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8:00 PM
@simchona slander, slave, sleuthing, sleeve. Sky, skull, skillfully, skeleton.
At least someone finally posted booba/kiki.
 
@RegDwightАΑA The idea is cool.
 
@RegDwightАΑA It's strikes me as unlikely that the sound symbolism thing is true. There are just so many counterexamples
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Agreed. There are groups of words which are similar, but it's not really supporting his premise I think
He's going for "always" instead of "sometimes"
 
Well, I guess even if his premise is wrong, the phenomenon does have a name
 
He's going for wherever they appear though
 
8:06 PM
@simchona And he didn't expect it. Hmm.
 
@Robusto Not from you.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 in fact sometimes it's the other way round, like with mama, which people around the globe consciously force themselves to take to mean "mother" even though the baby that utters it doesn't mean any such thing. It's a bias.
0
Q: Is it correct to say "much more easily"

Ehrann MehdanI want to say that something is done in an easier way than something else, but not just more, much more Saying much easier is not exactly what I look for, as I'm not trying to say it's much easier I'm trying to say it can be done in a much easier way So I thought saying It can ...

 
@RegDwightАΑA Well... I always thought it was just used as a word for mother because it was easily said by a baby... however, that doesn't mean that it doesn't seed sound-symbolism for any baby taught that "mama = your mother"
 
I think we covered the "adverbs are allowed to modify other adverbs" thing before.
This is close but no cigar.
 
@simchona I'm taking the bullet for you.
 
8:17 PM
@MetaEd I noticed. And I appreciate it :]
Hi @SonicTheHedgehog
 
@sim Shh. I'm hiding. and Hi.
 
@SonicTheHedgehog Hiding in plain sight.
 
@Sim Th-they are after me.
looks around with wild eyes
 
Looking at some questions that get posted it hurts to think of all the questions I have not posted myself after spending five minutes on Google...
 
@Reg post them now.
 
8:22 PM
Ha.
Some of them are in the transcript, actually.
Teehee, Tim actually included EC's Facebook/Twitter in that meta post.
 
@RegDwightАΑA Questions posted to ELU in general, or questions posed to our would-be overlords?
 
@MetaEd How dare you laugh at Bozo the Clown! It's people like you who keep talented artists down.
 
@tchrist the main site.
 
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 Right. The word "mother" basically means "want nipple".
 
As far as the THC is concerned, I managed to squeeze in everything I had.
 
8:27 PM
Oh well, I’ve just done my first part. Or tried.
 
I finally added 2 and 2 and got 4. Earlier I was wondering about all the discussion of tetrahydrocannabinol.
 
Glad to have been of help.
 
time for me to get going.
 
You were the problem, mostly.
 
CU'aes.
 
8:29 PM
And I love that about you.
 
@MetaEd That's what I meant.
There is enough straightforwardness in the world today. This here is a jungley island of thought. Bring a machete or you won't have fun.
 
Commutin' time. byee.
 
@Robusto hardly brisk or quick > hardly brisk nor quick
 
22 hours ago, by Robusto
@KronoS I'll be the judge of what sounds weird.
 
8:33 PM
@tchrist Get. Out. Of. My. Head. You. Nuns.
 
la-la-las
 
Hahaha. I wish I were allowed to share flags. Some things are just hysterical.
 
You mean it is hysterical that it got flagged, or that the extra explanation supplied for the flagging reads humorously?
 
Actually, both.
 
I infer that that means it isn’t going to mysteriously vaporize.
 
8:36 PM
In terms of absurdity and hilariousness it's on par with MetaEd getting called a dick the other day.
 
Hey, some of my best friends are dicks.
 
I resemble that remark.
 
@simchona The letter "s" is involved in a number of examples. Please, see what I have already suggested to MetaEd. And, please, do not make fun of issues that you have not, as it seems, the slightest knowledge. — Carlo_R. 31 secs ago
The gloves are off.
 
@simchona You know this is just going to engender a hundred-comment chain of drivel from Carlito. Is that really appropriate on a closed question — or any, for that matter? He should take it to meta.
 
@tchrist I'm not going to answer him.
 
8:45 PM
We could ask 4chan to track him down.
Than spam his number.
Or make his life miserable.
Etc. They are famous for it.
 
@MetaEd - In this way, you do not show a lot. Do not waste your time studying sociology on wikpedia. Study, if anything, the English language. — Carlo_R. 43 secs ago
 
@SonicTheHedgehog Let's not.
 
@Meta Why not?
 
Sorry you got pulled into this, Meta.
 
@simchona put the gloves back on.
Jul 27 at 10:59, by RegDwight АΑA
As my mother used to say to me and my brother, whoever's smarter will shut up first.
 
8:48 PM
@RegDwightАΑA I'm not talking. Just following the conversation. Like ping pong.
 
@simchona I have thick skin.
 
@simchona Well, what do you think happens if you don't pong and just leave him with his ping?
 
@RegDwightАΑA Ayup.
 
That question is going to end up with more flags than a rave.
 
@RegDwightАΑA I'm letting him ping. I stopped ponging. He's just ponging Meta now.
 
8:49 PM
It's too bad. He's not going to learn anything as long as he perceives any disagreement as a personal attack.
 
Yes, a shame.
 
@simchona Not me. He tried to make it personal with me too, and that's where I stop playing.
 
Oops, I have actually answered a question about "much more" at one point! Silly me, I don't even remember.
 
I do know very well how flagging.
 
I'll argue a point all day, but I won't exchange insults.
 
8:51 PM
And if it’s just one way, not exchange?
 
We still have the stack part.
Some people stack, others exchange.
 
@tchrist Well once an insult has been flung the argument is over. There's no point in pursuing the argument, and there's certainly no point in replying in kind, so it's time to move on.
 
Speaking of which, I gotta finish the Harry Potter LEGO bus.
BBL
 
I suspect Carlo is quite young and fairly intelligent. Which are good traits; they just interfere with cultivating one's sense of humility.
 
@MetaEd Whatever, dick. :-P
 
8:55 PM
giggles
 
See what I did there?
pounce
 
My workplace is uncomfortable.
 
Try loosening your belt.
@tchrist You know I was just joshing you earlier, right?
 
@MetaEd tell your fine coworker lady to make it more comfortable. Like, plants, a chocolate fountain. Cushions. Stuff like that.
 
Someone please explain to me why Carlo doesn't just get banned.
4
 
9:03 PM
Встретимся под столом!
 
Oh, well, okay then.
slut, sliver, slouch
 
what's the meaning of "wind up" in: Any extras on here you might wind up needing?
 
end up
need after all
 
@SpareOom: Haha, that is horrible!
 
will turn out to need
 
9:09 PM
I hate heat more than anything.
 
@Cerberus it's been ~40C here everyday for at least a month.
 
Ahhh!
Where are you?
Do you have air-conditioning everywhere?
 
@Cerberus Humidity is worse. So long as the temperature plus humidity is under 100, you’re fine. Similarly if you’re driving without AC: just roll your windows down and drive faster than the temperature.
 
@tchrist Haha, nice math.
 
@cornbreadninja Where?
 
9:13 PM
:D
 
I know people talk about how dry heat is not so bad. I strongly disagree. It is true that high humidity makes it even worse, but the bulk of the problem is caused by 1.) air temperature and 2.) exposure to the sun.
 
I learned this driving out on I-70 over the border into Utah one summer when it was well over 100. There’s a sign at the west end of Green River that reads "Next services 117 miles — AND WE MEAN IT!". This tells you two things.
First, that you probably won’t see any cops till you get to the other side.
Second, you’ll be there in about an hour.
 
As to driving with open windows: it is somewhat cooler than with windows closed, but it is still excruciatingly hot at anything over 25 °C if it's sunny. And the poisonous smoke/gases you will inhale are nasty.
 
sighs
 
@tchrist Panted the pedant.
 
9:14 PM
makes plan to raise children to be smarter and funnier than @tchrist, then put them head to head in chat room of the future
2
 
@Cerberus I think you have to convert to English if you want my math magic to work for you.
 
@KitFox What if tchrist is raising children of his own?
 
@tchrist What was this about?
@tchrist Never!
 
@Robusto Damn it.
Well, maybe I am a better parent.
 
@Cerberus Por dónde fueres, haz lo que vieres.
 
9:16 PM
Vieres?
Live? See?
 
Future subjunctive of ver < vedere.
Same tense as the previous clause.
Which is actually go not be; only context sets them apart, the forms are identical.
 
Ah OK.
 
It works because of the ser/estar split. Can’t ser somewhere, so that can’t be ser.
 
I don't know the various stems of ver, so I guessed.
 
Past and future subjunctive take their stems from 3p preterite.
Which are often irregular.
 
9:19 PM
I don't know any stems.
 
@tchrist Is the ser/estar split something you just have to learn by rote for different situations, or is there a simple rule?
 
Yes you do.
 
I just use my intuition, which is often enough in context.
Nope.
 
It’s not by rote. It’s by understanding.
 
I couldn't name a single stem of ver.
 
9:19 PM
@Meysam did I shed any light?
 
The issue is that 3p inflexional ending is -ieron.
 
But I will recognize many forms when I see them, especially in context.
 
@cornbreadninja You did! Thanks yo
 
@tchrist Help me understand.
 
@Meysam oh, good. You're welcome.
 
9:21 PM
1s1, 2s2, 3p6
 
fuera comenzara hubiera quisiera dijera supiera viniera debiera estuviera &c
@MetaEd Estar is statist; it’s about qualities, usually transient ones. Position is a transient thing.
A person is/estar angry, but a person is/ser a redhead.
See the difference?
That man is/ser your father, and he is/estar close by right now.
 
Cake.
 
You are/estar in America, but you are/ser an American.
So you just get a feel for these things after a while.
There are occasional minimal pairs that mean different things. Estar listo is to be ready, while ser listo is to be clever.
 
This distinction and the parallel one in Italian only become an issue when you have to write or speak.
 
As opposed to when, reading?
 
9:25 PM
@KitFox lie.
 
Yes.
 
It's also in Portuguese, which is not quite perfectly identical to Spanish in this regard, but quite close.
 
@cornbreadninja But it wasn't, now, was it?
 
As usual.
 
:)
 
9:26 PM
@KitFox two-shay.
 
Some such distinction is no doubt also present in the French langues d'oc?
And estar comes from stare, not esse, I presume?
As in Eyetalian.
 
@Cerberus Un dels errors que més es fan és a l'utilitzar el verb SER o el verb ESTAR. En català aquests verbs no segueixen la mateixa regla que en castellà. here
 
In what English dialect/accent do people say Eyetalian, by the way?
 
Lots of America.
Eyeran. Eyeraq.
But Ittaly not Eyetally.
 
@tchrist Mateixa? Major/main?
 
9:29 PM
"shade"
I think. matiz.
 
Eyeran and Eyeraq are not as egregious.
@tchrist Shade?
 
Ciutadants de Catalunya, ja sóc aquí: you can’t say that in Castilian.
Shade of meaning / distinction
 
@tchrist, Sorry to interrupt... I wasn't sure if your last comment on commas between subject and verb was for real (it contains a comma I would have removed): I have Aspergers and can't tell irony or sarcasm easily. [Nor can I tell when to interrupt here!]
 
Mateixa regla = shade of meaning? That sounds odd.
 
Yo estoy aquí VS Yo soy de aquí
I know. Boink through google translate.
 
9:31 PM
@AndrewLeach Interruption is allowed at all times!
@tchrist I refuse to use such tools!
 
@AndrewLeach I was kinda teasing. But I am curious what the "rule" is.
 
@AndrewLeach I agree that one must have a VERY good reason to put a comma in between a subject and its verb in a normal sentence.
 
So that page describes how Catalan has a ser/estar rule, but how it is different from the one in Castilian.
 
Latin's children are nice.
 
Ok, mateixa is même/mismo/stesso. I wonder how that happened?
 
9:33 PM
Ahh.
 
Right, okay: thanks. I think it's the product of a poor education. When I left school having had fourteen years of grammar drummed in, everything changed and it went out the window. There followed twenty years of not worrying about commas and apostrophes and the like. I'll add a comment.
 
I actually don't know where même comes from. Let's see if we can guess.
 
I was doing an ear-cognate with the Portuguese version of matiz, which sounds more like mateix.
There are languages with mesmo. I forget which.
But that definitely looks like an s-substitution that leads to même.
 
wouldn't Akzidenz Grotesk as drawn by Miedinger & Hoffman pretty much just result in Helvetica?
 
@tchrist Yes, most probably.
I am trying to think of something, but nothing comes to mind.
No Latin word that could possibly have led to même.
 
9:36 PM
Apparently VL had *metipsĭmus.
 
Ahhh.
Then that's it.
 
met- is an emphatic.
Leaving ipse.
 
Yes.
 
cornbread out.
 
For one moment I thought there might be an ipse in it.
But it seemed unlikely.
 
9:36 PM
It's hard to see.
 
An ugly formation.
 
A lot got worn down over the years.
 
I think semet ipse could occur in literary texts, letters or such.
 
@tchrist Is there a conventional translation from ser/estar to English which makes the distinction clear? Maybe ser = is, estar = is currently?
 
Not really.
You can’t use estar with noun complements, though.
 
9:38 PM
And some confusion between "this man himself" and "the same man" already existed in literary ipse.
 
"I am a man today, but tomorrow I shall be a woman" demand ser, because they take nouns.
The same thing happens with prefix-vs-postfix même/mismo.
La misma idea is the same idea, but la idea misma is the idea itself.
 
@Cerberus Tell me about it! I remember having a flight delayed, because the temperature was 123 F and they had to wait until the air cooled later that evening before they'd leave the tarmac.
 
Before they could become unglued from the tacmac.
 
@tchrist Well, that does still sort of make sense. Gender bending is a change of identity, not transient.
 
It's not because it's gender.
It's because the complement is a noun.
You cannot estar a thing.
Where thing is a noun.
Because a noun is not a state.
 
9:42 PM
@tchrist Happens? It must be the same phenomenon as in Antiquity.
@SpareOom Wahhh! plugs ears
 
It is.
 
@tchrist In the desert, you don't use air conditioners, because there's no moisture to take out of the air. Instead they use *swamp coolers*en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evaporative_cooler , which at some point make it humid as well as furnace like and you just have to lie down on the tile floor like the dog. (no offence @Cerberus)
 
The same phenomenon that also exists in Germanic, of course.
 
♬ In the desert, you don’t remember your name...
 
@SpareOom I know, I don't like lying on the floor either.
 
9:45 PM
Better than lying on the stand.
Show me the Germanic.
 
Dezelfde man = the same man. De man zelf = the man himself.
German is similar.
 
mmms
 
And it happens in Greek too.
So I have always thought of it as a pan-Indo-European phenomenon.
 
@tchrist Names are unimportant, but you should remember your water bottle on the hike so you don't perish from dehydration. You may not even know you're getting dehydrated, because the sweat can't build up, since it evaporates instantaneously.
@tchrist The dog dug down a few inches where it was cooler sand, then moved to a new spot when it warmed up to much.
 
I've drunk 14 liters of water on a 30-mile dayhike down to the bottom of the Grand Canyon and back before; I know when to drink.
 
9:51 PM
Speaking of heat, just 30 min ago the A/C finally got repaired after about 2 weeks of waiting for a part to come in.
@tchrist Good. I have a hard time. It makes me feel sloshy.
 
40F at 9000 feet at 5:30am when I started down, 40C at 2500 feet at 10:30am when I started back up.
 
30 miles!
 
You'll have to convert the times to metric on your own.
You feel sloshy because your body can only assimilate about one liter of water per hour, but you can easily lose, and drink, more than twice that.
This is a problem.
 
USA doesn't use metric yet, sadly.
 
Yes we do.
We use it for metric things.
Medicine is in metric.
Milk is in English.
Not for English things.
 
9:54 PM
@tchrist Yes, I meant for normal everyday stuff, like they promised decades ago.
 
That is out of order.
More than decades.
Doesn't matter.
No reason not to use whatever works for the thing you're doing.
Water boils at 100C minus 1C per 1,000 feet of altitude. Have a nice day.
 
We didn't have any trouble going to 2L bottles of soda.
 
Oh? Checked waistlines lately?
 
The copula or copulae (the verb or verbs meaning "to be") in all Romance languages largely derive from the Latin verbs "to be" (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h1es-, as in English is); "to stand" (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *steh2-, as in English stand and German stehen); and "to sit" (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *sed-, as in English sit). The verb was an irregular, suppletive verb, with some of its forms (e.g. fuī "I was") taken from the Proto-Indo-European verb *bhuH- (as in English be). A number of developments occurred in the Romance languages: *The irregul...
 
@tchrist Yeah. I check mine often so I won't match with the people who have trouble sitting in airline seats.
 
9:56 PM
So I've been looking at this.
Of course every damned Romance language has to do it differently.
But I do like "ser = essence" / "estar = state" since those are actually cognate.
 
French mostly just uses one, although it is indeed an irregular suppletive one.
 
So I'll try to follow the "t".
 
je vais / nous allons is as annoying as I go and you went.
And then there are the fut-ile pasts.
 
Yeah, go / went / gonad, or however it goes.
Well, hic / haec / hoc.
Have some more of this drink, whatever it calls itself.
"Romance copula" is pretty good on its own.
 
Your article forgets that Spanish also uses quedar for some of that.
 
10:00 PM
Nothing like a little romantic copulative.
@tchrist Well, edit the damned thing, already. You done yet?
 
Where it is closer to the STABAT MATER thing.
 
I remember singing that.
 
No me mosquees tanto, tonto.
 
The Pergolesi.
 
It does have quedar, just further on down.
 
10:07 PM
I'm afraid Yoichi-san has posted a gen-ref question.
 
10:33 PM
Wifman is a funny word. It summons up images of manwives and wifemen as sometimes-heard inventions for straight house-husbands and gay male spouses alike. Not very nice, though.
 
Werewif.
Where's everybody gone, anyway? Watching US vs. Nigeria?
 
George Martin had weirwoods for like decades before anybody realized he was just respelling were-, and what all that implied.
 
Scott Card's Speaker for the Dead is a heck of a lot more EWWW in its treatment of the piggies getting turned into trees when they die.
That was not intentional.
 
10:38 PM
NOT a treat, that one.
 
I think that's the point of her complaints.
 
We have an enthusiastic young man from England who thinks nobody in England actually drops their R's. Curious. Perhaps he's from Leeds.
 
A pine in the neck. What a lovely pun.
Wouldn't work in Australia, though.
 
Roight, mite.
 
Some poor sod has just flagged a closed question as "i need somebody to helpe me with it".
It's kind of cute but there's nothing I can do.
 
10:44 PM
New to SE, new to English.
No, you can't just reopen it. That would be silly.
 
To their defense, I am silly.
 
Silly for using "to" instead of "in". JUST KIDDING!
 
Oh I do that quite often. Especially on Tuesdays.
 
Double international dateline, eh?
 
This is not a room for to care between prepositions.
 
10:47 PM
Nor one for scoring international dates, apparently.
 
True. It's more fun to score on an international date.
 
First things first.
 
Why don't they just run clockwise? Then the third base would come first.
Well, well. Now it's time for me to check out US vs. Nigeria.
BBL
 
Sounds like the Japanese version.
 
11:30 PM
@tchrist (That wasn't my downvote, btw, but I see someone voted your answer back up.)
 
I didn't think it was yours. Carlo has been about of late, suddenly going non-idle as both my recent contributions were dinged.
Mine was the closing vote on one of his questions today. He takes these things very personally.
 
@tchrist I wondered about that.
 
I'm in the deadzone of the day, for 30 more minutes. It means upvotes count for nothing, and it takes a whole upvote to erase one downvote, not to erase five. Happens around noon my time every day or so. Check my recent rep graph to see what I mean.
It’s all very opportunistically timed.
BTW, the Dictionary of American Regional English only provides sample online entries for free. They want you to buy it.
N-grams can never reveal anything about speech. That’s why the Dictionary of American Regional English is so valuable: they actually sent out zillions of people asking scads of questions. So it is about actual speech.
 
@tchrist But then how do I see the regional differences in DARE? I don't own a copy and it wouldn't make sense for me to buy one just for this question.
 
You'll have to go to a library, the traditional place to do research. This is just like people who want to consult the OED.
 
11:40 PM
My town's library is under renovation and has been for 2 years. :(
 
I know: it’s all very antebellum if not antediluvian. But so it goes.
 
However, I did find that they OED was available online from my library. Is the DARE very popular? It may also be available in their online references, I guess.
 
I imagine DARE will eventually sell online subscriptions like the OED does. DARE only recently finished and published its final volume. It has been fifty years in the making.
You can read an article about it here.
Yes, I’m a UW alum.
 
I lived in Madison for 5 years and worked in the university system.
 
Where did you live?
 
11:46 PM
Asking my address?
 
Well, the area of town. Isthmus? Westtown? I was just at a conference at the Alumni Center down by the Red Gym. Amazing what has and has not changed since I graduated 25 years ago.
 
Toward Fitchburg. Was that the south side?
West, maybe?
 
Yes, Fitchburg is to the south.
 
I avoided the Isthmus.
 
It's on the other side of the highway.
I only ever lived on the Isthmus.
 
11:48 PM
@tchrist Yup. Was that called the beltway?
 
Because I had no car, nor driver’s licence.
Yes, that’s right.
It’s 12/18.
Goes over the restored/moved wetlands project.
 
Yeah, I used to go to work on the bus. Impressive public transport for that size city.
 
At one point the #1 in the country for its size.
Oh drat. They’re doing a Volume 6 of DARE.
That's the one that will have the synset maps they've been showing off lately.
Expected early 2013.
I thought it was already out, because I’d seen the maps in the alumnorum magazine.
Volume 5 is "Sl" – "Z". Which has been recently published. So I thought it was done.
The Inland North (which Madison is part of) uses teetertotter.
 
I'm originally from Kansas. I don't remember if I ever talked to anyone about teeter-totters in WI. Currently in the DC area, next to a playground where they have them. What should I call them here?
 

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