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19:00
Nobody could care less about La Rochelle or Carcassonne or what province have you.
Suppose France were ten times as large geographically, and the German army hadn't been so greatly superior. What then?
And suppose Paris had been near the Spanish border.
Anyhow, the thing with Napoleon was, and I have no idea if this is a misattribution or if he actually said that, "if you conquer St. Petersburg, you'll get Russia's head; if you conquer Moscow, you'll get its heart".
1
Q: Question marks at the end of declarative sentences

QuassnoiI often see declarative sentences ending with question marks, like these: I tried your solution but it didn't work? or This seems to be easy but I'm out of ideas? , assuming a request like "could you help me please?" or "what to do with it?" but not expressing it explicitly. Is it st...

Yes for close?
I would say so. But you decide.
@Reg: Then it depends on one's philosophical position whether one or the other would break Russia.
I will say this: not knowing anything else about either side, the fact that one side is able to take the other side's capital is a fairly good indicator that it is superior in strength; however, because each side usually comprises several countries with several capitals, it doesn't always predict the outcome of a war.
19:05
@RegDwight Yes for close!
And knowing military and geographical factors will be a better indicator, I think.
I have no idea what to do with the suggested edits on the loan-words tag wiki.
I don't think that the proposed description is... accurate.
On the other hand, nobody else could be bothered to write a better one...
That?
It took me awhile to find the 5k link trail :P
@RegDwight Ugh. Fine. One second...
My link didn't work for you?
No; it went to "suggested-edits"
19:07
I have approved it so you wouldn't have to bother.
A loanword (or loan word) is a word borrowed from one language and incorporated into another. General By contrast, a calque or loan translation is a related concept, whereby it is the meaning or idiom that is borrowed rather than the lexical item itself. The word loanword is itself a calque of the German Lehnwort, while calque is a loanword from French. Classes Certain classes of words are more commonly borrowed than others, usually words for exotic concepts or ideas. What is "exotic" varies from language to language. Thus, English names for creatures not native to Great Britain are alm...
How about their first sentence?
In the spirit of "something's better than nothing".
@MrHen Excellent.
@Cerberus Something wrong is much worse than nothing.
@Cerberus Fair enough, I have rejected his other one.
How's that for a salmonic decision.
@MrHen: Well I wouldn't call it wrong exactly: just a bit amateurish.
19:09
@Cerberus Fair enough
@Reg: I like your sword.
I added an exceprt
Cool.
I think mine will have overwritten yours then...
Lemme see.
19:13
I have just finished reading this. I wish it were a longer thread.
I think it's rather long as it is.
I have only skimmed it, especially where people kept talking about me.
Not nearly enough.
It kind of didn't feel right to participate in that analysis.
Especially the parts where people kept talking about you.
Meh.
Honestly, meh.
Plus, see your top starred comment right now.
19:16
Right, I have an ax to grind. I can expect to make similar mistakes, being a native Russian speaker.
Those people weren't correcting me, they were correcting other native speakers via a proxy.
Mistakes in the sense of something odd.
But I get your point.
@Reg: It was only wai who held that position.
Possibly.
The thing is, he did have a point.
Did he?
19:19
Yes, some of the staff he pointed out I knew sounded wrong the very moment I posted it.
"So much for" was a Freudian slip, I was obviously thinking in German at that moment.
Soviel zu
Hmm let me see that so much for again...
But hey, I never pretended to be a native speaker, so there is just stuff I don't care about.
I would be way more careful if I were pretending to be the actual Reg Dwight, say.
So in a way, he was 50% right, 50% wrong, but then everybody jumped on him and... well, as I said, I didn't feel like participating.
And this discussion here is way too long, too.
I'll go fetch myself some soup.
I am all semanticaly satiated now.
Good idea.
Borscht?
Or however that is spelled...
Sadly, no.
I wish.
But no.
Brb.
Sad indeed.
19:24
At least they cared enough to use your writing as an example, @Reg. Noone cares enough to sift through my chat history. /sniff
I sift through everybody's chat histories. No Russian child left behind.
(Soup's too cold, waiting...)
((There you have your zero article.))
But anyway, I keep telling you to post more on the main site.
yesterday, by RegDwight
You could be at 5k by now.
So no whining. Your own fault, comrade!
Brb, checking soup.
What's the difference between soup and borscht anyway? I'm always getting them confused.
One is delicious, the other one extremely delicious.
Plus, cold borshch is an option.
Cold soup ain't.
So, breaking applying all rules of logic at the same time, if it's cold and you can eat it, then it's borshch.
@RegDwight Not necessarily: meggyleves
Yeah, gazpacho.
But I'm talking Russian cuisine.
Oh yeah.
How could I forget that one.
Though I'm not a big fan.
Or probably I am, but I find myself eating borshch much more often.
Is there any kind of ritual I have to perform in order to the “add comment” button to show up?
Кушай тюрю, Яша.
@Vitaly А Яша кушает да ест.
@rberaldo You need at least 50 reputation on the site concerned...
19:40
@Vitaly, @psmears wow, I didn't know that. I'm sorry.
Mea culpa.
@rberaldo Hey, no need to be sorry :)
What @psmears said.
Only 24 points to go. Just post something about bricks and mortar.
@psmears, I'm used to tex.stackexchangr.com, I didn't even notice I had to have 50 points to be able to post comments.
@rberaldo Hold on a sec.
Just associate your accounts.
You'll get an instant 100-rep boost.
No wait, disregard that.
You only get the boost once you're at 200 rep on any site of the network.
But then you get it automatically on every site.
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19:42
@RegDwight don't be sour, you too can think of such a stellar answer next time
@RegDwight oh, thank you. Soon enough I will have 200 points on tex.sc, I think.
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Q: Who invented the chicken sandwich?

AlanBarberThere's a US restaurant chain called Chick-Fil-A and their motto is "We didn't invent the chicken, just the chicken sandwich" If you did deeper you find that they claim that what they really mean is that the founder, Truett Cathy, was the first person to sell a chicken sandwich in 1940s at a pre...

that one is fun
@Fx Nah, before there's any misunderstanding, I'm not jealous or something. We've all been there. Robusto, ShreevatsaR, JSBangs, myself...
Ghoppe, too.
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maybe next time: “my mother-in-law said I'm a jackass; can anyone help me with evidence refuting this theory?”
Ask a guy who's attending to a Methods of Sociolinguistics Analysis anything.
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19:44
and it's tagged
Hi! Questions like this are off-topic, right? english.stackexchange.com/questions/23991/freezed-vs-frozen
Boo, it won't be long before we have three lines of chatters!
@RegDwight It does pain me slightly that, after all the hours I've spent carefully writing up answers for this site, the question that netted me by far the most rep was one that took barely 30 seconds to write, including looking up and pasting on the reference link...
@z7sg Not off-topic. But could be considered too basic by the community.
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well, inactive chatters decay as slowly as 137Cs
so it's not a very accurate representation of activity
19:45
@psmears Yeah well, this discussion comes up every week or so, and not just here but in every chat room and on every site.
@RegDwight Well, there is a question on meta about it. It could be closed as general reference.
In the end, it evens out.
@Psm: I know the feeling! My Wikipedia copy-pastes are my "best" answers, I think.
@z7sg That's what I'm referring to.
@RegDwight Sure. But the pain lingers on nonetheless :)
19:46
I'm not sure if I'm flagging over-zealously already...
Come to think of it, my faaaaar too long answer on the modality of "supposed to" actually made it to 10 in a few weeks. That was remarkable.
Feb 16 at 13:30, by RegDwight
But I think that Ex-user is spot on anyhow: it all evens out in the end. You take your time to compose a thorough answer, you get 2 upvotes. You post a half-assed joke, you get 20. In the end, you still have 22 upvotes, whether you would prefer them to be the other way round or not.
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except that you never get them the other way around
LOL.
That's the bikeshed problem.
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so, if I have skill but no wit, I get f*cked by the system, over and over again
come to think of it as highschool :)
19:47
Everyone feels entitled to vote on one-liners everybody understands.
At least you are getting some.
In order to vote on complicated stuff, you have to switch on your brain and read it.
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@Cerberus still talking about votes, right?
Can you star answers instead of upvoting them?
@RegDwight Exactly, that is the problem: people vote on what they find true or false.
@F'x: Eh right!
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19:49
OK, I've checked and I definitely got no highly upvoted witty answer; kind of sad
@Vitaly Yes, I like to refer to it as "the pageman approach". You post a comment saying "+1 excellent would vote again A++++", but don't actually upvote.
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but every time, I was just lucky to be the first one to answer a question that would turn out to be popular
@Fx I think I have figured that out somehow.
Out of my 20 most recent answers some 15 got multicollidered.
But hey, there are a lot of great questions out there. I upvote five times a day.
Speaking of popular questions, I have a gut feeling that Elven, elvish, and elfic is sort of promising in that respect.
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19:52
@RegDwight when you multicollide, you get 300 rep; when physicists multicollide, the uncover a Higgs boson; not fair!
@Vitaly Nope, sorry.
Too old, and there are at least two questions ahead of it.
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@Vitaly be right back, gotta get that lottery ticket :)
I'm not holding breath.
What, LOTR is not all the rage nowadays?
Sigh. I am getting old.
Mar 7 at 18:08, by Robusto
@RegDwight — Here's my all-time shill question suggestion: "Which Ubuntu distro allows the fastest downloads of porn and more cowbell?"
19:53
Someone ask a Twilight question then.
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@Vitaly I'd have to read the book, or the movie, or the Wikipedia entry, and I'm not that desperate for rep
@Fx: it's okay, I didn't actually mean it literally. I was referring to the what-do-you-call-it pop literature?
@Fx Too complicated. Just ask "What is Twilight?" or "OMG isn't Twilight teh awesum?"
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@RegDwight actually, a few years back, I would have loved to ask "OMG what arez the Deadly Hollowz?"
Mar 7 at 17:48, by RegDwight
Or post a question about whether Vista is better than Ubuntu. In the three seconds it will take me to close it, it will get more views, answers, and comments, than all of our sex questions combined.
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19:57
@RegDwight: you may want to close this:
http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/23996/monosyllabic-and-polysyllabic
After you answered?
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@RegDwight well, my nerves got the worst of me
Seriously though, it's dupish.
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I have a small kid crying in my ears while I try to spend a nice evening chat here
3
Q: What is a word called that has more than one syllable?

Edward TanguayYou can say e.g.: The word "on" is a monosyllable. but it seems that the word "multisyllable" has been outdated since 1913. What is the correct term for a word that has two or more syllables, e.g. "The word "beautiful" is a _________.

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19:58
I'm getting cranky
Well, not that dupish, it turns out.
@Fx Let the kid post. It could learn some English or something.
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not dupe, but dupish: the answer is contained in it
Remember that French ain't even a language.
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you want me to upload a wav file? you'll regret it instantly
3 month olds have a very specific way to tell you that they're not happy, even without language
Well, we'll just force @Martha to listen to it on our behalf.
20:00
1
A: Monosyllabic and polysyllabic...

F'xMonosyllabic is polysyllabic. Polysyllabic is polysyllabic. Is is monosyllabic.

You want me to consult the Oxford Latin Dictionary?
Of course.
Is there any reason you shouldn't?
Name one.
I'm not Catholic?
I'm told they even have an entry for bagels.
20:03
Will y'all quit waking me up already?
@Martha Sorry, @Martha. Sorry. I'm really sorry, @Martha. I really am. @Martha.
No you're not. Hmph.
@Kosmonaut Is that a question? In that case
Apr 29 at 23:00, by RegDwight
This is clearly the wrong site. You must ask over -----> there
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0
Q: What's the longest monosyllabic word? And Dissyllabic?

F'xAnother question on the site made me take notice that through is monosyllabic, but quite long. Are there longuer monosyllabic words? What's the longest dissyllabic word in English?

let's get those brainz cracking!
@Fx Oh, longuer. La-di-da!
20:06
Edited already. :)
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@RegDwight Martha got there before me
French influence
like I often write langage
Not Slovak? Oh...
Also fixed disyllabic while I was at it.
Right. Dissing is off-topic.
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@Martha rolled-back, then, and re-edited
disyllabic |ˈˌdaɪsəˈlæbɪk| |ˈˌdɪsəˈlæbɪk| (also dissyllabic)
20:08
But you missed disyllabic.
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I always check for uncommon words with double consonants in a dictionary, because otherwise I never get them right
There's one in the title, too, that even I missed.
...consonants...
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@Martha told you :(
someone know if there's, like, a rule, a mnemonic, for that?
Well, yeah. So, are you going to fix the double-esses, or do you want me to?
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3 mins ago, by F'x
disyllabic |ˈˌdaɪsəˈlæbɪk| |ˈˌdɪsəˈlæbɪk| (also dissyllabic)
                                                                   ^^^^^^^^^
20:11
@Fx I just have this built-in spelling dictionary in my brain.
Just be careful about not bulding in anything from Microsoft.
> Dissyllable was universal in 17–18th c., and (app. either under the erroneous impression that it contains, not the Greek prefix δι-, but the word δίς, or from association with words in the Latin prefix dis-, as disseminate, dissimulate, dissonant, etc.), is still the spelling of the majority. But classical scholars now prefer the etymological form, which has also been approved by the Philological Society.]
Haha. Zis side ruels.
@Fx I don't care what the dictionary says, "dissyllabic" sounds like it means "wrong syllable" or something.
“is still the spelling of the majority” ← that entry from the OED is dated early 20th century.
20:13
@RegDwight — Yeah. Which means you won't get high rep on SO. And Jon Skeet and Tony the Pony will hunt you down.
@Robusto I like ponies!
You like unicorns.
We're dangerously close to getting a third row of gravatars.
Unicorns != Ponies.
Ponies, unicorns, aren't they the same thing?
Jinx!
20:14
No, that was the opposite of what I said.
Night all.
I'm already seeing a third row of gravatars.
In fact, if I resize the window, we already have five.
Or yours was a Jeopardy response to my statement.
No, wait, somebody just left, we're down to two rows again.
20:14
@Vitaly Wow that was unexpected. Night. Or more like hello, when you see this tomorrow.
@Dori never leaves. She is the Kibo of EL&U chat.
yesterday, by RegDwight
/kick lurkers
yesterday, by RegDwight
/start with=@Dori
It neva workz.
Oh, now you're just doing it to torment me ;-)
There never was any other reason.
Well, yesterday it got us @kiamlaluno.
20:16
Right!
I'm kinda surprised we actually got the @Dori herself to respond this time.
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Q: Correct pronunciation of the letter "v"

picakhuGoing off of the "haitch" vs "aitch" debate, what is the correct pronunciation of v? is it "vee" with a f-type mouth placement or a "wee" or "wi" like the game console?

In other news, my stupid online radio stream keeps freezing up. Or something. Anyway, it stops playing music.
We're the third-most active and third-most, um, peopled room right now.
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what happens when we have gone over the entire alphabet? where will the quality questions come from next?
20:18
@Fx — That one is easy. "V" is pronounced just like "v". Or vice versa.
@Fx Letter combinations, d'oh!
@Martha If I'm around (about 12 hours a day) and you mention my name, I show up.
@Dori — Hey! Give credit where it's due. I'm the one who @-mentioned you.
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@RegDwight OK, I'll start with “How should I pronounce ‘aa’?”
@Dori Well, except yesterday the same magic incantation that summoned you, summoned @kiamlaluno instead.
20:19
@Robusto Credit or blame? ;-)
@Fx We've had that one on the list of shortest palindromes.
I thought Pikachu asked the question about the pronunciation of “v”.
@Fx Didn't we close that one already?
@rberaldo Gottacatchemall!
@Dori Well, when you rub the lamp and the genie appears, what do you call that? Credit-worthy or blame-worthy. I guess it depends on the genie, yeah?
20:20
People rub stuff too often in this room.
@Fx I am crafting a script that automatically posts questions from the dictionary. Starting with "What is the meaning of 'at'?". And for extra credit it also posts an answer with a definition pasted from a random online dictionary...
Apr 29 at 21:14, by Robusto
@RegDwight — No. You have to rub a charm. You don't have to rub the settings at all.
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Then, we'll have "How long is the /i/ in 'eek'? How much longer are that of 'eeek' and 'eeeek'?"
Nobody look at Priapus.
On the negative side, the quality of questions will go down. On the plus side, once it's done we will be able to close all "What does X mean?" questions as dupes.
20:21
@psmears a is covered already, in a number of questions. And I am happy to report that I have answered them all.
/modifies script
@RegDwight, funny, yesterday the 1st episode was going on TV.
@rberaldo You live in a time machine?
@RegDwight, unfortunately not, it's just Brazilian TV.
So it is a time machine.
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20:23
@MrDisappointment /me actually wonders how, if I were actually willing to look at Priapus, I could actually locate the god of fertility
Not that strap-on again.
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@RegDwight and I was about to say "queue the jokes", but it's a mixed English-French pun
pun is the antonym of bun.
@RegDwight, damn it, I always hoped that times machines were assembled in DeLorians.
20:25
You can't assemble a DeLorian while dancing samba 24/7.
It just doesn't work.
There's actually a samba routine. It's called “DeLoriando na avenida”. True story.
You'd be surprised by how many people work whilst dancing samba.
Well, samba dancers...
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@RegDwight very bad (or confused) cha-cha dancers…
20:31
Ivan Rebroff...
@RegDwight they're everywhere!
The goggles do nothing!
UMG content.
20:33
eben
I guess Germany strictly monitors its Schlager hits.
Oh I can't watch it now. I'll bookmark it and watch later, seems like gold.
Haha @Martha, that answer got trimmed in a very interesting place when converted to a comment:
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A: “It's no use of doing something”

Robin CésarThe Ugandan is me, and I did not insist. I said he was right. Sorry I couldn't read it all apart from the examples you've given like... "pop" which I never use at all. I can't be sure of anything, I hear it that way and I can't insist that it was right or wrong. I am so surprised that someone too...

It used to end in "I admire your spirit of descriptivism. Keep it up."
Look where it got cut off. "I admire you"
Snicker.
@Kosmonaut For a video titled "Dance the Samba with me", there is very little samba-dancing to be found in it.
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Regarding monosyllabic words, I should have thought of thwacked
20:41
@Martha Oh you mean it's this song?
@RegDwight Jopp
That one I know.
It's awesome, as a matter of fact.
Those two videos are equally painful.
Your version contains even less samba-dancing. I didn't think that was possible.
I had to make that comment a part of the original answer.
It was fun while it lasted.
20:46
@Martha, do you have a real example of a samba?
Not really, no, though I'm sure a little searching on YouTube would find you more than you ever wanted. (Can't do it now, I'm at work.)
I found one entitled samba, but the comments mentioned it wasn't really a samba.
Apart from Google's ngrams, what else is out there? The tool from Google has some OCR issues: goo.gl/bJQYT
@SpareOom Yeah, that's some weird fusion of belly dancing and various types of Latin dance. Try this:
@rberaldo COCA + BNC + COHA + Google Spreadsheets.
That's the old-school approach.
20:54
@RegDwight, apart from Google Spreadsheets, yeah!
Gotta go. See you guys!

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