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Thread: Language! (words change meaning)
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23rd May 2013, 09:33 AM #31
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23rd May 2013, 10:27 AM #32
.
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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23rd May 2013, 12:04 PM #33
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26th May 2013, 11:55 PM #34
Vaccination
Love it. Thanks SBS.
Edward Jenner infected people with non-fatal cowpox in 1770 which protected against smallpox.
latin vacca = cow.
vaccination ~= "Cow injection"
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27th May 2013, 12:34 AM #35
Maybe a little off-topic, but I'd like to pin George Dubbayer up against a wall:
"NOW, Mr President of the World's most powerful nation, making you the most powerful person on Earth - SPELL NUCULAR! How many "u"s are in it?? What's that? Only ONE?"
I mean, did it not occur to ANY of his minders that he was an international embarrassment?
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27th May 2013, 07:58 AM #36
I think that was the least part of him they had to worry about
I didn't particularly notice early on ... but remember the news kept mentioning him screwing up various phrases ... someone brought out a book ...
But ... Supernanny would say ... "Stop it. That's not asseptable. It's not asseptable behaviour."
Kinda leaves you feeling "vunnerable", don't it.
Cheers,
Paul
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28th May 2013, 03:03 AM #37
"Plagiarism" ... Plagiarism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the 1st century, the use of the Latin word plagiarius (literally kidnapper), to denote someone stealing someone else's work, was pioneered by Roman poet Martial ...
This use of the word was introduced into English in 1601 by dramatist Ben Jonson, to describe as a plagiary someone guilty of literary theft.
The derived form plagiarism was introduced into English around 1620.
The Latin plagiārius, "kidnapper", and plagium, "kidnapping", has the root plaga ("snare", "net"), based on the Indo-European root *-plak, "to weave"
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20th August 2013, 12:32 AM #38
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20th August 2013, 08:47 AM #39
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22nd December 2013, 10:51 AM #40
Lucubrate.
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22nd December 2013, 01:24 PM #41
On the ABC this morning ... I thought it was interesting.
" To write in a scholarly fashion; produce scholarship."
after ... "write or study, especially by night."
because ... Origin: early 17th century: from Latin lucubrat- '(having) worked by lamplight', from the verb lucubrare
A.Word.A.Day --lucubrate
So starting with the scholar working at night by oil lamp ... to producing scholarship or thought ... maybe debate ... in general.
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22nd December 2013, 03:13 PM #42Skwair2rownd
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I must try to remember that one Mr. McGee!!
A word i like is corybantic and a second is calumny.
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22nd December 2013, 03:16 PM #43
I like COCCYX for hangman (or hang the butcher).
the other one is cry/dry/fry/try, you can change you answer depending on what they have already chosen.
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23rd December 2013, 05:57 AM #44
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23rd December 2013, 06:19 AM #45
Pique vs Peak vs Peek
Aaarggghh!
meaning in context - Is it "peek", "peak" or "pique"? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
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