" of these jobs, in absolute numbers, just because of the impossibly large population of human beings. But I'd say most white collar labor is not mostly useless.
@MetaEd Perhaps not.
But I do think modern society has a serious issue with bullshit jobs.
Or partly-bullshit jobs.
@Cerberus I manage clerks and computer techs. a lot of the labor is tasks that SEEM like they are bullshit ... until somebody stops doing them, and you find out they are foundational to doing business
19:25
Maybe the way many organisations work is not great?
A ton of overhead.
And don't most people work for governments?
@Cerberus much of what you might be tempted to call overhead, I call accountability
Part of accountability may also be the problem. Big organisations, distrust.
accountability is equally important in small businesses
What are we talking about?
19:58
Noun: Chesterton's fence (uncountable)
  1. (public policy) The principle that reforms should not be made until the reasoning behind the existing state of affairs is understood.
Usually.
20:15
@Araucaria-Him A most welcome one, even if most English speakers are unaware of instrumental case in other languages. The baffling incidence of bogoforms like oncely,twicely,seldomly,oftly,oftenly,abroadly —not to mention thusly —over the past 50 years appears to support a puzzling notion that people think they must somehow “forcibly and mannerly convert” perfectly fine adverbs that were not to the manner born. — tchrist ♦ 3 mins ago
0
A: (How) can I use a color as an adverb?

Old Uncle HoI think my answer will be seen very redly, though while my intent in answering was meant to be pure, I did so, as will later be said, very greenly — that the color attributed most often to jealousy.

Furiously dreaming greenly that non-answer is.
@Cerberus To be fair, only a mild oblique suggestion.
@Mitch Was the suggestion then mild, or was it merely mildly oblique? Aslanting minds want to know!
@MetaEd I think you're thinking of accounting.
@tchrist the suggestion was mild and the suggestion was oblique and while the two are correlated, they were intended to be for separate emphasis.
but of course a correlation could be interpreted as one modifying the other but of course obliquely mild is just absurd.
Word vectors available upon request.
(which means I don't have them)
@MetaEd To be clear it's more often walking away with less money.
@Mitch Maybe you should consider 𝒆𝒍𝒆𝒈𝒂𝒏𝒕 𝒊𝒕𝒂𝒍𝒊𝒄 instead of 𝐬𝐥𝐚𝐧𝐭𝐲 𝐨𝐛𝐥𝐢𝐪𝐮𝐞. It changes the a's and g's etc.
20:32
Maybe I should just consider myself part of the family.
Pickpocket!!!
snortle
@tchrist Oh, you found all those quickly and fastly.
@tchrist I should say yes and both.
@Mitch and the more you play, the closer "more often" edges toward "certainty"
@Cerberus Quicker than the silver runs.
More fastly than a sbeeding pullet.
20:41
Mercurially?
@tchrist more than time flies.
@Mitch time flies like a ananab
@Cerberus I prefer the messenger's more Hermetic incarnation, although the Ægyptian one also has much to commend himself to us.
@tchrist I hate that question. It's someone who doesn't know how to write asking better writers how to write redly horribly.
@Robusto He rolled back my edit.
20:45
What was the Nilotic manifestation?
@tchrist He brooks no counsel. Full steam ahead!
@Cerberus Horus the piercingly percipient falcon-headed god, he with stella matutina in one eye and stella vespertina in the other.
@Robusto Most of the answers were obvious or close to, that time though.
> "Your tomato was very redly diced," purred the head chef. "I believe the diners will be pleased."
"Now I'll make like a tree and greenly leave," the sous chef replied.
@Cerberus the Egyptians forced him on them.
20:50
Oh, I didn't know he was the aequivalent.
Did the Greeks borrow him?
@MetaEd *horably?
@jlliagre This one was a bollocks.
@Cerberus No exactly: Hermes/Mercury is also perhaps better viewed as Thoth, the ibis-headed moon god of wisdom, while Horus is the golden eagle of the sun, Osiris's son. Have you truly still not read Creatures of Light and Darkness?
@MetaEd THat sounds like one of those new fangled monoclonal antibody drugs
@Cerberus Absolutely.
Osiris was almost as much of a fink as Anubis.
20:54
@Robusto Don't disparage my achievement :-)
@Mitch you could fairly describe the Star Trek transporter as a monoclonal antibody
2
@jlliagre Hey, I already congratulated you. If you were just fishing for more praise, sorry, but I'm fresh out. Try me tomorrow. ;-)
@Robusto That was a douche écossaise :-)
@tchrist Still not, what is it?
Some gods the Greeks directly adopted from the Egyptian pantheon.
21:00
Creatures of Light and Darkness is a 1969 science fiction novel by American writer Roger Zelazny. Long out of print, it was reissued in April 2010. The novel is set in the far future, with humans on many worlds. Some have god-like powers, or perhaps are gods—the names and aspects of various Egyptian gods are used. Elements of horror and technology are mixed, and it has points in common with cyberpunk. Creatures of Light and Darkness was originally conceived and written as nothing more than a writing exercise in perspective by Roger Zelazny. He wrote it in present tense, constructed an entire...
@MetaEd This could apply to many devices.
Or market it as art.
Would you be more apt to read it from electrons or from paper?
@Cerberus certainly can. "monoclonal antibody" less so
I'm trying to remember if I've read that. I did read all the Chronicles
@jlliagre I'm not familiar with that term? Is it a disparagement of Scots?
It is very short.
21:03
@tchrist Funny mix.
It really does work out well.
It's a unique tale.
@Robusto Not at all. I was suspecting the expression would be confusing for a native English speaker.
@jlliagre So what is a Scottish shower, exactly?
Contrast bath therapy is a form of treatment where a limb or the entire body is immersed in hot (but not boiling) water followed by the immediate immersion of the limb or body in cold ice water. This procedure is repeated several times, alternating hot and cold. The only evidence of benefit is anecdotal and no plausible mechanism has been confirmed. == Theory == The theory behind contrast bath therapy is that the hot water causes vasodilation of the blood flow in the limb or body followed by the cold water which causes vasoconstriction. The lymph system, unlike the circulatory system, lac...
> Au sens figuré, l'expression désigne une vive alternance de sensations, d'événements ou d'impressions qui passent brutalement du positif au négatif.
Sounds like a form of torture.
@tchrist Did you delete your answer before the post was migrated?
21:06
@tchrist - reviewing the linked article, I'm sure I never read this. The agnostic's prayer is hilarious
@Robusto no just a sec
@tchrist Is it at all similar to the Worm Ouroboros?
@tchrist It's there on ELL, but I thought I saw it deleted right before that.
@Robusto Maybe close to resembling a roller coaster.
I totally want to have somebody in my family read this over me when I am dead :D :D :D
21:10
@Robusto They flipping migrated the redly question?
@tchrist yep
@Robusto Ass be dingled!
@MetaEd I cannot overly recommend this book. Get it. Read it. You will be delighted.
Dingleberry sounds like a Tolkien character
@MetaEd That's because we've lost all our old words for landforms. Dingles and dells and glens and glades and ginnels and gills and oh so much more!
snicket  dell     kyle     fold     wold     dene
dess     dub      side     dingle   graff    lough
pant     gill     garth    scree    lea      burn
dimble   firth    bink     glade    low      mere
sike     thorpe   cam      hurst    bourne   copse
wheal    midden   brim     fell     croft    porth
how      knoll    pike     hope     scaur    beck
force    cairn    vennel   strath   bache    coomb
sound    moor     kame     tor      dale     stank
thwaite  holm     voe      close    toft     frith
Also dimbles and thwaites.
But cairns we have here in Colorado, and tarns as well.
@tchrist What in tarn-nation!?
21:17
Up where the wild things are, and the trees find no purchase.
I could live with being buried in a dingle.
That would make me the dingleberry.
@Robusto Researcers in pain use cold water immersion to induce pain without (much?) injury.
@tchrist looks like there's a copy in College Station. But I'm more likely to pick up an audiobook
@MetaEd Tom Bombadil's 'partner'
selfish of me really. A real book I could read to others or gift away
@Mitch possibly Tom Benzedrino
21:25
@tchrist Torpenhow Hill
@MetaEd 'real' books are so last century
@Mitch sure. but then so am I
(last century. certainly not real)
@Mitch I think that turned out to be a bit hyped
@MetaEd It's more of a rise than an actual hill
21:40
@Mitch and it's more of a made up example than an actual place name
@tchrist If I had an audience I'd take this as an opportunity to go on another rant about people abusing the migration process, but I'll spare this chatroom.
@tchrist ok picked up the audible edition. thank you for the recommend
@alphabet You sound like a slightly more civilised Trump.
oh, now that's my cue to find the door :D
@Cerberus Gonna run for moderator on a promise to ban all migration.
Of questions.
21:55
@tchrist Should I go and close it on ELL?
@Cerberus uncool man
That stings
I think though the migration policy is more like a forced expulsion than immigration.
@Mitch Or all questions can be seen as being granted a few days temporary resident visa while waiting for the processing of the immigration application? With outright bad questions are denied entry right away at the border checkpoint?
(I'm overthinking this again, am I)
22:12
@GratefulDisciple I think you got it pretty good.
22:40
@Laurel I probably would, yes. Me, I'm not convinced it will get a good treatment there, or at least a better treatment. I'm not sure what's wrong with the current answers being on ELU either. But I'm not dogmatic.
@Mitch Exile not migration.
I just got back to my desk; need to look around.
@tchrist I don't usually interfere like this (deleted there, reopened here), but let's see what happens
@Laurel Thanks. They're all highlander votes anyway. But we have so many of those.
@GratefulDisciple Thanks for the advice about switching hands to grab the middle voice on m. 45 of the prelude to avoid having to arpeggiate it. You have to do that sort of thing in fugue mm. 26, 38 too. But I have no solution to that problem in fugue mm. 47,48 but to drop the voice or arpeggiate it. ARGH! Even Liszt arpeggiated m. 95! BTW the fix for fugue mm. 35-37 is to use only the thumb for the middle voice, not 1,2 games.
23:11
@Mitch We should find the children of those migratory posters and put them in temporary prisons or concentration camps or something. Work with me here, I'm just spitballing.
I will eat them.
Does that help at all?
That solves part of the problem, sure.
23:32
@Cerberus How did that work out for Kronos?
@MetaEd I have a simmering resentment for the entire notion of a Minimum Viable Product approach. It so often leads to more work and pain.
@tchrist Yeah. Screw planning, we'll just wing it.
@tchrist He wasn't taught to always chew your food properly by his mum.
Well, I don't so much chew as tear.

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