- Joined
- May 8, 2021
Walls of text. Even if you're posting from a phone, it's super lazy and makes it hard on the reader. If you glance away for a moment it's very difficult to find your place again.
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Why the fuck does the O in woman suddenly become an I when it's women?
How about this grammar meme? One moose. More than one moose, MOOSE. One goose. More than one goose, geese. Why not meese? Or mooses? Give me a break with that BS.
For the oldest English plurals, they undergo something called i-mutation, for reasons that even this tism-nigger thread would find autistic to detail. In short, the vowel for the plural form becomes a front vowel (i or e). Old words have this, words added later usually don't. Deer, fish, and sheep are exceptions for other autistic reasons (though notice those vowels are already i/e).FWIW there is a comparison to be made with deer, fish and sheep. These are animal names that have an identical-looking plural like moose. As for why goose retained its ancient plural while others have gained more regular plurals, who knows?
yeah, they are pronounced differently.
with 'bury' it's supposed to sound like burr-ee
and 'berry' is supposed to sound like bare-ee (like a long a)
'barry' would be like bah-ree (short a)
Standard British/American pronounces it the same, though there's many dialects where it's different (I know of NE US and NW England), but obviously OED is only going to have the standard dialect pronunciations.Not according to the OED they aren't.
bury, v.
(ˈbɛrɪ)
And berry? Exactly phonetically identical.
berry, n. 1
(ˈbɛrɪ)
@AnOminous rate me dumb all you wantStandard British/American pronounces it the same, though there's many dialects where it's different (I know of NE US and NW England), but obviously OED is only going to have the standard dialect pronunciations.
People who pronounce them the same also say "fir" instead of "for". What they say about language matters not. Perhaps we should pronounce "pen" as "pin" and "wash" as "warsh" while we're at it.Standard British/American pronounces it the same, though there's many dialects where it's different (I know of NE US and NW England), but obviously OED is only going to have the standard dialect pronunciations.
You should opt for burial-at-sea.Not according to the OED they aren't.
bury, v.
(ˈbɛrɪ)
And berry? Exactly phonetically identical.
berry, n. 1
(ˈbɛrɪ)
You just had to say that from the start and I'd have cut you some slack for the extra chromosomes.
the only language i need
@AnOminous i may be mad at the internet, but at least i have a cool dialect UNLIKE YOU
FATTY
edit:
THE DIALECT OF MY PEOPLE
the most chromosomes, the biggest collection of chromosomes, no one has more chromosomes than i do. they say, "lurker, the number of chromosomes you have brings tears to my eyes."You just had to say that from the start and I'd have cut you some slack for the extra chromosomes.
Berry-all at seaburial-at-sea
They've probably never encountered anything you could get for a dime a dozen, or maybe even a physical dime itself.Adding diamond dozen to the pile. These people don't even know what a dime a dozen means in the first place.
I don't know about there being a dialect of English that works like that but it's something that I struggle to teach my ESL students.A similar one that bothers me, and is common to European ESL speakers, is "I'll do it until Friday" to express something I would say as "I'll do it by Friday." It's so common that I wonder is there some dialect of English where it's correct. I know in German it's a literal translation (bis Freitag). But to me it sounds like, "I will do this thing every day and stop on Friday whether it's done or not," rather than, "On Friday it will be done and we don't have to worry about it anymore."
You haven't lived until you tried to explain to a bunch of ESL students why in American "wonder" has an "ah" sound and "wander" has an "o" sound while in Bri*ish they sound the same. "English is retarded" is usually a satisfying enough explanation.Why the fuck does the O in woman suddenly become an I when it's women?
Moving the content vs moving the window. Apple calls it natural scrolling. Their computers also do it this way; and I prefer it.Something I just noticed: to scroll down on a touch screen, you have to swipe UP with your finger. And the reverse. I've stumbled on that terminology without noticing it.
Tangentially related, but I really dislike using "woman" as an adjective.I apologize if this has been mentioned but calling a female who acts in a movie an actor drives me nuts.
She is an actress.
That doesn't mean she is "less than" an actor.
Just different.