English Language Question
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After the Norman conquest of 1066 the English language was affected by the French conquerors. As a result, English absorbed alot of French spelling and vocabulary into itself. You will find that "table" in French is spelled "table" and, in fact, that is where English obtained the word. In the case of "label" vs "lable", the pronunciation would actually be quite different. Following the conquest, the version of English spoken prior to the invasion was much different than that spoken after.
It's always France's fault....:-D Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg
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Why is it "Label" and "Table", not "Lable" and "Tabel" ? _________________________________ Vote '1' if you're too lazy for a discussion
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Agreed. One example is the word "sort." It has multiple meanings, the one used depends on the context.
"Opinions are neither right nor wrong. I cannot change your opinion. I can, however, change what influences your opinion." - David Crow
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Good question. Why doesn't "food" rhyme with "good"? And how can the words continent, continental, and incontinent mean completely different things? An expert is somebody who learns more and more about less and less, until he knows absolutely everything about nothing.
If you come from Scotland (as I do) food and good do rhyme. :) Gary Rich Cook: "Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning."
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After the Norman conquest of 1066 the English language was affected by the French conquerors. As a result, English absorbed alot of French spelling and vocabulary into itself. You will find that "table" in French is spelled "table" and, in fact, that is where English obtained the word. In the case of "label" vs "lable", the pronunciation would actually be quite different. Following the conquest, the version of English spoken prior to the invasion was much different than that spoken after.
in fact, since the last century, the reverse phenomena is being observed. Lot of english words are creeping into french, mostly neologism. Although there is a french equivalent for 'walkman' (baladeur), almost nobody uses it. Some words even made it to official french, such as 'Parking', 'Weekend', and 'Stop'. Some words have funny story, such as 'Dispatch', which I often use in french (well, canadian french), the word itself is of course english, but comes from another word.. 'Dépêche' (french for hurry up). :doh: Denevers
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I have another problem according to the English language. In fact I am searching for a word. It means the height of a server you put into a 19" rack. The German word for it is "Höheneinheit". What's the English word?
"dimension" might be close to what you are looking for. A computer will have dimensions which consists of height, width and depth. regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project Pope Pius II said "The only prescription is more cowbell. "
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"dimension" might be close to what you are looking for. A computer will have dimensions which consists of height, width and depth. regards, Paul Watson South Africa The Code Project Pope Pius II said "The only prescription is more cowbell. "
Thank you for your answer, but I'm not sure this is the word I am looking for. Especially in connection with server or router there are special heights for this devices. This is kind of standard. So you could mount either two devices with this standard height or one device with the double height in the rack.
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Really ?!? What about ... German ? :-) ( not mentioning the ... Vienerish - cool, how should I put this into English?) SkyWalker
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Why is it "Label" and "Table", not "Lable" and "Tabel" ? _________________________________ Vote '1' if you're too lazy for a discussion
...and what about the difference between "sin" and "pity" ? ;P SkyWalker
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Thank you for your answer, but I'm not sure this is the word I am looking for. Especially in connection with server or router there are special heights for this devices. This is kind of standard. So you could mount either two devices with this standard height or one device with the double height in the rack.
Believe it or not, the name for the unit of measure you are looking for is U, as in a 1U rack (Google this and see what pops up). 1U is 1.75 inches (44.3 mm); multiples of this is the standard height of most rack-mount devices nowadays. 'til next we type... HAVE FUN!! -- Jesse
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Good question. Why doesn't "food" rhyme with "good"? And how can the words continent, continental, and incontinent mean completely different things? An expert is somebody who learns more and more about less and less, until he knows absolutely everything about nothing.
My favourite on this topic is http://www.nanceestar.com/KidsGrammar-Frame-Main.html well worth a read!
"An expert is a person who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field." - Neils Bohr
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...and what about the difference between "sin" and "pity" ? ;P SkyWalker
Another is Pork (from the French) and pig. At one time they both meant the same, the animal, now their meanings have changed, but the phrase 'porker' is still used in some areas todescibe the animal.
"An expert is a person who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field." - Neils Bohr
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Why is it "Label" and "Table", not "Lable" and "Tabel" ? _________________________________ Vote '1' if you're too lazy for a discussion
Just 'cause ;) --Mike-- LINKS~! Ericahist | 1ClickPicGrabber | CP SearchBar v2.0.2 | C++ Forum FAQ | You Are Dumb Strange things are afoot at the U+004B U+20DD
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Just 'cause ;) --Mike-- LINKS~! Ericahist | 1ClickPicGrabber | CP SearchBar v2.0.2 | C++ Forum FAQ | You Are Dumb Strange things are afoot at the U+004B U+20DD
One of my favorite English language oddities is the way a grammatically correct sentence can be constructed with one word repeated consecutively an unusual number of times. An easy to understand example is a sentence containing five consecutive instances of the word "and". A more convoluted but still grammatically correct sentence exists which contains eleven consecutive instances of the word "had". Any takers? .. Steve T
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If you come from Scotland (as I do) food and good do rhyme. :) Gary Rich Cook: "Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning."
Gary Thom wrote: food and good do rhyme That's what I was thinking. Gary Thom wrote: If you come from Scotland (as I do) Me too, but... What accents pronounce food and good so they don't rhyme? I can't think of any.
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One of my favorite English language oddities is the way a grammatically correct sentence can be constructed with one word repeated consecutively an unusual number of times. An easy to understand example is a sentence containing five consecutive instances of the word "and". A more convoluted but still grammatically correct sentence exists which contains eleven consecutive instances of the word "had". Any takers? .. Steve T
FlyingTinman wrote: Any takers? .. To generate the sentence, or to parse the sentence?
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Hmm, dunno. You would think the american spelling would have been "rationalised", they did to to centre and center, not there though. English english spelling isn't meant to make sense, it's designed as a trap for the unschooled and foriegners. Thank the lord for computer spell checking. On a side note, I often accidentaly used the American spellings of programming related words (color,center,randomize,program) when I was in school which drove my english teacher up the wall. Ryan
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markstu wrote: Guess that's why the English language is one of the hardest to learn. It's actually one of the simplest to learn. You should take a look at Malayalam :rolleyes:
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Believe it or not, the name for the unit of measure you are looking for is U, as in a 1U rack (Google this and see what pops up). 1U is 1.75 inches (44.3 mm); multiples of this is the standard height of most rack-mount devices nowadays. 'til next we type... HAVE FUN!! -- Jesse