Bah
#29
Posted 28 June 2009 - 02:06 PM
Of course if he's posting unconscious that would explain the slight increase of the quality of his posts.
#30
Posted 28 June 2009 - 02:06 PM
But if you double-post by clicking the post button twice after only a few microseconds, it posts twice‽
This post has been edited by Rickton: 28 June 2009 - 02:07 PM
#33
Posted 28 June 2009 - 06:00 PM
(x)enos. Awesome in a can. Without the can, though.
#36
Posted 28 June 2009 - 07:10 PM
I'm offended either way
I like to think it was a little of both.
Edit: That means you're twice as offended as you otherwise would be, right?
This post has been edited by Sponge Tom: 28 June 2009 - 07:13 PM
I shat a bottle of rope.
#37
Posted 29 June 2009 - 02:33 AM
This all goes to show that prominent scholars don't necessarily know how to pronounce words directly related to their scholarship. It also goes to show that I never thought I'd get so many rubber bands with the chocolate syrup.
-Pufer
#38
Posted 29 June 2009 - 08:19 AM
What's illuminum when it's at home for example?
-- Tom Sims
Never take life seriously. Nobody gets out alive anyway.
#40
Posted 29 June 2009 - 12:26 PM
#41
Posted 29 June 2009 - 10:30 PM
I honestly don't know what the hell you're talking about here. Aluminum? At the risk of walking into a setup, how/why does aluminum change when it's at home?
Aluminum/aluminium is a color/colour thing, rather than a pronunciation thing. The guy who came up with the stuff - a Brit, himself - called it aluminum (like platinum, lanthanum, molybdenum, and tantalum) because it made sense.
Modern convention states that the oxide of any metal is the stem-plus-a. Thorium --> thoria, magnesium --> magnesia, lanthanum --> lanthana, etc.
Aluminum oxide is not aluminia, it's alumina - there's no question about that one, everyone uses alumina. For whatever reason, you Brits have decided that aluminium --> alumina, which just doesn't make any sense. Aluminum --> alumina. The base is alumin, not alumini. Alumini wouldn't be a stem, but a different word (like alumni, which is not the plural of alumnius, but of alumnus).
Actually, it wasn't done for "whatever reason," it was done for the pure and explicit reason that that aluminium sounds more pretentious and "classical" than aluminum, the correct and original word. Some bunch of mustachioed silly English types sat around being idle in a room back in the 1800s and decided that they wouldn't sound pompous enough saying 'aluminum' while traipsing around in their silly uniforms in their traditional knees-bent, running-about, advancing behavior, so they added a superfluous 'i.' Americans and Canadians laughed, whereas the French thought it was a great idea - being completely ridiculous themselves - and did it as well.
The strangest part of that last bit, of course, is that it is entirely true. The superfluous 'i' only exists in the British spelling of aluminum because the British powers-that-be are pretentious boobs.
-Pufer
This post has been edited by Pufer: 29 June 2009 - 10:43 PM
#42
Posted 30 June 2009 - 07:08 AM
#43
Posted 30 June 2009 - 01:33 PM
But you guys do use some stupid names for things.
On the subject of Aluminum/Aluminium, did you know that it can be extracted from grass, it is the most common metal on earth, but was only 'discovered' in 1822 and you and Canada are the only people in the world that don't put that 'i' in there
On the subject of Canada, did you know that Canada has never started a war, nor a war for a Canadian cause and the uranium in the atom bombs dropped in Japan was supplied by Canada...
-- Tom Sims
Never take life seriously. Nobody gets out alive anyway.
#45
Posted 30 June 2009 - 03:35 PM
Iron is the most abundant metal in the Earth (as in, if you melted down the entire Earth, core and all) but aluminum is the most abundant metal in the Earth's crust, followed by oxygen, which is number 1, and silicon, which is number 2.
[citation needed]
One of the atom bombs dropped on Japan used plutonium, which is an entirely different animal, and I'd like to know your source for where the uranium for our bombs came from as well; there's a uranium mine and distillery about 20 miles west of where I live, and I know there are several uranium mines scattered throughout the US, primarily in Colorado, Nevada (most of it was put there by nuclear tests, or so the legends go) Wyoming, Idaho, North Dakota...
#46
Posted 30 June 2009 - 03:57 PM
-- Tom Sims
Never take life seriously. Nobody gets out alive anyway.
#48
Posted 16 July 2009 - 08:22 AM
No, it's, "I just accidentally the whole game." If you're going to meme do it right DOMMOT FRONK!
#50
Posted 17 July 2009 - 12:09 AM
SENSES: Foolish intellect! Do you seek to overthrow us, while it is from us that you take your evidence?