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12:07 AM
That's nice.
But hard to remember.
 
Well, we could just call them Pat if that's easier to remember.
Araucaria (pronunciation: /ærɔːˈkɛəriə/) is a genus of evergreen coniferous trees in the family Araucariaceae. There are 19 extant species in the genus, with a Gondwanan natural distribution in New Caledonia (where 13 species are endemic), Norfolk Island, eastern Australia, New Guinea, Argentina, Chile, and southern Brazil. == Description == Araucaria are mainly large trees with a massive erect stem, reaching a height of 30–80 metres (98–262 ft). The horizontal, spreading branches grow in whorls and are covered with leathery or needle-like leaves. In some species, the leaves are narrow, awl-shaped...
Araucariaceae would be even worse.
> The genus is named after the Spanish exonym Araucano ("from Arauco") applied to the Mapuches of central Chile and south-west Argentina, whose territory incorporates natural stands of this genus.
 
I find the endless closing of perfectly fine questions so demoralising.
I'm sure I'm not the only one.
 
1
Q: What should we do when a reasonable grammar question is incorrectly closed?

AraucariaHere is one of the most important yet most difficult questions about English for the majority of language learners in the world: What is the difference between 'a' and 'the'? My question is: How can this site survive if questions like this get closed? By the way, if you really have no idea o...

It's been shogged.
 
I think that one was properly closed as a duplicate.
But a number of high-reps like to close questions that get OK answers and that are just fine.
Tons of questions.
Do they care at all about the fact that it makes many others, including experienced users, hate the site?
 
12:23 AM
Properly closing things as duplicates makes people hate the site?
 
"But" indicates opposition or antithesis.
 
@Cerberus Once one has moved into they territory, it becomes impossible to generalize without demonizing.
Who can say what "they" may or may not care about, since their are necessarily so many of "them"?
 
"You", then.
 
I filter on off-topic and duplicate only.
Certainly duplicates are easily adjudged.
 
I'm not talking about duplicates, unless they're not duplicates.
 
12:31 AM
@Cerberus: Hi! I'm grateful that you don't blame me for voting to close this question, but if not, I don't know what you mean when you say "all the hostility." The question has received zero downvotes, and the only comments are from me and you. Are you talking about the Meta post I linked to? If so, maybe you should post an answer or comment there.
 
@tchrist You've closed plenty of questions that I thought were enjoyable enough.
 
@Cerberus I'm sure.
 
@sumelic I'm sorry, I just get mad when I see another question closed that I think is asked in earnest, can be answered, and is enjoyable enough for people to answer.
It's the large number.
Makes me close the tab.
 
I'm open to persuasion.
Also bribes.
 
People close lots of questions.
 
12:33 AM
I am not people, unfortunately.
But I don't want you to be mad.
 
That makes me and a fairly large number of people ashamed of this site. And it makes the site seem hostile to newcomers. I have heard this countless times from people at other SE sites. Although ELU is by no means the only hostile site.
 
I guess I don't understand why you feel mad. My first comment explained what the word was and had a link to a dictionary definition. So, I think the original poster has gotten the answer to their question. But the question doesn't seem like it will be useful to other people in the future who find it through Google.
 
Yes, your comment was an A+ for that reason and I have upvoted it.
Maybe someone else will one day wonder about the pronunciation of the same word in that video, who knows?
90% of all questions on the site are probably not actually "useful" for other people. But people might still enjoy reading them and answering them.
 
1
Q: What is a word for "having the form of a Brussels sprout"?

Sam FaheyInspired by Dictionary.com's Word of the Day, "botryoidal" (adj. -having the form of a bunch of grapes), and the ongoing naming process of a product at my work which has these features: What is a word for something with a long cylindrical shape covered in small bulbs? If you understand how such ...

 
Yeah, I saw that one.
 
12:37 AM
Catullus, right?
 
We have 10000 SWRs that are far less useful to anyone but the Op and that are not closed.
 
I've done my best to fix that.
 
Why is it that sites start out far more welcoming, and turn sour as the years pass? I remember this was a much more open, friendly place in 2010 for new users.
@tchrist Why? I have always hated SWRs, but what if other people like them?
 
@Cerberus It's true that not all questions currently on the site are useful. But, I don't think the site will function if the criteria for questions are just "things people enjoy reading and answering." Everybody has different opinions about that.
 
@Cerberus Have you never seen that before?
@Cerberus I try to close them, usually.
Especially bad words for people.
 
12:40 AM
I have, but I will make sure to protest vehemently if that should ever happen to Latin. Luckily, we need all the questions we get there...
 
This happens on mailing lists, news groups, forums. It's a syndrome. Might ask Shog.
Can you name three non-beta SE sites where this does not happen?
I'll take one or two even.
 
@sumelic No, not all questions should be allowed. But most questions that have to do with English and are asked in earnest deserve to stay open, unless they're really bad for some reason. Or unless they're try duplicates or belong on ELL.
@tchrist Probably not. But does that make it any less demoralising for me and other people?
This looks a whole lot less hostile than ELU's 129.
 
@Cerberus I think if someone asks an earnest question about English, we should do our best to make sure they learn the answer. But that doesn't mean the question itself is necessarily valuable.
 
PT.SE has closed exactly five undeleted questions in the past 90 days.
 
@sumelic Don't you think different people have different opinions on what's valuable?
As it is, only 5 users are needed to close a question.
And it alienates lots of users, new and old alike.
It spoils the atmosphere.
 
12:46 AM
@Cerberus It also only takes 5 to reopen.
 
But those 5 are 1000x harder to acquire.
 
@Cerberus Verga verrucarum
 
Because they cannot be cast when normal people view such a question.
I view the question when it is new.
 
@Cerberus Alienating users is a serious problem. But it's hard to figure out how to best resolve conflicting preferences.
 
Then I probably won't see it again.
@sumelic It's just that I get the feeling that the close-happy among us don't realise what kind of an effect it has on people.
Nor do the people at SE HQ.
Or most of them.
 
12:48 AM
That's the passive-aggressive we. :)
 
How has your experience been when you went to a new SE site because you had a specific question (not because you were looking to answer questions)?
 
Never had a problem with it.
 
I don't think any of my questions have ever been closed, but that is because I dare not ask any questions except when it's a new site.
 
Except on MSE, whose masters are cruel slavedrivers.
 
@Cerberus I asked a question on Skeptics about "Earl Mitt." It is still unanswered, but people were friendly and left some helpful comments.
 
12:50 AM
I ask questions in chat, not on actual SE sites, usually.
@sumelic I'm glad.
 
wonders whether it should be warty green pole or whether it should be green warty pole
 
@Cerberus I know it bothered me when I got a question closed on this site. But that is because I didn't feel I had the answer. If I knew the answer, I wouldn't really care.
 
Just to toss in another v-word.
 
I recently wanted to know whether ECC protected one against the rowhammer malware attack.
 
I think I may have seen that question.
 
12:52 AM
I got no useful information.
 
Well, chat.
It's an interesting question.
 
@Cerberus Oh, where did you ask?
 
@sumelic Sure, if you get the answer in a comment, that really helps to take away some of the hostility. But still, if it's closed, that may make people feel that not is their question disliked, no, it is not even deemed worthy to be on the site at all. They're not even able to ask a question that isn't considered ridiculous. That's how it can make people feel, even though it's probably not intended that way.
@sumelic I asked on Security, I think, but got nothing.
 
People will always be put off by having their questions close, justly or not.
 
I wanted to ask what memory I should get to be safe against rowhammer on Hardware Recommendations, but I asked on Meta first, and I was told my question was not good enough to be posted. So I didn't post it.
@tchrist Yes, that that should only be done if it is really necessary.
 
12:57 AM
If you ran the ELU close-vote review queue, do you not think you could exhaust your votes, and perhaps good will?
 
Well, anyway, it was not my intention to discuss the merits of closing questions per se; I just want to let people know how harmful it can be for the community.
@tchrist The queue disgusts me, frankly.
 
It would exhaust your good will.
 
@Cerberus to put aside the question of the amount of closing for the moment, I notice that none of the vote to reopeners upvoted the question, and neither did the answerer
 
I occasionally start dealing with some questions from the queue, but the negativity makes he hate the site too much to continue. All the questions that don't deserve to be closed.
@Mitch No, because it's not a good question per se. But that's what general votes are for: to indicate whether you like the question or really dislike it. But it looks to me as though high-reps are simply using close-votes for that instead.
 
You can vote not to close and move the thing from the queue.
 
1:01 AM
Or some of them.
 
But in the other topic, the entire set of special features for a Q&A site added by Jeff Atwood was intended to combat your specific malaise
 
How do you mean?
The close-vote queue is no substitute, it is far too weak to be able to offer any resistance to the 5 close-votes that are needed to close a question.
 
Well in one direction, the closing machinery to get rid of crap, just like reputation, eventually gets gamed, people playing with the rules simply to exercise their abilities.
 
@Cerberus That depends. On SO I only ever run the CVRQ for duplicates I have golds in. That takes care of that.
 
There should at least be a "leave open" button next to the "vote to close" button on the question page, from the beginning.
 
1:03 AM
I agree with the leave-open idea, there should be parity
 
@Mitch I'm afraid that would be closed as as duplicate.
 
If there were, far fewer questions would be closed.
 
11
Q: Allow voting "Vote to not close" from the question without being in a review

BrianI just reached the 3k rep limit required for close votes and have started exploring the vote-to-close UI that's opened up to me, and I have a request. The review queue has a Do Not Close button, but when I click the close link under a question that has close votes (i.e. it shows close (1)), ther...

 
@Cerberus: I also was just thinking about that. It is "status-declined" though:
434
Q: How about a "Vote not to close" option to counter the "Vote to close"?

BFreeMy request is simple: Many times, there will be a question where some people feel like it should be closed. At the same time, I'll feel like it's a perfectly legit question, and it should therefore NOT be closed. Right now, I have to wait till it gets enough close votes (which it always does for ...

 
1:06 AM
But highly upvoted
 
And not closed!
 
Too radical an implementation?
 
59
A: How about a "Vote not to close" option to counter the "Vote to close"?

Shog9As the Mechanical snail points out, this has now been implemented, though not quite as-requested. Of note: Only accessible from the review queue (so rather difficult to target a specific question). Yes, this is very much by-design. Voting against closing does not override anyone's close vote....

 
@tchrist I'm not surprised that people have asked for this before. Shog's answer is bad.
 
Can we please have different systems for StackOverflow and other sites? SO is a juggernaut constantly besieged with terrible questions, in need of a fast, efficient close system, with plenty of users to re-open incorrectly closed questions quickly. Smaller SE sites have the opposite problem - it's common for a clique of 5-7 pernickety users (usually SO veterans) to scupper a site's growth by closing every question that in any way stands out. Re-opening questions on these sites takes ages even when there's a strong consensus, because they've usually dropped of the front page. — user568458 Jan 28 at 15:07
*persnickety
 
1:09 AM
Trivia: there've been over 9 thousand questions on Stack Overflow where the same user has up-voted and voted to close.Shog9 ♦ Jun 7 '12 at 0:10
 
@sumelic I hardly need to chase that link. I'm aware of the cisatlantic distinction.
 
Kerfuffle vs kerfluffle
 
I'm just beating on the Brits. The Fourth is coming up here pretty soon now.
 
> Voting against closing does not override anyone's close vote. However, a sufficient number of "Do Not Close" responses (currently 3) will kick the question out of the review queue and start aging the close votes - regardless of how many views the question has had.

If the question is closed, Do Not Close votes do not translate into re-open votes. However, we may use them to prioritize items in the Reopen Queue (when such a thing exists).
 
1:11 AM
Wha? Brits say it wrong?
 
Very much intentional.
 
Way too complicated
 
Where's your Gold Reopen Steward badge?
 
Let's not all become Jeff Atwoods.
Who drove away several of our most valued, knowledgeable users with his hostility.
 
*our
 
1:14 AM
Although in his case I think it was intentional.
 
SE is better than yahoo answers, but I don't know how to fix its behavioral problems
I feel like tweaking the features won't do it.
People are just jerks by nature
 
Perhaps.
But then why give them the power to shut down other people in fives without any resistance?
I think most of the questions that are now closed should instead be downvoted.
Down votes are about interest and quality.
Closing should only be done when it is super clear and objectively testable.
And even then they should just be migrated to offtopic.SE.
 
Have you been getting enough catsup lately?
 
2:15 AM
?
 
Ketchup has lots of flavonoids, supposedly calming
Wait....there's a offtopic.SE?
 
There should be.
Call it Varia.SE if you will.
@tchrist By the way, the Brussels sprouts turned out to be a fun question with good comments, ridiculous though it was. I think our site is better off with it open.
Despite my hatred of SWRs.
 
 
5 hours later…
7:54 AM
If anniversary is the date on which something happened last year, what is the date on which something happened five or ten years ago? Again anniversary?
 
8:36 AM
@Færd Yes. You can also specify: Today is our ten year anniversary.
Or simply, today is our tenth anniversary.
 
9:00 AM
@terdon Thank you.
 
9:17 AM
You're welcome
 
 
2 hours later…
11:27 AM
@Mitch you wish, defiler of the Queen's language
 
11:38 AM
Good morning @Matty.
 
11:55 AM
hi @Kit :D
 
sup
 
not much. trying to get motivated. sup with you?
 
About the same. I started reading a book last night and I want to keep reading it instead of doing my work.
 
Hello everyone. I need some native speakers to help me out. Is the following correct English?
Instead of saying "count hairs" can I say "perform follical counts"?
 
Depends on what you mean by "correct English".
 
12:01 PM
I find the use of "perform" here very unusual but I would rather not touch/fix it unless it is clearly incorrect ...
 
It's fine, except it's follicle not follical.
@Szabolcs No.
It's not incorrect.
Except for the spelling.
 
@KitZ.Fox OK, thanks. follical means "related to follicles", but thats just one fancy word I substituted for another one. It's not in the actual text.
 
That would be follicular.
 
Thanks again.
 
Sure thing.
"Performing a count" is the usual way of making that sound fancy.
(instead of "counting")
 
12:04 PM
TBH I really dislike making things sound fancy just for the sake of sounding academic.
 
Usually you'd use it if you had, for instance, some kind of count measure and you wanted to make it clear that you were gathering that data in this manner.
"I performed a follicle count every time he sneezed. ... The follicle counts got smaller and smaller over the course of the study."
For instance.
If you said instead "I counted follicles every time he sneezed. ... The follicle counts got smaller and smaller over the course of the study." it would be less clear that the two things are directly related.
 
In that context it doesn't sound quite as unnatural anymore.
Makes sense now. Thanks!
 
sure thing
 
@KitZ.Fox what's the book?
 
Loki's Wolves.
I got it for my son's birthday and he wanted me to read it first.
 
12:11 PM
:D
 
I wish I hadn't discovered the thing about Odinists being white supremacists, because it really kind of taints the story.
Also, I haven't read Percy Jackson, but I'm pretty sure this is the same story s/Greek gods/Norse gods/
 
@KitZ.Fox maybe not all of them are and just those two were racist
 
Yeah, but now I am very conscious of the fact that it is a very Aryan/Nordic blond white boy who is going to save the world.
 
Does a plagiarism detector detect speech in videos?
 
12:25 PM
If she's paying attention, then yes.
 
Your plagiarism detector is your teacher, right?
 
the teacher and the software
 
Why are you putting effort into plagiarizing when you could just do the work?
 
I have my work almost done.
I'm just wondering if I transcribed somebody's speech on youtube, would an anti-plagiarism system detect it?
 
12:34 PM
I don't know. It's not plagiarism unless you pass it off as your own work anyway.
 
People talk about "computer graphics". Does "graphics" have a singular?
 
Graphic. Yes.
It's probably less common as a noun.
 
@KitZ.Fox So on this page, when running the function Graphics, does it produce a graphic? The phrasing there is "graphical image" or "graphics image".
> Use lines, polygons, circles, etc. to build up a graphics image:
 
I would call that a graph and not a graphic.
And they are likely using graphics in graphics image because graphic image implies something shocking is displayed.
 
@KitZ.Fox What would I call it if I absolutely wanted to avoid confusion with this kind of graph? Anything better than just image?
 
12:39 PM
I'm thinking.
Plot is mentioned there, and depending on the context would be understood to be some kind of representation of data.
 
The name graph is a very unfortunate term for networks ... the whole point of the concept is that we don't care about how it is laid out graphically, yet we use a name that derives from Greek for writing/drawing
But that's now going to change :)
 
In a scientific context, it's unlikely graph would be confused with the mathematical concept of graph.
I think the word I chose would depend on what the thing looked like.
Chart might work.
 
Thanks again!
This was only needed for my SE answers so it's not a big deal :)
 
But in a science context, I'd prefer plot, like box plot or scatterplot or whatever it is.
A graphic would be a good generic for any image.
But it doesn't suggest that it is representing data.
 
That's what I used to use but I was never sure about it.
@KitZ.Fox No need to in this case, so all is good.
 
12:44 PM
Oh. OK. So it's just a computer generated image? Then yes, graphic is suitable.
 
12:59 PM
@Szabolcs graph can be either a network or a plot. Calling networks graphs is far less common and will only be used by people working in the field. I would use graph for network only if I knew the person I'm talking to also knows what edges and nodes are. In the absence of context, graph will almost always be understood as plot.
 
@terdon Well, I do work in the field (sort of) :)
 
@Szabolcs I guessed as much. As I said, those who don't will likely not even be aware of the network meaning of graph.
 
On Mathematica.StackExchange newcomers often accidentally apply the tag graphs-and-networks to plotting questions.
 
I'm a native speaker and a biologist by trade but I think I only heard of graph meaning network when I started a post-doc on protein-protein interaction networks. That's certainly when I first heard about edges to mean a line in a network.
 
@terdon What sort of biologist?
@terdon I recently moved to a biology lab and based on my experience here I am absolutely amazed that the Unix.SE moderator is a biologist ...
 
1:04 PM
@Szabolcs Umm. Kinda complex actually. Pure biology as an undergrad, gene prediction/comparative genomics as a PhD, systems biology (protein-protein interaction networks) during my post doc and variant calling/next gen sequencing now.
@Szabolcs Heh, you must be in a wet lab then. Bioinformaticians tend to work on *nix.
 
@terdon Yep, a bit lonely here ...
 
Of course, the other U&L mods are sysadmins and the like.
What do you work on if you're not a biologist?
 
@terdon Trying to do something with the data they collect (neuroscience). I'm a complex systems physicist.
 
Ouch. Yes, I imagine communication will be hard. You speak very different languages.
 
What field of neuro?
Sensory integration?
 
1:08 PM
@KitZ.Fox Anatomy, connectivity in the brain.
@KitZ.Fox Some other people in the group do that.
 
@Szabolcs Ooh, nice!
 
@Szabolcs Oh that makes sense.
Ha. That Wiki article cites one of my former colleagues.
 
:)
 
That sort of thing was all brand new when I quit the field. We were only just getting the computational power to even consider it.
 
@KitZ.Fox Weren't you doing molecular stuff?
 
1:12 PM
No, cellular/behavioral.
sensorimotor integration in primates
We did cellular recordings.
Etc.
 
@MattE.Эллен "The British version is preferred everywhere outside North America." ... until now! mua ha ha ha
 
@Mitch who let you out of North America?
 
@MattE.Эллен I think she mangles it just fine on her own.
@MattE.Эллен A boat. Duh.
 
@KitZ.Fox Biologist turned writer?
 
@KitZ.Fox That's the worst.
 
1:16 PM
@Mitch I thought that's how you got into America
 
Books are so much more engaging.
@MattE.Эллен I got here by ... well, it's a long story
pulls out memoir
part 0.001
 
@Szabolcs Who, me?
 
It all started with my great great grandfather... wait... his father.
argh.. it keeps going back
 
@KitZ.Fox Yes.
 
I could start with my great grand children
 
1:19 PM
@Mitch you could...
 
My first ancestors here were four brothers who came over around 1600. The one who was my direct lineage was the swineherd of Boston in the early 1600s, according to some registry of such things from 1607.
@Szabolcs Yes, I guess that fits.
 
@Szabolcs graph means drawing for most people. only when you're in combinatorics does it start to mean network
 
He also owned a pub.
 
My first ancestors were prokaryotes who were being invaded by mitochondriotes but then worked it out to work symbiotically.
 
Well. I was talking about my first ancestors in North America. I'm pretty sure I have the same first ancestors as you in the eukaryotic sense.
 
1:22 PM
@Mitch Always thought you were a bit of a prok.
 
My first ancestors were amino acid crystals that encouraged an ATP/ADP conversion cycle
 
Although, come to think of it, I have some First Nations blood in me too.
 
@terdon A euk would say something disparaging like that.
@KitZ.Fox Cousin!
 
As a giant floating Orc head, I have existed since before time. And let me tell you, existing before time is awkward. I never knew when anything was happening.
 
Always simultaneously late and early.
 
1:23 PM
all you have to do is go back, let's say liberally, 30 generations and you're guaranteed some .. untoward relations.
@MattE.Эллен kinda peaceful though
 
@Mitch it's difficult to make memories when there no difference between one moment and the next. So, it could have been.
 
@Mitch Of course they're untoward, that's radial symmetry for you!
 
@terdon 30 generations only gets us back to say the middle Middle ages
or like Orwell, the early later middle Middle ages
 
@Mitch Speak for your short-lived self!
 
@terdon What? Do you think you're some kind of tree?
 
1:30 PM
I yam what I yam.
 
I'm disappointed about the Lost Colony of Roanoke. It was always made out to be some kind of huge mystery.
But the description in Wikipedia makes it obvious what happened.
 
I subscribe to the Flying Pizza Monster Abduction hypothesis here.
 
Ramen.
 
@terdon How do potato varieties get created? I thought most potatoes are spread through rhizomes, cut up a potato and plant them to make more, asexually.
@KitZ.Fox They died?
 
They joined a tribe that was on a nearby island that was subsequently nearly wiped out by smallpox.
 
1:35 PM
There you go.
 
So. It's kind of a no-brainer.
 
Lesson learned. Don't get smallpox
 
Don't welcome settlers with smallpox.
Maybe people thought even less critically then.
 
their first resort was "probably magic".
 
The governor showed up and was like "Most of the houses have been pulled down" Did you find piles of wood? No, you didn't. Because you need wood for pyres and boats.
 
1:37 PM
Like the Odinite/white supremacy thing, it seems like whites like to look for the 'missing' white tribe that show up in the locals that are colonized later by whites with more guns. The blue eyed blond Indians of Kansas (from Welsh explorers).
Did I just make up a myth?
 
And then the "mysterious message" of Croatoan, well, the governor arranged with the settlers to carve a message in a tree if they needed to relocate.
So.
 
@KitZ.Fox It really is a germ theory. You can't really see them so it really might as well be magic as good as miasma
 
Given the next island over was named "Croatoan Island" after the friendly tribe that lived there, it's not really much of a mystery, is it?
 
how do shovels penetrate the ground? probably magic. how do my fingers know how to grip a spoon when I want to grip a spoon? probably magic.
 
Especially after that island tribe is nearly wiped out by a European plague just the year before.
 
1:39 PM
@KitZ.Fox It is a fun story. a movie should be made. about the impending doom. and the flight for safety. being harbored by the locals. then coughing and fever and fade to black.
@MattE.Эллен How do blankets work?
 
How were they exposed to smallpox, you might ask? Probably magic.
 
@KitZ.Fox hm... ponders
 
@Mitch well, some settlers gave me this one...
 
Naw, that's just a coincidence
@MattE.Эллен kinda scratchy.
 
Totally a coincidence.
 
1:41 PM
Totally
 
Totally inaccessible
 
On the other hand, the myth we all hear over and over is just the very superficial story "all gone, nothing left, just a carving. mystery where they went". There's only so much you can pack in to 3rd grade history class when there's absolutely no consequence to later colonization.
Relatedly, all you hear about are pilgrims pilgrims, jamestown, puritans, etc. Like everybody in america came from those two places.
but in both areas (MA and VA) all the townn in those areas say 'founded in (5 to ten years after first landing)'
so there was an invasion of settlers colonizing the areas pretty quickly.
 
Yeah. The four brother came in via Boston and then two went north and two went south.
The one I'm related to had twelve children so we spread out pretty fast.
Which is why I'm related to First Nations distantly.
There were only three European families that settled that particular part of Maine.
Which is one more family than Jonesport-Beals had. You can probably guess which two families settled there.
 
hmmmm
that's a tough one
 
user208178
Hello folks.
 
1:58 PM
@KitZ.Fox I know! wink wink
To be honest I have no idea who you're talking about. The only name I know from Maine is the Bushes because they had a holiday home there.
 
@Mitch I think therefore I yam.
 
@Mitch Ralph Waldo Emerson
 
@KitZ.Fox me too! My great great grandmother was first nations.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Maliseet?
 
user208178
"Them's fighting words" is ungrammatical but it is used as a joke or play on bad grammar, so if someone says "Those are fighting words" will it still be considered a joke or it might look serious?
 
user208178
2:11 PM
I know it depends on the tone but still just thought I'd ask.
 
Hmm.
I think it could be perceived in a joking way.
 
user208178
ah thanks.
 
@RegDwigнt hahaha. That's funny. I used to have this song on LP.
 
@RegDwigнt Heh, actually made me laugh out loud.
 
2:31 PM
That's counting incredible.
 
You counting fornicator!
 
@KitZ.Fox I don't know
 
What the count are you trying to count, you counting count?
Suddenly, I feel like having a hot dog for lunch.
 
thank goodness I get the most recent line spoken in this room on the sidebar in other rooms
 
A Lethal Weapon remake. I ... can't explain how I feel about that.
 
2:42 PM
seems... unnecessary
 
I guess I am of an age where my beloved childhood movies are being made anew for this generation's sensibilities.
 
are you saying... you're too old for this shit?
 
Haha. They deepened Riggs' backstory.
Huh. Now I'm not sure if it's a movie or a series.
Well, whatever. Nice to have it not be that crazy guy.
 
@RegDwigнt This video reminds me of a conversation (well, argument) with someone a while back, where she was insisting on censoring a title of a question, but censoring that title actually cemented the wrong meaning of the word.
 
I remember that.
"Stop making it dirty!"
 
2:53 PM
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Ah yes, I think I remember that. Something about penis, right?
 
Maybe cum?
Something in that general vicinity.
 
it was "cock"
a word with many meanings
but "c*ck" only has one
 
Ah, yes.
I believe it was this one.
 
Ah yes.
 
2:58 PM
Anyway I didn't want to dredge up the q or its drama.
But I think it's interesting how censorship is essentially a way of spelling/saying swear words.
It doesn't obscure or blunt them at all, really
 
Like Unnecessary Censorship. It's funny because of the assumption that a bleep replaces certain words.
 
yeah I was just going to type that
 
I wonder how it compares with ... what do they call them?
 
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