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00:04
1
A: Why were full stops used in old texts after singular words or incomplete sentences?

Sven YargsThere are (at least) two logically consistent ways to interpret a period (full stop) that appears at the end of a string of words in a list entry: (1) as signifying the end of a complete sentence; (2) as signifying the end of a free-standing entry in the list, whether the entry consists of a comp...

Love that man. Please.
Looks thorough.
Haven't read it all.
I often use full stops there.
I like the period. Full stop.
What period do you like best?
The jot.
Or is it a tittle?
Italic or bold, no matter to me.
@Cerberus As do I. I hate having to decide on an element by element basis where and whether to signal
that I'm done.
00:18
I wonder what the period in the Wingdings font looks like.
This is not fine.
I had to read that thrice.
> element-by-element basis
@tchrist fixed
I was illustrating the woes of marks
of punctuation omitted.
@tchrist You. Could. Use. It. Everywhere.
@tchrist oh. How about my suggestion?
00:22
Then•you•should•omit•spaces•too—
Surely you are aware that amongst some writers, the use of a period can seem like a moral failure; after all, we have other ways of bracketing and punctuating our thoughts: but consult King James and all shall be made clear to you.
> For certainly as such customs that have their first
institution either from a godly, necessary, or
honorable ground and are first brought in by means
of some worthy, virtuous, and great personage are
ever and most justly held in great and reverent
estimation and account by all wise, virtuous,
and temperate spirits, so too should it to the
contrary justly bring a great disgrace into that
sort of customs which having their origin in base
corruption and barbarity do in like sort make their
first entry into a country by an inconsiderate and
A man who used a period as lesser men use a pilcrow.
> For even as a strong enemy who invades a town or
fortress, although in its siege he should belay and
encompass it all round, yet he makes his breach and
entry at one or another particular part of it which he
hath tested and found to be weakest and least able to
resist, so sickness doth make her particular assault
upon such part or parts of our body as are weakest
and easiest overcome by that sort of disease which
then doth assail us, although all the rest of the
body should by sympathy feel as if it were belayed
> The public use of which, at all times and in all
places, hath now so far prevailed as diverse men
very sound both in judgement and complexion have
been at last forced to take it also without desire,
partly because they were ashamed to seem singular
(like the two philosophers who were forced to dunk
themselves in that rainwater and so become fools like
the rest of the people), and partly to be as one who
who did not love garlic was content to eat it anyway
so that he might not be troubled with its smell on
But of all of those, this is surely the most regal of the King's great sentences:
> Whereas tobacco, being a drug of late years found out
and by merchants as well denizens as strangers brought
from foreign parts in small quantity into this realm
of England and other our dominions, was used and taken
by the better sort both then and now only as physick
to preserve health, and is now at this day through
evil custom and the toleration thereof excessively
taken by a number of riotous and disordered persons
of mean and base condition, who, contrary to the
use which persons of good calling and quality make
Feed that one to your NLP parser and behold in wonder the tree it produces!
Can it?
Heh, no, it falls down gibbering.
Consumes all the memory on the machine until the kernel's out-of-memory hunter SIGKILLs it into oblivion.
As expected.
0
A: What explains English's lack of a distinct and unique passive inflectional marker distinct from other uses since ‘‑ed’ means so many things?

alphabetOne might think that the difference between a preterite verb form (like wrote) and a past participial one (like written) is essentially that the former is "active" and the latter is "passive." If that were the case, English would have the exact problem you mention: for regular verbs, the active v...

I did get around to answering it after all.
00:41
New Ukrainian news. Probably better to look not.
00:55
What is it?
I can't find it.
That isn't even counting Putin being all nuke rattling yet again today.
Putin has been doing that since the beginning of the war.
He certainly has.
He keeps signing things about it.
I get the idea that he's trying to say that Russia is not allowed to lose in Ukraine, or else he's going to nuke everybody.
But this is not new. He's pretty much always said that.
01:12
He certainly must be popular among the Populus, no?
@tchrist He isn't saying that, exactly.
He is just trying to make the West think he might use atomics if they help Ukraine too much.
It costs him nothing to threaten.
Sure, talk is cheap.
"_supported_ by a nuclear power"
Huh, isn't Russian being supported by a nuclear power? She's been sending North Koreans into the war.
> Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov emphasized that the Ukrainian strike in Bryansk marked an escalation and urged the U.S. and other Western allies to study the modernized nuclear doctrine.
I know, I know.
It's just what they do.
Perhaps he's trying to give North Korea the rights to bring in nukes against the Ukraine.
I worry that the world is tiring of the ploy.
"The boy who cried nuke."
3
01:24
The paper tiger with nuclear teeth roars again.
Propaganda and other forms of infowars have always, always been Russia's favorite long-game strategy. It costs them so much less than anything else would.
It's all about Russia's "sovereignty and territorial integrity", a smoke screen which he pretends allows him to do anything here in this war. THAT is why he's redefined Ukraine to be part of Russia when he annexed Crimea and the Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk, and Zaporizhzhia oblasts. He's done that in order to allow him to do anything one would expect if western Russia itself were attacked and invaded, threatening his regime as though it were actually the country itself.
The Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine are areas of southern and eastern Ukraine that are controlled by Russia as a result of the Russo-Ukrainian War and the ongoing invasion. In Ukrainian law, they are defined as the "temporarily occupied territories". As of 2024, Russia occupies almost 20% of Ukraine and about 3 to 3.5 million Ukrainians are estimated to be living under occupation; since the invasion, the occupied territories lost roughly half of their population. The United Nations Human Rights Office reports that Russia is committing severe human rights violations in occupied Ukraine,...
Those places.
This war has been going on for more than a decade now.
01:57
@tchrist Yes.
@tchrist Indeed.
02:15
@tchrist Yes, good for threatening and policy freedom.
02:28
If Russia nuked Kyiv next February, would Trump even care?
Quite possibly not.
@alphabet That would involve some form of empathy, so no.
@Robusto He could care about it for purely self-interested reasons. I think it'll depend on whether he thinks Ukraine is "woke."
@alphabet First, lots of people would care around the world.
Secondly, it wouldn't help Putin much militarily.
@alphabet I have no idea what those reasons might be. Does it make him money? Flatter his pride?
For the record, I also doubt Putin would use nukes.
02:36
Using a nuke is a betrayal against humanity itself.
@Robusto Fair enough. Certainly he doesn't have much interest in defending Ukraine now, and Russia using nuclear weapons likely wouldn't change that.
In retrospect, of course, Ukraine's decision to give up its own nuclear arsenal was a horrible mistake. If they'd kept it, this war would simply never have happened.
That decision in 1991, made in the name of "nonproliferation," cost hundreds of thousands of lives. Giving up nuclear weapons can be far worse than keeping them.
02:53
@alphabet So much for Doing The Right Thing.
@Robusto Of course, the right thing would've been for both countries to give up their nuclear weapons. But nuclear weapons are here to stay on this planet; I don't think we'll ever be able to denuclearize the world.
@alphabet Yes.
@alphabet The opposite is happening.
When will the first terrorist group gain access to a nuke?
03:14
Behemoth likes licking plastic bags sometimes, and I try to discourage him from that.
I wonder why he does that.
I have been riding for over 8 hours a day, and developed something like boils on my behind. I've just ordered a specialized pair of shorts with inserts for cyclists, and will probably order a seatpost with suspension - but I'm not sure if that will help.
I wonder what could be used in lieu of padded shorts in the period before they arrive.
I decided to stay home today, lest I be forced to go to a surgeon for removing those boils.
Because removing boils is such a pain-in-the-ass procedure, especially when they are in the ass.
@CowperKettle Have you ever had that done?
@Cerberus Yes, back in the 2000's
Twice even.
Once by an elderly woman surgeon, who scoffed at my attempts to cover up my most precious parts from view.
How long did the wound take to heal?
Once by a young male surgeon, who put me in a doggie-style position and developed a suspiciously heavy breathing pattern while he performed the surgery. I think I would prefer an elderly woman next time.
Haha.
03:23
@Cerberus Several days at least.
Hmm that is not super long!
Sometimes you need to clean the wond every day using hydrogen peroxide, and place some tissue soaked with the levomekol ointment inside the wound to prevent infection. ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
@CowperKettle Saddle sores, as they're called?
@alphabet Probably yes.
I found a suspended seatpost on Ozon, but it comes in two diamaters, 27.2 and 30 something millimeters, and I've just measured mine, and it looks like it's smaller than 27.2
At least it is good to know that the ultimate remedy is available.
03:27
I'm not sure how to exactly measure a seatpost's diameter.
@Cerberus Yes, it's great.
I meant the surgery.
I found that for me, strong antihistamines also work by making a boil go away sometime
You mean "sometimes"?
And how strong / what kind?
03:39
@Cerberus I used Chloropyramine in the 2000s, but then discovered a milder drug that does not penetrate the brain and does not make you fall dead asleep in 5 minutes
I don't recall the milder drug's name
04:00
@CowperKettle Oh let me know if you find the name.
04:18
@CowperKettle They also make creams you can apply to your skin to reduce chafing, though I recall hearing that petroleum jelly works about equally well.
05:31
 
1 hour later…
06:44
Race of the day: crown race
@CowperKettle is Putin popular amongst the common working people in Russia?
6 hours ago, by think_meaning_buildß
He certainly must be popular among the Populus, no?
Or does anybody really care...
(after the devastation of the pandemic)
07:06
@think_meaning_buildß I don't know..
Thanks 🙏 for responding :-)
(I didn't mean to pry)
08:38
@think_meaning_buildß I really have no idea now. I guess that the current regime is supported by many people, because in times of war, people rally around the leader/government
 
2 hours later…
10:44
Wordle 1,250 4/6

⬜⬜⬜🟨🟩
⬜⬜⬜🟨⬜
🟨⬜⬜⬜🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
 
2 hours later…
@tchrist Nice edits! Erm, I was planning to, but am now excavating myself from a landslide of marking. Will see if I can get round to it ...
13:28
youtube.com/watch?v=2rWaUm9YUuY#t=4m30s The message was clear only through solidarity can communities effectively combat the divisive narratives pushed my extremists. -- Do you understand this sentence? It sounds wrong to me.
@MichaelRybkin I can't listen to that right now, but what you've written makes sense if there's a colon after the word clear.
14:01
@tchrist Got it now. Thank you very much.
14:17
@CowperKettle Get some actual cycling shorts, which are padded. Pro tip: you don't wear underwear so the seams don't chafe you (other pro tip: you wash those after every use). Then, there is shammy butter you can apply to your posterior, specifically for cycling. Look those things up online.
@MichaelRybkin They left out the colon. "The message was clear: only through solidarity can communities effectively combat the divisive narratives ..."
@tchrist Oh, I see you already said that.
#travle #707 +0 (Perfect)
✅✅✅
https://travle.earth
Wordle 1,250 4/6

⬛🟨⬛🟨⬛
⬛🟨⬛🟨⬛
⬛🟩🟨🟨🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
Oct 7, 2012 at 22:21, by tchrist
Sep 3 at 15:24, by tchrist
@Robusto Pereant qui ante nos nostra dixerunt. ―St Jerome, In Ecclestiasten Commentarius, I
14:33
@tchrist You had me at "I can't listen to that right now" ...
@Robusto Thank you! I never heard of "chamois butter" before. Curious - a lot of discussions on Reddit about it.
> "Perish [pr.subj. 3pl, "may they perish"] who/whoever/those-who/they-who said/did-say [perfect active indicative 3pl = ES dijeron] our-words/stuff/things/bits before us."
It's one of those great many L x > ES j evolutions.
Like how fijo means "fixed".
That's a pretty new change, which is why when Cervantes wrote his novel, he spelled the protagonist's surname Quixote but which we now spell Quijote.
Ditto México > Méjico.
15:12
@MichaelRybkin also it should be "... pushed by extremists."
@CowperKettle Interesting: I don't know of her, but she's very knowledgable (the first 15 minutes are very technical and seems to use the vocab intentionally and correctly, like an engineering class (what she's is trying to do that is new is unclear to me). So she seems sane and that channel tends to put sane/sober people on.
I haven't yet gotten to the rest of the talk (it's super long! Have you noticed I have a preference?).
But I google her, and while she has reputable science credentials, she seems associated with the EA and LessWrong communities, which while not bad in and of themselves, has some associations with not particularly sober people (Eliezer Yudkowsky).
The long talking heads format (just people talking) is great for story filled ideas, but I would have preferred some diagrams too for the technical part.
16:14
@Robusto Thank you
@Mitch Thank you
Is it just me or are other people annoyed by WotY creep? The announcements seem to come earlier and earlier every year.
I mean... there are still mostly two months left...-anything- could happen.
 
2 hours later…
17:57
@Mitch None of this would have happened if I were the president.
18:31
@Mitch Think of the fat lady....yep, two more months.
Wordle 1,250 3/6

⬛⬛⬛⬛🟩
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19:04
@tchrist I read the original article and they were not comparing 'I saw 3 deer.' with 'I saw three deer.'. Or 'I saw 5295 deer' with 'I saw five thousand two hundred ninety-five deer'. That's the study I'd like to see.
I already know the answer... numerals are easier to read than their worded versions.
@Lambie Wait... does the fat lady have some december surprises for us?
@Vikas If you had 'manifested' more often maybe you would have been president already.
 
1 hour later…
20:15
#WhenTaken #267 (20.11.2024)

I scored 725/1000🎗️

1️⃣📍1.8 km - 🗓️0 yrs - 🥇200/200
2️⃣📍21.0 m - 🗓️25 yrs - 🥈135/200
3️⃣📍8.3K km - 🗓️8 yrs - 🥉96/200
4️⃣📍1.0K km - 🗓️11 yrs - 🥈151/200
5️⃣📍644 m - 🗓️23 yrs - 🥈143/200

https://whentaken.com
Daily Octordle #1031
5️⃣7️⃣
3️⃣6️⃣
8️⃣🕚
9️⃣🔟
Score: 59
Daily Sequence Octordle #1031
6️⃣8️⃣
9️⃣🔟
🕚🕛
🕐⓮
Score: 83
Tightrope, a daily trivia game | Britannica

Nov. 20, 2024

T I G H T R O P E
✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ 🎉

My Score: 2270
@Mitch ¡Basta con las manis, tío!
Querías decir "¡Basta con las manos, tío!"?
21:17
Las manitas, quizás.
Is that you, Fernandó?
Must be me, I can hear the drums.
21:34
Careful, they’re listening. And trust me, they’ll shake things up.
#WhenTaken #267 (20.11.2024)

I scored 760/1000🏅

1️⃣📍6.1K km - 🗓️30 yrs - 🥉31/200
2️⃣📍27.9 m - 🗓️0 yrs - 🥇200/200
3️⃣📍2.1 km - 🗓️5 yrs - 🥇195/200
4️⃣📍1.1K km - 🗓️11 yrs - 🥈149/200
5️⃣📍1.1 km - 🗓️10 yrs - 🥇185/200

https://whentaken.com
Bad start, better afterward.
22:02
@Mitch FYI Cambridge 2023 WotY was announced Nov 15 (2022 was Nov 17) while the Oxford 2023 WotY was announced Dec 4 (2022 was Dec 5). Maybe Cambridge just wants to beat Oxford.
22:13
@Robusto okay, but not to my knowledge turned into a Doctor Who anthem
@MetaEd That was not stated in the requirements.
@Robusto Was there a specification? I missed the specification.
Other than the drums, which I can hear.
@MetaEd You added that requirement ex post facto.
All I said was that the two songs had similar riffs. You added the Doctor Who thing. More of a non sequitur than a requirement, I suppose, but you're the one who said, "ok, but ..." in response.
But what?
22:54
#travle #707 +2
🟧🟧✅✅✅
https://travle.earth
Tightrope, a daily trivia game | Britannica

Nov. 20, 2024

T I G H T R O P E
💔 💔 💔 ⎵ ⎵ ⎵ ⎵ ⎵ ⎵ 🤕

My Score: 0
Yeah!
Wordle 1 250 4/6

⬛⬛🟨🟨⬛
⬛⬛🟨⬛⬛
⬛⬛🟩⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
Daily Octordle #1031
5️⃣6️⃣
3️⃣8️⃣
7️⃣9️⃣
🕛🕚
Score: 61
Daily Sequence Octordle #1031
4️⃣5️⃣
6️⃣7️⃣
8️⃣9️⃣
🔟🕛
Score: 61
23:37
@GratefulDisciple Since my perception is reality, there is obviously some conspiracy going on to shift the calendar with hidden leap days.
I'm pretty sure it was the night last week. I went to sleep and after a very long rest, I woke up ready to start the day and it was only midnight.
But...
23:54
@Mitch Are you George Washington? The calendar moved what year he was born in.
@Mitch Maybe you skipped 3 years (like Rip van Winkle), since Cambridge WotY 2021 was announced on Dec 10. You're right about it's being waay earlier.

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