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#12 |
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"Rashid Naimi"
Oct 2015
Remote to Here/There
40178 Posts |
Being a constant does not mean it does not have a definition.
It was known to be a constant in time of Einstein as well, but somehow the physisis of his time did not think of defining a metre in terms of speed as a function of length in metres. BTW I think this argument is becoming circular. One of us has to stop, so I will.
Last fiddled with by a1call on 2018-03-15 at 03:53 |
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#13 | |
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Basketry That Evening!
"Bunslow the Bold"
Jun 2011
40<A<43 -89<O<-88
3×29×83 Posts |
Back on topic, a1call if you find language change interesting, I suggest that you spend some time on Wikipedia reading about the Indo-European language family and its evolution.
Quote:
Of course, from a point of view of natural selection, the PIE peoples were apparently something special, as their descendants seem to account for the most expansive conquerors on the planet -- Greek empire, Roman empire, British empire, Russian empire, American not-quite-an-empire (Mongol empire is the biggest counter example I can think of) -- and that's not even counting the prehistoric expansion, from a one small portion of the world (near the Black and Caspian seas) to more-or-less conquer the European mainland, Persia, half or more of India, etc, wiping out most of the indigenous languages in the process. (In Europe, the primary exceptions to the nearly-total linguistic conquest are Basque/Euskara, which somehow managed to survive both Celtic and post-Roman invaders, and Hungarian/Finnish/Estonian, being the major remaining languages of the Uralic group that was otherwise generally subjugated by PIE speakers.) How many unrelated languages have speakers of PIE-or-its-descendants collectively wiped out, languages like, e.g., Etruscan or Mahican? Hundreds? Thousands? Tens of thousands? Last fiddled with by Dubslow on 2018-03-15 at 04:12 |
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#14 | |
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Basketry That Evening!
"Bunslow the Bold"
Jun 2011
40<A<43 -89<O<-88
11100001101012 Posts |
Quote:
The length of a meter is defined by the speed of light. The speed of light is not defined in terms of anything, not the meter, not the mile, not anything. It is merely measured in labs. Last fiddled with by Dubslow on 2018-03-15 at 04:14 |
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#15 |
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"Rashid Naimi"
Oct 2015
Remote to Here/There
2,063 Posts |
Good less change topic then.
I think it is quite obvious that I don't necessarily follow the current viewes held true by the masses and if I happen to notice a discrepancy, I will point it out even though I know that the majority will disagree. You failed to mention the Persian empire was at its widest spanning from China to Mediterranean sea. As for the language roots, the linguists maintain that English is a offshoot of German/Ic languages. Which were branched off of Indo-European languages. However, as someone who is fluent in Persian, this does not compute for me. I can give you many examples but will suffice to one. The word star is pronounced as shtar in German but as Setareh in Persian. I can give you many such examples of old Persian and English words which are closer together than they are to their German equivalent. It does not make sense for English to have branched off Germanic when it has more in common with Persian than German. Last fiddled with by a1call on 2018-03-15 at 04:46 |
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#16 |
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Jun 2015
Vallejo, CA/.
17438 Posts |
I always find it amusing when someone says: "I have received literally thousands of letters".
I guess they believe that literally means "as in literature" or in, other words, figuratively. Another buzz word is "awesome". It used to mean causing fright or awe. More or less like "awful" |
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#17 |
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"Rashid Naimi"
Oct 2015
Remote to Here/There
2,063 Posts |
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#18 | ||
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Aug 2006
597910 Posts |
Quote:
Quote:
First, German is no closer to Germanic than English -- don't let the name fool you, it's just a label. Second, linguistics is not about words being "close together" but rather about regular correspondences. See for example https://web.cn.edu/kwheeler/IE_Main5_Grimm.html http://old-engli.sh/trivia.php?ID=VernersLaw http://grzegorj.interiowo.pl/lingwen/glottal.html Third, it's easy to cherry-pick examples; if you really want to make a case you should use an established list like Swadesh: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appen..._Swadesh_lists |
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#19 | |
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Basketry That Evening!
"Bunslow the Bold"
Jun 2011
40<A<43 -89<O<-88
3×29×83 Posts |
Quote:
My only conclusion is that a1call is simply the most dedicated, varied and imaginative troll on this forum. (The definition of the meter is circular? That's some choice troll material right there.) Last fiddled with by Dubslow on 2018-03-15 at 07:00 |
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#20 |
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"Rashid Naimi"
Oct 2015
Remote to Here/There
1000000011112 Posts |
I just noticed CGH's post. This is not related to that but something I remembered. Another thing that catches your ears when listening to OTR is use of words like difficulter.
https://en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/difficulter It is not in any of the Webster dictionaries but I have heard it repeatedly from the same person in the same commercial, I think in "Signal Gasoline" commercials. Last fiddled with by a1call on 2018-03-15 at 07:12 |
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#21 | |
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"Rashid Naimi"
Oct 2015
Remote to Here/There
2,063 Posts |
Quote:
Take another basic root word such as brethren and compare it to German Brüder vs Persian Baradaran. I know Germanic is not German but the point is it does not add up for English to sound closer to a supposed more distant/earlier branch such as Persian for so many words than a closer by vicinity and supposed linguistic branch such as German. Some more examples: Daughter dokhtar Ponder pendar Nice nik Door dar Eye brow abru Last fiddled with by a1call on 2018-03-15 at 08:06 |
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#22 |
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"Forget I exist"
Jul 2009
Dumbassville
26×131 Posts |
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