@Mitch I like to buy the seasoning blends in glass grinders when they go on clearance; they look so nice. And my husband uses like all of them. We'll never know his secret. The KFC recipe is easier to copy.
@Mitch I would say there are two 'easier' ones, one of which you have found; one harder one; and one that I had no idea how hard it is, maybe too unexpected, maybe not.
One is entirely thematic, the one you have found; one is collocations but with thematic words; one is also collocations but with more disconnected-seeming words; and the fourth one is a bit jocular.
What is it when someone does that take-it-to-extremes fallacy (What's it called?) Like they say: 'Then there is no place for that here or, dare I say, the world!' And you just agree with them, and add something: 'Yep, you said it, Jack. And no more doodle dogs.'
@CowperKettle Looks more like a bird nesting place, but that's beside the point. It's painted to have a hat such as Russian soldiers have historically worn, and the red star button on the front supports that.
But I can't tell if macho would make it too easy. (I did sort of think that was a mistake but couldn't figure out which of the others should be exchanged.
Our neighbor, a retired man who clipped his grass nearly every day with a manual reel mower, lived next door to a young couple with homing pigeons, dozens. Every time they were released, they pooped like rain on the old man's yard, the bane of his existence.
I visited the pigeon guy's wife one day, and there were 100s of things on the living room floor, not all toys either. Their little boy would just go get something (a brush, a bowl, a shoe, anything) and throw it on the floor, over and over and over.
@GratefulDisciple And the Woordenboek der Nederlandsche Taal contains only words after 1500 or it would have been quite a bit bigger still. So I think the size of a dictionary doesn't really tell you that much about a language.
> Updates to DALL·E We are no longer allowing new users to DALL·E 2. DALL·E 3 has higher quality images, improved prompt adherence, and we've started rolling out image editing. It is available for ChatGPT Plus, Team and Enterprise and the OpenAI API.
I'm working on a programming language. I'm considering the best word to use to tell the computer to output to the screen — or a file, another program, or elsewhere. It seems the most common amongst programming languages is print:
print "Hello, World"
Other common words are write, echo, puts (put...
@HippoSawrUs More concretely, he wasn't very hot on the new terminologies they invented. He had less of a problem with the actual work apart from the naming of such.
@HippoSawrUs Mostly. Huddleston is English (UK). Pullum is apparently a dual UK–American, but he sometimes forgets what sorts of things are syntactically unsound to American ears.
How's that now? Are not linguists with morphosyntactic specialties "grammarians"? Or are you talking about people who try to boss you around or copyedit your prose?
A (very) few publications do still employ staff to copyedit content into acceptably normalized forms. These are not linguists nor even grammarians sensu stricto.
Grammarians explain grammar.
They study it.
It's all about research investigations and refining or creating models that explain and predict it.
It doesn't have much to do with nuns slapping your wrist with a yardstick.
@HippoSawrUs I might be able to find his recommendation for you if you could guess some content in his comment that I could search for. As a site moderator I have better tools for searching comments on my sites than you do (you don't have any, in fact).
I have to go walk in the blowing ice fog now, doing battle with the hoarfrost demons. I shall return.
@HippoSawrUs @tchrist “ >If you're in CS and you either have or have access to native intuitions, you can probably benefit from McCawley's approach. He has a syntax text and a semantics (logic) text; I recommend both. They'll be in your university library. – John Lawler Commented May 9, 2019 at 1:36 ”