I was trying to be brief, but you are right, and I knew that. However, I stand by my original statement that “casualty” is a very different thing from “casualness.” If death vs. injury irritates you, wait until you hear someone talk about “someone’s casualty,” to mean their laid-back attitude.
While I’m posting, the threshold/tolerance comment on how educated people confuse them reminded me of this one: “negative reinforcement.” I know so many people, in the field of education, who should have studied learning theory, and therefore, ought to know about operant conditioning, misuse this term to mean “positively reinforcing undesirable (aka, ‘negative’) behaviors.” “Negative reinforcement” is removing a noxious stimulus, or setting up a situation where the desired behavior itself allows a noxious stimulus to be avoided. Actively introducing one as a consequence for not producing desired behavior, or producing an undesired one is punishment. Giving something desirable a a reward for producing a desired behavior is “positive reinforcement.”
New York City: Manhattan, Queens, Staten Island, the Bronx & Brooklyn.
New York County: Manhattan.
New York Greater Metropolitan Area: New York City, Westchester County, Long Island, and the parts of New Jersey and Connecticut served by the New York Metropolitan transportation authority.
New York State is the State of New York. Capital is Albany.
Continual: without end; goes on forever. May have interruptions, but always starts up again.
Continuous: without interruption; may or may not go on forever, but doesn’t break while it’s happening
Well, no, although “enormity” is commonly used these days as a noun meaning “hugeness”, a stickler or even a mild prescriptivist (of the sort this thread is for and by) would say that that is an error. The noun formed from “enormous” is “enormousness”. You could (though you probably ought not to) talk about the enormousness of an enormity, but not the enormity of an enormity.
Indianapolis 500: a race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Speedway, IN: the town in which the Indianapolis Motor Speedway is located
Indianapolis: the city surrounding Speedway, IN
There’s a way to express this in American Sign Language that is very clean-cut. I have discovered how many hearing native English speakers don’t know the difference by the fact that they fail to grasp the meanings of the signs, even though they follow a pattern, and have analogies in other ASL verbs.
Technically, Speedway is more of a suburb; it was a water and utility district created because the city couldn’t handle the occasional huge demands presented by the race track. I think Victory Field, where the local minor league team plays, is powered by Speedway as well, even though it’s just outside of Speedway.
Speedway is South of 25th street (we live about a mile North of it). If you address something on the part of Lynhurst Rd. that runs through Speedway as “2525 Lynhurst Rd., Indianapolis, IN,” it will get there. For that matter, if you addressed something on 34th St. served by the Speedway post office, but not technically in Speedway, as “Speedway,” and not Indianapolis, all that matters is that you get the Zip code right.
Speedway doesn’t have its own police force, and the voting districts are drawn without regard to the limits of Speedway. People and businesses located there have a different local tax code than the one for Indianapolis, but that’s because they have different utilities.
It’s true that Speedway is in the center if Indy, not the edge, which people find confusing, but it was worse when there were brown-outs because the race track drew so much power on Indy 500 day.
I see the difference in the art usage, but I think “naked” can encompass times when it is expected to be unclothed. I had a faulty smoke detector, (the contacts were set too close together,) and every time I took a shower, the humidity in the air would set it off. When I told my friends the story, “There I was, dripping wet, soap in my eyes, totally naked, and my apartment is on FIRE!!” :eek:
Also, I did not go home from a date with my boyfriend and “get nude,” we “got naked!” I don’t know… maybe “naked” is also used for shock value?
Hilarious, I love that!!
I explain it to the people that need to know as: Use “thEn” to tell whEn, a timE. Use “thAn” to compAre and contrAst. Perhaps they only learn it to shut me up, but they learn it!!
Ok, it’s not legal in my state yet, but I’ll admit I smoke a little weed upon occasion. Less now than what I did years ago. The ONLY time I was driven to perform an act of graffiti, I was in a fitting room, and someone had written, “Druggies are loosers!” on the wall. It made me SO mad, I whipped a pen out of my purse, and responded with, “Maybe… but at least we can spell!”
The way I learned it was “StalaCtites hang from the Ceiling, and stalaGmites grow from the Ground.”
For my own contribution to the thread, I hate Wendsday!! I accept the pronunciation, but must it be spelled that way?! NO!!
Also, **irregardless **of what you may think, unthaw is not a word. :smack:
Rain is water that falls from the sky Rein is a line, cord, or strap used for steering a horse Reign refers to royalty’s rule over a group or time period.
Thus:
Raining cats and dogs
Rein in your ambitions, or give them free rein and go nuts
Reign of terror, or reign over me
I saw some bathroom graffiti where someone had written “Jesus is my savoir!” Someone replied “He’s certainly not your spelling teacher.” I added “Maybe he’s her French teacher, and she’s one of those gnostics we’ve been warned about.”
It was the best I could do in a pinch. And I was only 16.
Sign language: any of the manual languages used by Deaf people.
American Sign Language: Sign Language used in the US and Canada, some schools in Mexico, and the foundational language of many sign languages around the world due to the efforts of an American Deaf educator working in the Peace Corps to bring organized Deaf education to other countries. ASL is similar to French Sign Language, and French and US signers are mutually intelligible, with patience, because the first teacher in the US who was himself Deaf was French, and was brought here specifically to teach his methods to Americans interested in educating Deaf children. The children came from all over the US, and brought many different Old American Signs and home signs, which were combined with the French sign of their teachers to create Original American Sign Language. ASL has its own grammar and syntax, and is not a manual representation of English.
Signed Exact English: a system for representing English manually, that borrows heavily from ASL. It is one of several, and the most common. It is used educationally, and not as anyone’s daily language, except by some young children whose parents demand that they use it.
British Sign Language: the sign language of the UK and some of the former colonies. It is completely unrelated to American Sign Language, and BSE & ASL are not at all mutually intelligible.
Universal Sign Language: doesn’t exist. (Although, I think someone did try to make the Esperanto of sign languages, but it never caught on.)
Hang: to fasten to some elevated point without support from below (synonym: suspend). Past tense: They hung the stockings by the chimney with care. Past participle: The stockings were hung by the chimney with care.
Hang: to suspend by the neck until dead. Past tense: They hanged the horse thief. Past participle: The horse thief was hanged.
**Horde **: a whole lot of dudes. Generally bent on pillaging, raping, looting, thieving, murdering and raping.
**Hoard **: a pile of loot, amassed over a long period of time.
cache, pronounced “kash” : a hidden stockpile of stuff, prepared for future use cachet, pronounced “kashey” : prestige, class. Also a seal (the ring/stamp thing, not the pinniped)