• Re: Pearls Before Swine: Man-Eating Octopus

    From Mark Jackson@21:1/5 to Lynn McGuire on Fri Apr 26 17:44:51 2024
    XPost: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 4/26/2024 4:33 PM, Lynn McGuire wrote:
    Pearls Before Swine: Man-Eating Octopus
       https://www.gocomics.com/pearlsbeforeswine/2024/04/26

    Yup, English is hard for the native born.  I pity people who learned
    English not immersed in the culture.

    Which culture?

    “England and America are two countries separated by a common language”
    - George Bernard Shaw

    --
    Mark Jackson - https://mark-jackson.online/
    Women tend to fare poorly in religions created by men.
    - Julia Scheeres

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  • From Ted Nolan @21:1/5 to [email protected] on Sat Apr 27 02:31:46 2024
    XPost: rec.arts.sf.written

    In article <v0hisp$4d0$[email protected]>,
    Cryptoengineer <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 4/26/2024 4:33 PM, Lynn McGuire wrote:
    Pearls Before Swine: Man-Eating Octopus
       https://www.gocomics.com/pearlsbeforeswine/2024/04/26

    Yup, English is hard for the native born.  I pity people who learned
    English not immersed in the culture.

    Many years ago I predicted that there much be a class of German
    language joke predicated on ambiguity in reading that language's
    agglutinated words.

    A native speaker in the group confirmed that I was correct.

    Consider breaking the word 'therapist' at a line end.

    pt


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joIr6c-jj4Y
    --
    columbiaclosings.com
    What's not in Columbia anymore..

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  • From BCFD 36@21:1/5 to Kyonshi on Wed May 1 09:45:24 2024
    XPost: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 4/30/24 08:58, Kyonshi wrote:
    On 4/26/2024 10:33 PM, Lynn McGuire wrote:
    Pearls Before Swine: Man-Eating Octopus
        https://www.gocomics.com/pearlsbeforeswine/2024/04/26

    Yup, English is hard for the native born.  I pity people who learned
    English not immersed in the culture.

    Lynn

    I constantly have to doublecheck with myself if some stuff you guys are writing everywhere maybe makes more sense for you. Although the larger culture is ok, it's the small stuff nobody actually talks about that's
    the problem: stuff you eat, stuff you use in your household, things from school. There's a surprising amount of stuff nobody ever really seems to
    talk about but uses every day.

    "Go off" and "go on" can have the same meaning, which can really confuse
    even native English speakers. It all depends on context.

    On a trip I took long ago, I was installing a system in a non-English
    speaking country. We had devices that would classify radio signals and
    would generate a notice when certain signals were detected.

    So the classifier would "go off", kind of like a bomb going off or "go
    on" because it was now active. When the signal went away, the classifier
    would "go off" because it was now inactive. Our hosts were in a constant
    state of confusion

    --
    ----------------
    Dave Scruggs
    Senior Software Engineer - Lockheed Martin, et. al (mostly Retired)
    Captain - Boulder Creek Fire (Retired)

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