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Ahhhhhh, stop typing that!

babomb said:
Along similar lines, I'm often amused when people mix up cavalry and Calvary.

Listening to Brad Dourif's commentary on one of the LotR DVDs drove me nuts. He went on and on about how the Rohirrim are a nation of calvary, and how Sauron has no calvary, and it's the calvary of Rohan that make the difference...

Gah!

-Hyp.
 

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Hypersmurf said:
Listening to Brad Dourif's commentary on one of the LotR DVDs drove me nuts. He went on and on about how the Rohirrim are a nation of calvary, and how Sauron has no calvary, and it's the calvary of Rohan that make the difference...

Gah!

-Hyp.

QFT! :\

Another "Yeesh...." from the fungal department. :)
 



Gonna have to resurrect this thread for a few more...

First, "Made of win." Whoever came up with that expression should be shot. And then nursed back to health just so they're nice and ready when I shoot them again.

Guh.

And second, something that I see and hear a lot (and you'd think gamers, of all people, would know better), is misuse of the word "dice."

Let's make it simple, shall we, folks? "Dice" is plural. Plural. As in "more than one." You cannot have "a dice" or "that dice" any more than you can have "a teeth" or "that mice."

Plural!!

When you're talking about one, the term is "die." As in "Pass me that 8-sided die" or "If you use the word 'dice' incorrectly one more time, I'm going to bash in your skull with my metal 20-sided die!"

Damn it.
 

Mouseferatu said:
Gonna have to resurrect this thread for a few more...
And second, something that I see and hear a lot (and you'd think gamers, of all people, would know better), is misuse of the word "dice."

Let's make it simple, shall we, folks? "Dice" is plural. Plural. As in "more than one." You cannot have "a dice" or "that dice" any more than you can have "a teeth" or "that mice."

Plural!!

When you're talking about one, the term is "die." As in "Pass me that 8-sided die" or "If you use the word 'dice' incorrectly one more time, I'm going to bash in your skull with my metal 20-sided die!"

Damn it.

I'm with you there.

The only added complaint I have is less to do with bad words, the internet or mispronounciations, and all to do with my own personal sense of imperial superiority.

WHY when it crossed the Atlantic did the word Aluminium lose a letter? Seriously, it doesn't make it all that much easier to spell, and it changes the pronounciation (unlike armour, colour, favour, etc which, while I accept they make more sense spelled the American way, still need the u in my irrational mind).

Can anyone explain to this old (26 years is a long time) duffer where the word phat came from and why it's a compliment?
 

I actually got a response from a co-worker that said the following:

aight

He actually saved 2 whole letters by not typing alright.

Please help the english language, it is on life support.

:)
 

I have no peev,s of my own, for I have no right to get upset on other people,s writing. I misspell all the time, and tend to shorten up words.....sigh, I know I tend to get on peoples nerves with my typing....but oh well
 

OakwoodDM said:
WHY when it crossed the Atlantic did the word Aluminium lose a letter? Seriously, it doesn't make it all that much easier to spell, and it changes the pronounciation (unlike armour, colour, favour, etc which, while I accept they make more sense spelled the American way, still need the u in my irrational mind).

Quoth Wikipedia:
Wikipedia said:
Etymology/nomenclature history

The earliest citation given in the Oxford English Dictionary for any word used as a name for this element is alumium, which Humphry Davy employed in 1808 for the metal he was trying to isolate electrolytically from the mineral alumina. The citation is from his journal Philosophical Transactions: "Had I been so fortunate as..to have procured the metallic substances I was in search of, I should have proposed for them the names of silicium, alumium, zirconium, and glucium."[18]

By 1812, Davy had settled on aluminum, which, as other sources note,[citation needed] matches its Latin root. He wrote in the journal Chemical Philosophy: "As yet Aluminum has not been obtained in a perfectly free state."[19] But the same year, an anonymous contributor to the Quarterly Review, a British political-literary journal, objected to aluminum and proposed the name aluminium, "for so we shall take the liberty of writing the word, in preference to aluminum, which has a less classical sound."[20]

The -ium suffix had the advantage of conforming to the precedent set in other newly discovered elements of the period: potassium, sodium, magnesium, calcium, and strontium (all of which Davy had isolated himself). Nevertheless, -um spellings for elements were not unknown at the time, as for example platinum, known to Europeans since the 16th century, molybdenum, discovered in 1778, and tantalum, discovered in 1802.

Americans adopted -ium for most of the 19th century, with aluminium appearing in Webster's Dictionary of 1828. In 1892, however, Charles Martin Hall used the -um spelling in an advertising handbill for his new electrolytic method of producing the metal, despite his constant use of the -ium spelling in all the patents he filed between 1886 and 1903.[21] It has consequently been suggested that the spelling reflects an easier to pronounce word with one less syllable, or that the spelling on the flier was a spelling mistake. Hall's domination of production of the metal ensured that the spelling aluminum became the standard in North America; the Webster Unabridged Dictionary of 1913, though, continued to use the -ium version.

In 1926, the American Chemical Society officially decided to use aluminum in its publications; American dictionaries typically label the spelling aluminium as a British variant.

[edit] Present-day spelling

In the UK and other countries using British spelling, only aluminium is used. In the United States, the spelling aluminium is largely unknown, and the spelling aluminum predominates.[22][23] The Canadian Oxford Dictionary prefers aluminum, whereas the Australian Macquarie Dictionary prefers aluminium.

In other English-speaking countries, the spellings (and associated pronunciations) aluminium and aluminum are both in common use in scientific and nonscientific contexts.[24] The spelling in virtually all other languages is analogous to the -ium ending. (See the box in the first column of this page for specific languages.)

The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) adopted aluminium as the standard international name for the element in 1990, but three years later recognized aluminum as an acceptable variant. Hence their periodic table includes both, but places aluminium first.[25] IUPAC officially prefers the use of aluminium in its internal publications, although several IUPAC publications use the spelling aluminum.[26]
 

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