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00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

00:38
Don't everybody talk at once.
01:05
talks
01:42
I’ll give you my Oxford comma when you pry it from my cold, dead hands. — MετάEd 22 secs ago
@MετάEd Star-whoring again? :)
Of course not. Did it work?
Time will tell.
@MετάEd I share your sentiment, but I am no pimp.
@Cerberus I am my own pimp, thankyouverymuch.
01:49
Great.
Such an entrepreneur!
If anybody is going to put a cap in my ass, I want it to be self inflicted.
> A Finnish anti-piracy group has copied—down to the CSS file—the design and layout of The Pirate Bay’s classic pirate ship-themed design. In a statement to TorrentFreak, The Pirate Bay was nonplussed.
> “We are outraged by this behavior,” an anonymous Pirate Bay spokesman told TorrentFreak. “People must understand what is right and wrong. Stealing material like this on the Internet is a threat to economies worldwide. We feel that we must make a statement and therefore we will sue them for copyright infringement.”
Pretty hilarious.
You are kidding, right?
Or somebody else is.
I am kidding?
I'm afraid this is serious.
The confirms it: the Pirate Bay is nuts.
How can they sue? Doesn’t that require that the principals be known?
02:06
Possibly.
Or perhaps not.
A lawyer could represent them and sue in their name?
Maybe. Probably. I don’t know anything about the Law.
I just read that the Russian meteor briefly outshone the sun. Bet that was freaky.
Sure.
Of it it all depends on distance.
I guess. Inverse-square law, or some such.
Yes.
> Apple doesn't want to get drug into the low margins area. They want to be where the money is, not the commodity market.
 
1 hour later…
03:40
@Cerberus Great artists of our time were constantly accused of drug references.
No doubt.
Have you seen this "drug" before?
WMD
WMD
03:56
@Cerberus Oddly, I suspect such forms are going to become more and more common.
@Cerberus I can never tell with you. You didn’t know that there are people who say drug as the past of drag?
Or are you just scandalized that someone should have written such a thing?
04:11
@tchrist No, no. You're thinking of the stuff at the bottom of the bottle.
@WMD You think so? It is sort of funny...
That's the first move in a game, by the way. Do you know how to play "no, no, not"?
@tchrist I don't remember whether or not I have seen it before, but is certainly unusual.
I don't think we have any move towards irregularising regular verbs in Dutch.
Except ironically.
Dann, stehend unterm Tumtum Baum, Er an-zu-denken-fing.
@Cerberus It's redneck American dialect, past tense of drag.
WMD
WMD
04:25
@Cerberus I know several children who normally use "brang" and "brung" in place of "brought".
@Cerberus Think of it not as deregulating them, but rather as strengthening them.
I snuck in the back gate while they were away and dove into their pool, only to discover too late to turn back that nobody had drug out the dead horse yet.
@Robusto It was obvious what it meant, but I didn't know it was typical of rednecks...
Well, stereo-, yes.
@WMD Aww. It sounded a bit childish.
@tchrist C'est pareil.
@tchrist Still, drug sounds far more marginal than the others.
WMD
WMD
Yes, but the childish neologisms of today are the established forms of tomorrow.
04:31
Not always!
We shall see.
It’s considered non-Standard, yes. The others you can often sneak by with.
WMD
WMD
Yes, if they're sufficiently widespread. The one that I just KNOW will become standard is the verb "to verse", which means to play a sporting fixture against. It is a back formation from "versus", which has presumably been misspelt in the speaker's mind.
Right. That's pretty old already!
Feb 10 at 1:43, by tchrist
Common Teut.: OE. bring-an, brengean (pa. t. bróhte, pple. bróht), corresp.
to OFris. branga, bringa, OS. brengian, bringan (MDutch brenghen, Dutch
brengen), OHG. bringan (MHG. and mod.G. bringen), Goth.  briggan (=
bringan), pa. t. brâhta, pple. brâhts. Beside the type bring-an, the Saxon
group has also *brangjan, brehook.ngian, brengean, brengan, app. after
þankjan; from bringan, OE. had also a rare strong pa.  pple. brungen (mod.
dial. brung), to which later dialects have added a strong pa. t., so as to
WMD
WMD
@Cerberus Pfft. YOU'RE pretty old already.
04:33
Not yet! I still have today, my last as a twenty-something.
For which value of today?
Mine own.
And you really need to shed yourself of base-ten numbers before they catch up with you.
We can't all use hundreds like you.
WMD
WMD
Yeah, just go around telling people you're 11101 years old and see how far that gets you.
04:35
I prefer sexagesimal.
WMD
WMD
Mothers, lock up your gesimals.
If it was good enough for the Babylonians, it’s good enough for me.
Haha.
And with that we come full circle, for without it, we couldn’t.
WMD
WMD
Why do we use an H for hexadecimal, but an S for sexagesimal?
04:43
You know this.
Where do we use this?
nonagesimal, quinquagesimal, vigesimal.
WMD
WMD
So why the H?
It’s septagonal, yet heptastrophic.
WMD
WMD
I have always called it a heptagon.
I consider septagon non-standard.
04:48
Septagon is rarer that heptagon, but not non-existent.
It appears that octosexdecimal also exists.
It has to do with a way of cutting a gem.
Either eight sides in one place and sixteen in another.
Proto-Indo-European s- turned into h- in many Greek words, while Latin kept s-.
Hypo = sub.
Hyper = super.
Etc.
It’s sexagenarian, for example, but usually hexahedral.
If it is construed to come from Greek, it takes an h-. If it is construed to come from Latin, it takes an s-.
Whether it does or not is a different story.
Hexadecimal is a modern invention.
Obviously.
Haema = sanguis.
Since clearly hexadecimal is one of those homosexual-like words.
I'm trying to think of more Greek and Latin roots used in English.
WMD
WMD
04:55
@Cerberus How do we know that PIE didn't have H in such words, which changed to S in Latin?
It is possible that same and homos are related.
@WMD Because other branches have s- too.
WMD
WMD
OK, good answer.
Like Germanic.
Seek = sequ- = hep-.
For example.
Self = se = he-.
Is he- like se then? Like where?
Usually attached to -aut-.
Heauton.
= Himself.
05:00
Hm. The Delhi quote has se there, doesn’t it?
Delphi?
Seauton = yourself.
Ah. I took it for oneself.
"You must know oneself"?
You think I know Greek verb forms?
-ti/-thi is a 2nd imperative.
05:01
As is thy. Yes, yes.
Ehm.
Thou is probably related to su.
But to -ti/-thi? I hever never heard of that, but it is possible.
At the PIE level, the t- for 2nd person thing that is so common.
And how is thy an imperative?
Yes, sometimes t changed into s in Greek.
I was just connecting it to thou/thee/thy, not specifically going to that.
OK.
Attic thalatta, Ionic thalassa.
Tettares, p/tessares (or something like that).
Proto-Indo-European kʷ- changed into p/t/k in Greek, depending on the vowel, but it remained qu- in Latin in many cases.
Same for kʰʷ- and gʰʷ-.
05:06
What, random stop from all three series? How strange.
It's not random.
T before i/e, p before ehh I forgot how it worked exactly. So as good as random for a learner like me, yes.
Front–back affinity?
Probably something like that.
Or don't know whether it was assimilation or compensation or both.
If /t/ goes with /i/, I might expect /k/ with /u/.
Not sure how to get /p/.
I don't think /u/ existed as such.
P is often before o, for example.
05:08
Just /o/ then?
Also before a, I think.
PG a.
There is debate about whether or not a existed in PIE.
And this change is PG.
What vowels did PIE have? How many? 4? 5? More? Less?
I think e/i/o.
At least at some point.
That’s 3.
A is undecided. It appeared at some point, around the time when the laryngals disappeared.
WMD
WMD
05:11
@Cerberus Haha! Somebody ought to translate "Old MacDonald had a farm" into Proto-Indo-European.
Connection?
Or is it laryngeals?
Both words exist.
Well, I believe laryngal h2 resulted in +a.
Or possibly colouring of e into a.
WMD
WMD
I think laryngeals in this context.
05:11
I assume PG had plenty of vowels.
H1 probably disappeared, and h3 resulted in...I don't know, h? Lengthening?
@tchrist Less than in historical languages, I believe.
Funny how inflectional morphology seems to simplify with time, but the phonemic situation becomes more complex.
What if we just started putting spaces at slightly different places?
And created new definitions?
I'm not sure simplification can ultimately be proven.
Sed hora dormiendi adest.
WMD
WMD
HB if I don't see you tomorrow, dude. Which I almost certainly won't.
@Cerberus I’m a blithering idiot up this late; I cannot understand how you do it.
05:25
@WMD Gratias ago tibi.
@tchrist I thrive on tardiness, that's it.
I can go on forever.
The morning, however, is my bane.
It can be postponed by a day or two, but in the end it must come.
 
4 hours later…
09:08
Guys
may i ask u a question?
guys
so my question is basically
why don't you put 'a' when you say 'You're rich' or
'Are you rich'?
Is it wrong to say Are you a rich?
what is the grammatical term for this?
my friend told me
it's because rich is not athing
then what is it?
 
1 hour later…
10:50
back
=( no one answered
 
2 hours later…
13:19
Guys, how should I post the question title? "Lorem Ispsum Dolor Sit Amet" or "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet"?
13:58
@TemporaryNickName Yes, that is wrong.
Rich is an adjective. Adjectives don't get a/an.
> I am rich.
> I am a rich man.
Man is a noun. Nouns can get adjectives.
The grammatical term for rich in I am rich is subject complement.
The verb am is a copula there.
Copulae normally come with subject complements.
 
3 hours later…
17:20
> ... a useful (and horrifying) map that the ACLU put together highlighting just how much of our country is within 100 miles of border/coastline, creating the Constitution-Free Zone Map -- which happens to cover about 2/3 of all American citizens.
so is it just the dept. for homeland security that can search laptops? Or can I do it too?
I mean, not searching your laptop is of minimal benefit to your civil liberties, so you might as well let me
A persuasive argument.
You must be right.
Search our laptops!
a conclusion I wish more people would come to!
searches laptops
17:30
Hehe.
The only thing is that my laptop is 10 years old and I never use it.
finds old ten year old search history
It will be mostly empty.
is disappoint
Sorry.
You may search my desktop, but it is rather heavy. I'd rather not take it with my on the plane.
And I'm not sure the monitor will fit into my hand luggage.
you could try wearing it as a fourth head
17:33
Wouldn't that get in the way?
And where do I buy a fourth neck?
the fourth neck shop
on the corner of fourth neck shop street and main
or you could try the second hand shop, I hear they have some fourth necks in the back.
Hmm.
Under the counter, huh?
I like my body parts secret and clandestine.
@Cerberus Interesting how that line dips south to follow the coast of Lake Michigan near Chicago.
@tchrist I was wondering about coastlines too, but apparently those are "borders". I suppose a ship could land near Chicago and unload laptops with copied songs.
I feel that, just to be sure, areas 100 m from a river or an international airport, should also be included in the Zone.
17:48
@Cerberus Yes, I imagine those count as ports of entry.
Yes.
so everyone should move to Denver. the constitutionally safest place
kukluxklandestined
@MattЭллен Safe from coastal beaches.
Despite our having the tallest sandcastles on the continennt.
The wind blows all the sand from out west and piles it up in front of the Continental Divide.
Which it can’t get over, at going on three miles high.
Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve is a United States National Park located in the San Luis Valley, in the easternmost parts of Alamosa County and Saguache County, Colorado, United States. Originally created as Great Sand Dunes National Monument on March 17, 1932, Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve was established by an act of the United States Congress on September 13, 2004. The park includes and the preserve protects an additional . Natural history The park contains the tallest sand dunes in North America, rising about 750 feet (230 m) from the floor of the San Lu...
You can see it from the Crestones, which are the high mountains towering above it.
Oh, it says 750 feet now. I thought it was a thousand.
17:52
@MattЭллен Uhh I'm sure Denver is within 100 miles of an international airport.
Barely. The airport seems like it’s in Kansas to most of us.
What does that mean?
It means that it is a long ways away, and utterly flat.
It’s out on the plains far from the mountains.
So no 100-m zone?
It’s like 30 miles from Denver and 50 miles from Boulder. It really is close to nothing at all.
How far are you from Schiphol?
I still think it should be called Airshiphole myself. :)
To go with all the car holes.
17:59
About 20 minutes by train. The train stops right below the main hall of the airport, just 1 escalator. And I live about 5 minutes from the Centraal Station. I have no idea how many km.
Maybe 20 km? 30 km?
It counts.
100 miles is plenty.
I don’t even remember what the 100 miles is about.
But yes, it is within 100 miles, by 50%, or however you measure that.
I guess you must be about 20 miles away.
Except that trains in urban areas seldom go a mile a minute.
So maybe you are closer.
Hi @BarrieEngland. What’s up?
18:19
By car, the airport is 20 km / 23 min from here.
By train, 13 minutes if you take the fast train.
16+ minutes on slower trains.
12 km as the crow flies.
So I could walk to the airport in two hours.
@Cerberus So you’re saying it’s two leagues away, then? :)
The actual route on foot would take 3h06 according to Google Maps, to the main hall.
Most people walk 3 miles per hour.
That's very slow.
You can actually walk 5 miles per hour before you start to seem like not-walking.
18:26
Is a league 1 hour?
A league is an hour’s walk, yes.
Now held to be 3 miles. At least on the flat.
I always forget what which measurement was in which age in which place.
Oh, wait, you said 3 miles.
5 km/h is a brisk walking speed.
6 km/h is military march.
I didn’t say that.
You know I use only English.
?
I read km where you said miles.
Yes, that was the bug.
I use only English measurements.
18:28
"I didn't say that"?
Hi @MattЭллен
I didn’t use non-English measurements.
After a long time
I have no idea what you're talking about.
"You said 3 miles" => "I didn't say that".
Perhaps it is time you grew two more heads.
You are mismatching the threads.
18:35
Hi
2
Hail and well-wet.
> He slashed the threads to pieces and went off singing.
How are you? @MattЭллен
I've one question @MattЭллен
What're the factors that determines exchange rates?
Like 1 British pound cost ₹83
You there?
@tchrist: You can help me
I do not know
magic mostly and bankers
So what's value of pound in London
?
one pound in London is one pound
so long as you mean GBP
18:51
I mean how much one laptop in pound?
oh, well that depends on the laptop
but let's say from £300 upwards
For eg. HP notebook
yeah about £300 upward
I think its cheap than in India
What you say?
possibly. how much is a laptop in India?
18:53
It starts from ₹30,300
You know for us, its very huge amount
well, that's not much different
in absolute values, anyway
no its different
See 1 pound = 80 ruppes
30,300 Indian Rupees is about £360 GBP
80x300=24000
how you typed that pound sign?
shift + 3
how do you type the rupee sign?
18:56
mine is not working
there is special button
over 4
shift + 3 means # in my lappy
oh, for me that outputs the euro sign €
Which lapy you have?
I think manufactures use signs according to country
Laptop belongs to which company?
I don't have a laptop
Then
?
I always wonder these differences
Please be fast
you want your laptop to be fast?
19:03
Ha ha
For you
:)
You've PC?
means
?
means
try talking in full sentences so I can understand you better
I'm asking what device you've?
oh! I have core i5 based system.
I bought the parts separately
19:07
Oh good
PC?
What are there companies that manufacture Laptops?
there are lots. you should look on google, that would be quicker than asking me :), but for starters there's Dell, HP, Acer, Asus that I can think of
Oh Thanks
I just want the differences between England and India.
well, most of the brands are international, so you'll be able to buy in the UK what you can buy in India
19:11
Oh
I thought price may vary
ah, that I don't
You know I just wonder how you people do all your work in Eng language
Also I found British people articulation very hard to interpret.
the same way you do all yours in your native language?
Yeah
Well, there are plenty of accents in the UK, and sometimes we can't understand each other :)
19:16
firstly, when I was child I use to think English speakers of UK, US are beyond the universe
:)
Because knowing English was like that the person is very intelligent
from our regional persecpective
knowing more than one language is surely a sign of an intelligent person
Hmm but we treat English speaker as a intellectual person
where I was born
So I think in your schools every student get 100 out of 100 in Eng
?
English isn't a science, so people can't get 100% :D most people can use the language really well, but they don't understand how it works from a linguistic perspective. It would depnd on how you tested them
19:23
But I think every person in UK knows English
Even a beggar can speak English fluently
nope. there are some people who immigrate who don't know it at all
What about beggars?
depends if they are native speakers or not
all native English speakers of English can speaker English.
So there are beggars in UK?
there are homeless people, yes.
19:25
As UK is one of the most developed country
In India, its worst
So what they do?
I don't know
I think they can get job easily
as they knew English
In India its just reverse
since so many people here know English, that's not a stand out skill.
19:29
They're illiterate
in my country
I have to go now. Byee!
Bye
20:28
What is your intuitive reaction to when a writer uses "she" as the common gender?
20:43
“Non habemus papam” is a cute title for an article.
20:55
Yeah.
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