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01:32
I'm back!
How are you all today?
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 There is going to be an investigation into Google's pushing carriers to include the Google applications in Android on their phones.
In Europe.
 
2 hours later…
03:51
It's always a mistake to read about past perfect tense, particularly since there is no past perfect tense in Modern English. Reading about it is wasted time, and it's no wonder you're confused. There's a vast amount of nonsense out there labelled as explanations of zombies like the Past Perfect. — John Lawler 5 hours ago
Look who's being constructive again.
@Cerberus Taking selfies again, are you?
@Cerberus What does this even mean?
@Mahnax You see three heads?
@Cerberus No, but it could be the lighting.
@MετάEd The last two lines are a single sentence.
You know how Kinect works?
04:03
I don't.
@Mahnax Damn, I see I didn't manage to hide that ear at the bottom left.
@Cerberus Ha. You've been found out.
@MετάEd It is a device that can permanently record and analyse whatever is happening in front of it, through normal and infra-red camerae.
It also automatically forms 3D models of what it sees.
It is a compulsory part of the new Xbox, called the Xbox One.
And if you make it watch you play a competitor's system, does it feel hurt?
@Mahnax Then again, isn't that a raccoon?
@MετάEd Microsoft will.
Because of course they are watching whatever you do.
04:06
@Cerberus Makeup.
Hrmpf.
@Cerberus They're only a pass-thru to NSA.
There are probably many layers both outside and within the NSA, each of which has some guys who like watching what you do.
waves Hi, NSA!
awaits extermination
laser beam drops down from sky
04:08
mirror
burns self
helicopter is fried
OUCH!
That sucked.
Oops.
@Mahnax Hey! You blinded Superman. Watch where you point that thing.
04:09
I knew it. Throw bombs first, always.
@MετάEd He'll be fine. Walk it off, Superman, walk it off.
Thanks for the compliment, but I'm not Superman.
Besides, walking is beneath him.
@Cerberus Only when he's flying. When he's burrowing, it's above him.
He burrows, really?
For hibernation?
> And this isn't a theoretical problem either. Sweden just issued a ruling that bars the public sector from using Google's cloud services. Meanwhile, India is already telling companies that they need to setup local servers rather than make use of US servers if they want to do business in India.
05:07
@Cerberus Pfft. Next, somebody will invent a search engine that keeps track of what things you search for, and what pages you visit from its result list.
 
1 hour later…
06:12
Hi
What's the meaning of becky in "becky heel stretch": www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWzzMeYS8aA
seems like only a name
 
3 hours later…
09:00
@mr.shinyandnew安宇
Also, the next CUUSOO set is underway.
09:14
I just watched Man of steel and it makes me wonder
why do super heroes like superman or batman never exist in Korea or Australia?
Or China?
Super heroes tend to exist in the country they're created in.
09:34
@RegDwighт so much up talk?
@Meysam it's Becky, doing a heel stretch.
10:03
@MattЭллен how do you mean?
One of the loveliest videos Jamie ever made.
@MattЭллен Check this out, save does not work yet
10:17
@RegDwighт finishing statements with question inflection
Oh, that kind of up talk.
I didn't even notice.
Perhaps I'm too used to listening to him.
@JohanLarsson what does it do?
@RegDwighт yeah, it's not even vaguely important, it just grates on my ears
@MattЭллен The nice part is in the ctor for DummyVm, getting typed stuff out of appsettings, maybe you already knew about it
10:33
@JohanLarsson so you're saving objects to your exe.config?
yes, think the framework had a nice way
this is funny
@JohanLarsson cool. that's interesting.
pushed again, minor cleanup.
Properties.Settings.Default.Save(); //This does not save anything for application scoped settings :(
*the framework has two nice ways
 
1 hour later…
11:59
!!/define opinative
@DavidWallace opinative Conjectural; expressing an opinion rather than a fact.
 
2 hours later…
13:43
@DavidWallace Which is why people already don't use Google to search for things ththey wish to keep a secret.
Hmm, I never thought of that.
How do I delete my google history?
14:03
@DavidWallace You can supposedly delete it in Google's settings.
But I'm sure the NSA and others have copies.
@tchrist Haha.
I wonder why he wasn't taught the pronunciation of ij. It's rather basic...
That’s what I was wondering.
"Pronounce ij exactly like ei", and you're done.
He is right that it is something treated as a digraph, sometimes not.
But y is never pronounced in isolation like ij.
In Scrabble, ij is a single letter, but that sometimes surprises people.
Yes, it is strange.
And that’s strange, too, because of how it counts as two letters both directions.
I have question about lyric in language english.
Wut means "God rest ye merry, gentlemen"?
I can understand like 100% of the rest of the song, but not that one very first line.
14:19
Bongs for breakfast again, Reg?
You've a better idea?
Or is that the meaning of that line?
Sure.
It means "May God make you merry, guys."
So why the why does it say "rest"?
14:20
It’s an old use of rest.
It means keep or make.
We don’t use it that way today.
Très étrange.
Cuatro.
> There is some confusion today about the meaning of the first line, which seems archaic to our ears. It is usually given today as "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen", with a comma after the word "merry", so does not refer to "merry gentlemen". "Rest" here denotes "keep or make," with "you" as the object of "rest;" "ye" was the nominative form, and thus was nonstandard as the object of a verb.
> In both of the 18th-century instances, "you" was used instead of "ye," suggesting that the latter may be a modern insertion to make the carol sound more quaintly archaic.
I drive a quattro.
 
1 hour later…
15:23
@tchrist Nice.
Yes, ij counts as a single letter in two directions too (how could it be otherwise?).
I was off reading Lawler’s latest helpful link for English learners. I also answered his summarily unhelpul not-a-tense comment.
1
A: each - pronoun or adverb

John LawlerEach is a Quantifier, a part of speech that wasn't discovered until the 19th century, which was too late to get into the Top Eight list, which was canonized much earlier. Quantifiers are a form of Determiner (another POS), and they "bind" noun phrases, which means they modify and quantify them. L...

That’s where the link is.
Haven’t answered that one, though.
@PeterShor No, when John says tense he means single-word inflection, which is why the past perfect cannot be one of his tenses, since it takes more than one word in English (unlike in Latin). Here the auxiliary is in the (simple) past and the main verb itself is in the past participle. He doesn’t seem to believe in synthetic tenses. The problem with banishing it from the tenses is that it remains a construct that people use, and so will need to know how to use correctly. That doesn’t make it non-existent. — tchrist 4 hours ago
@Cerb But Lawler says belief does not enter into the matter. :)
> Now is this label "passive perfect" merely a convention? It may have been once, but, as people start believing in it, they start using it in ways that neatly fit the system, even if the meaning of visus sum was once somewhat different.
Synthetic tenses are not a matter of belief. Everything tchrist says about the "past perfect" is true for thousands of other constructions that people use, and so will need to know how to use correctly. Here's a partial list of past "tenses". Why give "past perfect" a special name and special treatment, if you don't do the same for the others? Because Past Perfect is what they told us about in the third grade, so it must be true. They never mentioned the others, so they must not be. — John Lawler 43 mins ago
There are thousands of other constructions like the past perfect? I disbelieve.
You can stack up a few auxiliaries and making things like I will have been being seen by that doctor for ten years come next Tuesday, but that only goes so far. It doesn’t add up to “thousands”.
And even that seems unnatural. There are too many words there.
15:42
geoguessr fun:
longitude let's say ~20W, latitude ~230N.
The best part..I got -some- points out of it.
@tchrist Right. Make it a hundred, then...
@Mitch Wow. You're really good at this game.
@tchrist And thanks for quoting me.
I have voted your comment up and added one of my own.
> Moderate candidate Rohani far ahead of opponents in Iranian presidential election
That's good.
16:10
@Cerberus The Rohirrim always give their opponents a good run for the money.
Hah.
I don't recall any fundraising for Théoden's ascendence to the throne...
I was thinking of horse races, actually.
16:58
Oh haha.
Did they have horse races?
Hey
Is "years" plural or singular? For example, I spent 30 years behind these walls and I wonder where it went.
Or should it be "where they went"
No.
It is correct.
Don’t get too tied to singular-vs-plural.
Okay.
Or you’ll spend decades pondering imponderables and then die wondering where the time went.
@Noah I would strongly prefer they there.
So I disagree with Tchrist.
17:12
Thirty years is all you get.
It means thirty years’ time.
But that's different.
Would you say 30 years was spent in prison, rather than 30 years were spent in prison? The latter sounds much better to me.
True.
 
6 hours later…
23:43
Does anyone here have good knowledge about TOEIC and TOEFL?
I want to buy textbooks that ETC officially recognised but I cannot find any on Google.
Can you please suggest me if you happen to know any of them?

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