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Groups > comp.sys.mac.system > #106179
| From | Snit <usenet@gallopinginsanity.com> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | comp.os.linux.advocacy, comp.sys.mac.system, alt.comp.os.windows-10, alt.cellular-phone-tech |
| Subject | Re: Apple told to warn against charging phone in bath after man's electrocution |
| Date | 2017-05-03 10:04 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <D52F5B98.A347B%usenet@gallopinginsanity.com> (permalink) |
| References | (9 earlier) <ktgpfctno06u90o20pjthakf899952kmtg@4ax.com> <D5222DCF.A0EF9%usenet@gallopinginsanity.com> <n6upfct27u73nh3k2a9mj7akc1pcn6p0oh@4ax.com> <6x7LA.12719$So6.538@fx17.iad> <op.yzn07spljs98qf@red.lan> |
Cross-posted to 4 groups.
On 5/3/17, 7:00 AM, in article op.yzn07spljs98qf@red.lan, "James Wilkinson Sword" <imvalid@somewear.com> wrote: > On Sun, 23 Apr 2017 20:47:12 +0100, Wolf K <wolfmac@sympatico.ca> wrote: > >> On 2017-04-23 15:00, Ken Blake wrote: >> [Snit wrote:} >>>> It took me a while to accept it, but I still cringe when I hear people >>>> pronounce the "t" in "often". Used to be that was considered a no-no... but >>>> it is done so often it is now accepted. >>> >>> Accepted by some people, but not by me. To me, it's another example of >>> "simply wrong." >> >> To all of you who get antsy about usage variations, etc: >> >> http://www.atlas.mouton-content.com/ >> >> Regional and class dialects are a fact of life. None of the >> English-speaking countries have an Academy that pretends to enforce >> language standards. However, standards do exist. In English, they are >> quite elastic, with much wider variations accepted than in French for >> example. Eg, the Queens' English in the UK, variations thereon on >> Australia, Canada, etc, and educated usage in the USA. >> >> The problem arises when speaker's own dialect is close to the standard >> in accent, which in the USA is vaguely Mid-Western with easily >> understood East/West Coast and Southern varieties. When the other >> speaker's speech is within the standard accent-range, even small >> differences in usage may feel like errors. If the accent were more >> different, usage variations would be felt as dialectical: that is, not >> part of the standard, and therefore acceptable within the dialect. >> >> Some regional and city dialects in every country are so far from the >> standard that they are (linguistically speaking) different languages, >> and may even be unintelligible to people whose native dialect is close >> to the standard. >> >> BTW, in England I've heard oft'n more often than off'n. > > What about "orfen"? > "When riding one's hawse, one orfen finds one's self lying on the grind." Yes, I have heard that, too. Irksome to me. :) -- Personal attacks from those who troll show their own insecurity. They cannot use reason to show the message to be wrong so they try to feel somehow superior by attacking the messenger. They cling to their attacks and ignore the message time and time again. <https://youtu.be/H4NW-Cqh308>
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Re: Apple told to warn against charging phone in bath after man's electrocution "James Wilkinson Sword" <imvalid@somewear.com> - 2017-05-03 15:00 +0100 Re: Apple told to warn against charging phone in bath after man's electrocution Snit <usenet@gallopinginsanity.com> - 2017-05-03 10:04 -0700
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