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I haven't had time to research this topic, but although the strange and confusing term unitless measure is apparently often used in definitions in Wiktionary, we don't yet have an entry for it, and "Category:en:Historical numbers" and "Category:Historical numbers" are misleadingly named because the number 12 is a different term and concept than the term dozen, and the latter never replaced it in many contexts, e.g. was never used in counting.
Less confusing and apparently more common than unitless measure are unit of quantity and unit of amount, but these apparently sometimes mean unit of measurement. Apparently editors are so unsure what to call terms such as dozen, score, and great gross that they usually only say what number they correspond to and don't say what they are (despite putting them in the categories mentioned above).
The situation is equally bad in Wikipedia, where there are essentially articles only in Swedish and Finnish and these terms are if at all only discussed in other languages in articles on old weights and measures, though they are neither. --Espoo (talk) 10:06, 1 February 2020 (UTC)
They are nouns of quantity, but do we have to state that? We could put them in categories, like Swedish nouns of quantity, if that is important. What about using “A group of N items of the same kind” for defining the noun senses? We could even create a template for that that also puts them in the appropriate category. --Lambiam13:17, 5 February 2020 (UTC)
"A homosexual woman or (less common) a homosexual female of a non-human animal species; one who is (near-)exclusively sexually or romantically attracted to other women." Doesn't this seem a bit wordy and overcomplicated? If you're "BRACKET near CLOSE BRACKET attracted" then aren't you just a near-lesbian? We don't define "stupid" as someone whose brain is "(near-)exclusively less intelligent". Gender obsession is turning simple sentence entries into convoluted ambiguities that don't help learners. Equinox◑11:06, 1 February 2020 (UTC)
Honestly I'd just define it as "a homosexual woman" (or "a gay woman" if homosexual is offensive now, I haven't checked this week's rules). Would we really be losing anything by making that switch? Equinox◑11:07, 1 February 2020 (UTC)
Animals were added to the noun in diff. I see the editor who undid your combining of those aspects into "female" has now split them into separate definition-lines and RFVed the "animal" one; I listed it at WT:RFV. (But pace your edit summary, surely the intent was not to "avoid offending animals" but to make use of the term to refer to animals interpretable to humans.) For "near", which I've changed to "mostly or" to match the adjective: compare the discussion on Talk:lesbian and citations I added last month to the citations page. Since my comment on talk last year, I've come to be more firmly behind retaining the "mostly or exclusively", on the basis of examples like those cited there and on the cites page. (I'd also like to find more early examples, as I've seen it said that early uses were even broader; cf my comment on Talk:lesbianism. However, as with trying to cite the broad use of "gay", it's hard to find unambiguous citations.) - -sche(discuss)16:36, 1 February 2020 (UTC)
"surely the intent was ... to make use of the term to refer to animals interpretable to humans" Good guess, but my actual intent was to include lesbian trans women in the definition. ←₰-→Lingo BingoDingo (talk) 12:37, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
Ah. Well, I appreciate that aim and I think the entry as it stands now with the noun "female" changed to "woman" is an improvement (including in other ways), but I would say "female" also encompasses trans women (cf. our definitions of it). Indeed, compare the discussion of woman below, which we (and various other dictionaries) define as "adult female human" or "adult female person": transphobes often use that exact wording because they think it excludes trans women, but most trans women I know—while certainly objecting when transphobes use the wording as a shibboleth or whistle for transphobia—don't consider the definition to actually/successfully exclude them; it's easy to find examples of both the noun and adjective female (and trans female) in reference to trans women. (Yes, some people try to use female more narrowly/exclusionarily, but many of those people who gatekeep who is female/male or a woman/man also gatekeep who is American or who is Christian , who is a true Scotsman, etc, and other people gatekeep who is progressive or a true communist or who counts as white or black or Jewish, and we wouldn't want to add separate "Catholic-only" and "Protestant-only" definitions for Christian, etc etc, to cover all that; better to have one inclusive sense. Hmm, perhaps that logic means the new senses just added to woman and man should be merged, too...) - -sche(discuss)18:22, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
The entry says "only used in בערך" but I have seen in the Najer Folksblat "אן ערך" which I'm fairly certain is common too. Are these identical in meaning, two versions of the same word, or something else entirely.
As always, I am eternally grateful for assistance.
EDIT:
אַן ערך is actually already an entry, so I'm just unsure of how to link it to ערך, if anyone could help with that.
Yep that seems fine to me, although maybe we should change it to "only used in derived terms", or something like that, and just add the derived terms in a list so that it's future proof. Then we could add on an erekh (without measure, infinite, very much. Different from on an erekh (without approximately -)), le-fi erekh (comparatively), in dem erekh (approximately again). Yes we could add them as it currently stands, but I feel like it would be neater. I submit to your knowledge of Wiktionary formatting guides and will be happy to do what is needed upon yours, or another's, decision from more experience.—Chaimish (talk) 16:38, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
@Chaimish: I haven't heard all those used, so thanks for having a list at the ready. I see your point, so feel free to change the definition to something like {{n-g|Only used in set phrases.}} and stick everything in a 'Derived terms' section. —Μετάknowledgediscuss/deeds16:45, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
@Metaknowledge: Entry is done, I'll add the entries for the derived terms another day. As for adding correct transcriptions/glosses, I can't find out how at the moment. I'll look again later, but if someone else wants to do it, I won't complain. Secondly, בערך is on a page called בעערך. It has to be moved, but on mobile this seems impossible I guess? I'll do it when I can access a computer but again, not complaining if someone else wants to do it. In any case, thanks for the guidance and reply, always a pleasure doing business with you.—Chaimish (talk) 18:40, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
It can generally mean "cookware", as in "I'm moving out of my apartment into my first house; I need to buy some pots and pans." which would include other items related to cooking as well like colanders, ladels, stirring spoons, etc. Leasnam (talk) 20:39, 1 February 2020 (UTC)
Plausible but I would like some sort of evidence. I mean, if I say "I need to buy some knives and forks" I might also be getting other cutlery like spoons, and a potato peeler, but I dunno if that's idiomatic, it's more like people can't be bothered to reel off the entire list of boring cutlery. Equinox◑00:34, 2 February 2020 (UTC)
Here it's used as a single unit not as and ]; kinda the same here ]. I'm not necessarily going to bat for an entry, but I am kinda leaning towards the possibility of one. I mean we do have fish and chips js Leasnam (talk) 04:12, 2 February 2020 (UTC)
I wouldn't say "fish and chips" is a very good comparison, given how that phrase refers to a meal composed just of those two objects, whereas "pots and pans" (and "knives and forks") is shorthand for a collection of numerous different things. That being said, "pots and pans" as shorthand is much more common than arbitrary pairs like "knives and forks" and could likely warrant its own page. --100.0.113.815:31, 3 February 2020 (UTC)
User:LICA98 just added the information "illative singular of pubi" (in Estonian) to the page puppi, and sure enough, that's exactly what the page pubi says. However, when I studied Estonian, my teacher said that the words klubi and pubi do not have illatives kluppi and puppi, but instead according to her, klubisse and pubisse must be used. (It is possible that she only said that of one of those two words, but I'm pretty sure both of them came up at some time). So who's correct, my Estonian teacher or Wiktionary's templates? (And yes, kluppi is mentioned as an illative form of klubi)
I've made similar additions in the past myself too, but for this reason I've been a bit hesitant. For example, I'd like to add illative singular of side 'communications, post office' to the page sidde but I'm not sure if such a form exists... Mölli-Möllerö (talk) 12:14, 2 February 2020 (UTC)
ÕS lists pubi under type 17, which it describes in detail here. Similarly, klubi is also listed under type 17, but has a further note "<17: kl`uppi ja klubisse>", so it seems both are fine. — surjection ⟨?⟩ 23:32, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
"sidde" is most definitely not a word. A short illative, if it existed for this word, would be "sitte", but it is not used afaik and I've never heard it. dd/gg/bb do not exist in Estonian. I'll fix the "pere" template later today. "kluppi" is definitely seen, maybe informal/slangy, but I've never heard "puppi". Strombones (talk) 15:47, 4 March 2020 (UTC)
Taking a look at it, many type-pere nouns (such as vähe) have wrong short illatives. The current code handles cases with long vowels, such as piiga and the most common words that have a short illative, such as pere, but everything else is wrong. A robust solution would be to just specify the short illative (if it exists at all, most pere-type nouns do not have a short illative). Would take a while to fix all the entries though, so idk. Worth noting though that only a minority of pere-type nouns have a distinct short-illative at all. And it's irregular, an example would be "pogri" (colloquial word for "jail", often seen in its short illative: "pokri"), while "mügri", meaning "water vole", does not have a short illative. Strombones (talk) 16:13, 4 March 2020 (UTC)
I'm not sure that I really agree. "by all that ~" is a standard pattern that has large numbers of possibilities, of which the ones cited do not seem especially notable examples, and I don't see why "right and fair" is anything more than "right" and "fair". I am not a huge fan of the present entry at for the love of all that is holy either. Mihia (talk) 01:47, 8 February 2020 (UTC)
We have an adverb section with the following usex: "He rolled the red in dead weight, and now he's nicely on the blue". Unless roll in is a transitive phrasal verb with the red as a direct object, dead weight is not an adverb but a noun in a prepositional phrase. Canonicalization (talk) 20:12, 2 February 2020 (UTC)
No – as you speculated, "roll in" here is, in fact, a transitive phrasal verb with "the red" as a direct object. This adverbial use of "dead weight" is fairly common in snooker, where it just indicates that the object ball is moving very slowly when it reaches the pocket, and drops in from its own weight rather than being banged against the back of the pocket. Ƿidsiþ13:38, 5 February 2020 (UTC)
Sense 3, "A family of conspiracy theories based on the notion that real and actual political power resides not with publicly elected representatives but with private individuals who are exercising power behind the scenes", doesn't sound substitutable. How can a shadow government be a "family of conspiracy theories"? Canonicalization (talk) 20:32, 2 February 2020 (UTC)
Are the two senses distinct? Also, labelling one "now historical" and the other "historical" is silly. (IMO both should just say "historical". Any(?) or almost any "historical" sense is only "now historical", at least the way we seem to use that term, to label words that were used while the thing they describe still existed. We don't, for example, label Ancient Rome "historical", even though by the glossary definition it fits...) - -sche(discuss)00:22, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
There's a duplication of contents at 竜 and 龍 and many others. I know that not all kyūjitai can be considered "dated/obsolete" and can be completely superseded by the shinjitai forms, so both are equal in case 竜 and 龍? When {{ja-kyujitai spelling of}} is used, it's normally to also to indicate that 来る(kuru) is now the main form and 來る(kuru) is the older spelling and the shinjitai article contains most of the information, so that no duplication occurs and no need for synching. Should the treatment be different if the kyūjitai form is still in use and not considered dated/obsolete? @Eirikr, Dine2016, TAKASUGI Shinji. If that's the case, any change to {{ja-kyujitai spelling of}} is required? --Anatoli T.(обсудить/вклад)00:54, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
We can still treat kyujitai in use as soft redirects, and we should avoid duplication. The solution is simply an explanatory usage note (and I have seen 龍 used in Japan, but I think only in the context of Buddhist sites). —Μετάknowledgediscuss/deeds00:57, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
@Metaknowledge: I agree that we should still use kyūjitai as soft redirects - regardless whether they are just current alt forms or mostly fell out of use after 1947 reform, and we should avoid duplication but I think the template could use an additional piece of info advising something along the line that it's still in modern use or, categorise the dated spellings appropriately and no cat for spellings still in use. I'm also aware that not all cases can be straighforward but it's a matter of discussing and deciding. --Anatoli T.(обсудить/вклад)01:13, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
This strikes me as a potentially tricky one. Dictionaries seem to treat these as equivalents, simply as shinjitai 竜 and kyūjitai 龍. But both characters are in current usage, and there do seem to be subtle differences in usage that I'm having trouble nailing down. @Shinji, @Eryk, can either of you shed any light on this, as native speakers? ‑‑ Eiríkr Útlendi │Tala við mig20:15, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
This kyūjitai is current contrary to its classification and may be one of the most common amongst them. Not a few people including me may think that the more strokes a kanji has, the more proper, dignitized and cooler impression it gives off. We could apply this (lacking logic and somewhat silly) idea also to a pair 滝 vs 瀧, which is a component of my surname (where the two types of character are used interchangeably except for official documents) and I usually use the latter for self-dignitizing purpose. Hiroyuki Sasahara, a linguist specializing in usage of kanji, remarks that 龍 is regarded as more fascinating than the other in terms of naming () in Japan. --Eryk Kij (talk) 21:27, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
@Eirikr, エリック・キィ: Thank you both. I actually thought that the label kyūjitai or "dated" shouldn't apply to names (personal or geographical) or part of names, which are known to use any possible characters in use with little or known restrictions. --Anatoli T.(обсудить/вклад)21:42, 4 February 2020 (UTC)
@TAKASUGI Shinji: Yes, that's what I mentioned when saying "Should the treatment be different if the kyūjitai form is still in use and not considered dated/obsolete". Could you please expand your response and comment whether we duplicate the contents in both 竜 and 龍? Or use {{ja-gv}} on one when the senses are identical and treat them as variant spellings? --Anatoli T.(обсудить/вклад)00:24, 6 February 2020 (UTC)
As far as I know, the use of 龍 is more limited. It is used in personal names or as a stand-alone character for the dragon, especially for the oriental dragon as opposed to the western dragon. They write almost always 恐竜(kyōryū), 竜巻(tatsumaki) and 竜田揚げ(tatsutāge) using 竜. — TAKASUGI Shinji (talk) 06:02, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
unmitigated hyperbole
In uses like “unmitigated disaster”, the adjective unmitigated does IMO not simply mean “not mitigated” but serves as an intensifier, like total. Most failures declared to be “total” could have been worse than they were, so they were not total in a literal sense. I think the same holds for many so-called “unmitigated” disasters. Add a second sense (like at total)? Also, doesn’t the given quotation (featuring a “most unmitigated cad”) belong more to the hyperbolic sense? --Lambiam13:38, 5 February 2020 (UTC)
I agree. I would say that the intensifier sense has developed enough of a separate identity to merit a separate definition. I also agree that the "unmitigated cad" quotation probably should be moved to that. Mihia (talk) 18:12, 7 February 2020 (UTC)
gaiwan was a simple alt form of chawan: now it has been expanded into its own entry. Is that right? I would prefer alt form if they are the same thing: less work to maintain and synchronise. Equinox◑23:44, 5 February 2020 (UTC)
Well, they have different etymons, and separate Wikipedia articles which say that the chawan is just a bowl (with no lid), and is the older device, being replaced later by a gaiwan which had a lid and sometimes a saucer. It appears they're similar but indeed distinct (which in turn means they shouldn't list each other as synonyms, but only coordinate terms or see alsos or something.). - -sche(discuss)02:48, 8 February 2020 (UTC)
Recently added to wench is a citation of a lyric from the Beastie Boys' "Rhymin and Stealin":
We got wenches on the benches, and bitties with titties / Housing all girlies from city to city
I must admit, I always used to hear this as "Hustling" not "Housing". Lyric sites give "Housing", but on the other hand lyric sites sometimes contain the most ridiculous errors. My re-listen of it was inconclusive. If the lyric indeed is "housing", then does anyone know in what sense? Is it a sense that we are missing? (Also pinging @Sgconlaw who added the relevant line.) Mihia (talk) 20:44, 7 February 2020 (UTC)
In "I gave him the book", "him" is the indirect object, but when the preposition "to" is used, it isn't an indirect object any more, is it? Or is it? Before I go and change this, perhaps someone else could opine. Mihia (talk) 22:00, 7 February 2020 (UTC)
Yes. I think indirect object is a grammatical role, not a semantic one, at least for English. It would be nice if we could include a reference to ], if not in the definition, then under a 'See also' header in the PoS section. DCDuring (talk) 00:15, 8 February 2020 (UTC)
In order to kill two birds with one stone, so to speak, I have merged this sense with the problem sense "For the purpose of" previously discussed at Wiktionary:Tea_room/2020/January#to, under the definition "Used to indicate the target or recipient of an action". I am not totally happy with the somewhat vagueness or wide inclusiveness of this, but OTOH I believe it is better than what we have at the moment, which is two faulty definitions. If anyone sees a better way to deal with these two entries, please go ahead. Mihia (talk) 23:09, 8 February 2020 (UTC)
French translation of escalate (technical support sense)
I confirmed that "to escalate a ticket" is "escalader un ticket" with a French colleague who works in IT. Kodar has said this is incorrect and changed it to "faire remonter". The phrase "escalader un ticket" does seem to have some usage online:
"Enfin vous avez la notion de « Groupes » qui sert dans les workflows par exemple pour escalader un ticket vers un groupe d'agents au lieu d'un agent." source
"Pour activer la possibilité à vos agents et/ou experts d’escalader un ticket, il suffit d’activer le toggle d’escalade." source
"Réceptionnaire : quel est le point de contact à qui escalader un ticket d’incident ou une demande portant sur le service d’opérations, par exemple, le centre de services de l’infogérant (la description du service contient les informations pratiques pour le contacter : numéro de téléphone, adresse électronique, etc.)" source
Compared to English, many French speakers tend to be much more conservative and judgemental with regard to “innovations”, following the lead of the Académie française, the official authority on all aspects of the French language, and condemn this as an Americanism. In English, escalate can be used both in a sense similar to rise and to raise. In “approved” French, escalader has only the sense of rise: it is the subject that goes up. But in escalader un ticket, the object goes up. Here at Wiktionary we follow actual usage, not authority, but we should not be shy to point out that certain uses are proscribed. One can use {{label|fr|proscribed}}, which links to Appendix:Glossary#proscribed, but I prefer a usage note with a more specific exposition of the issue. --Lambiam10:56, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
It seems to be attested indeed, but I somehow doubt it's durably attested.
To echo Lambiam's point, I (as a native French speaker) confirm that I consider it an abomination. Anyway, judging by the quality of the quotes above, it's clear that purity of language is not the primary concern of their authors. Canonicalization (talk) 10:58, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
Thank you both for the thoughtful comments. Perhaps there is not enough usage in French to justify that translation yet. It seems to me to be unnecessary business jargon in English too, but it probably has enough usage in English to deserve a mention here. The COED, 12th edition (2011), has only (1) 'increase rapidly' and (2) 'become more intense or serious' for the meanings of escalate, however, so I do not think the technical support meaning is well-established in English either (though perhaps it is related to COED meaning 2). Regarding the new translation, what exactly does faire remonter mean? I have looked online, but it seems difficult to translate. Is it worth creating an entry? --Thrasymedes (talk) 19:20, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
First of all, thanks for mentioning this issue. I really much like the fact that Wiktionary is built upon consensus. Then, I personally work as an IT engineer and I hear colleagues on an everyday basis using English words in the middle of their sentences, making even grammar mistakes at the same time (e.g. « Est-ce que tu as push le code ? » - I would, at least, expect the coined word « pushé » in that case...). « Escalader » in French, as far as I know, only applies to cases when you physically end up at a higher position, as already said. So I would be glad that the translation remains as I had corrected. --Kodar (talk) 9:19, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
That's OK. We're only trying to find the truth here. In summary, it seems that some French speakers, like my colleague and the writers above, say escalader for a ticket in IT, but this is not grammatically correct since escalader only applies to the subject physically going higher. It is a lesson for me that it is not always sufficient to speak to only one native speaker about the French language! Thank you too.
About faire remonter, what I mean is, although the literal meaning is "cause to increase/ascend again", the translation seems to vary a lot depending on the context, e.g.:
"Bien que le gouvernement se soit engagé à faire remonter le ratio au niveau réglementaire" fr → "Although the Government undertook to raise the ratio to the statutory minimum" en
"Ces astéroïdes pourraient subir des effets gravitationnels à l’approche de la Terre ou des autres planètes telluriques (des effets de marée) tendant à faire remonter à la surface la matière interne" fr → "These asteroids could undergo gravitational effects with the approach of the Earth or another telluric planet (tidal effects) tending to dredge up on the surface the internal material" en
"Faire remonter l’affaire à un plus haut niveau hiérarchique" fr → "Referring the issue to a higher echelon" en
And now we have "faire remonter un ticket", which means "escalate a ticket".
@Thrasymedes I can see why you would want an entry, but I still think it's SOP. There are two reasons for the variation in translations: (1) the construction faire + doesn't have a direct equivalent in English (not one that is equally versatile, anyway) despite being perfectly transparent in French, and (2) remonter has several definitions, which are not all translated by the same verbs in English. Thus, I don't think the translations are a reliable indicator of the transparency or lack thereof in this case. Andrew Sheedy (talk) 22:20, 18 February 2020 (UTC)
It is a choice of words. 勝手 literally means "considering only one's own condition, ignoring others' will". The computer just booted "on its own" (without human order or permission). -- Huhu9001 (talk) 16:52, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
Agreed, there's nothing idiomatic about 勝手に that goes beyond just 勝手 in the adverbial. As a reference point, monolingual JA dictionary aggregator Kotobank has no independent entry for 勝手に.
So I change my opinion here. But you still can’t say *この動きは勝手だ, so we need some clarification, such as Only attributive or adverbial. — TAKASUGI Shinji (talk) 01:41, 8 March 2020 (UTC)
Isaac Bonewits' definitions of magic
Isaac Bonewits had a Bachelor of Arts in Magic and Thaumaturgy; University of California, Berkeley and do wouldn't his definitions of magic be valid?--174.99.238.2217:04, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
Questionable how? Certainly a Bachelor of Arts in Magic and Thaumaturgy from the University of California, Berkeley would qualify one as at least on entry level expert in the field and make their definitions count for something.--174.99.238.2217:24, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
We require independent uses. Find someone else who isn't Isaac Bonewits who has used the words in the same way. DTLHS (talk) 17:25, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
What about Wikipedia:USESPS which expressly states "Self-published sources can be reliable, and they can be used (except for claims about living people). Sometimes, a self-published source is even the best possible source, such as when you are supporting a direct quotation. In such cases, the original document is the best source because the original document will be free of any errors or misquotations introduced by subsequent sources."?--174.99.238.2217:43, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
Wiktionary is WT:NOT Wikipedia. Wiktionary's inclusion criteria are fundamentally different in nature and are documented on WT:CFI. For an English word, you would need to show at least three books (or journal articles, etc) by different authors using a word with the meaning you claim (and if they could still readily be interpreted as the broader/usual definition, a neologistic narrow re-definition, if taken to be merely an attempt to re-interpret the same basic sense, might still not be added as a separate sense). - -sche(discuss)18:17, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
No, a BA does not make one an authority at all and having one does not mean one can make up their own dictionary definitions (which are based on common usage, not personal views, and should be concise and clear). — Mnemosientje (t · c) 17:29, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
I take it you have never read an anthropology paper that uses the word "Culture" :-) Seriously, a university degree is certainly better then someone with no degree at all. Never mind the popular use the definitions are getting. I mean gay doesn't just mean happy anymore.--174.99.238.2217:43, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
Nope. Terms mean what the people who use them mean when they use them. Our only authority for definitions of well-documented languages such as English is usage. Period.
You're certainly not afflicted by false modesty, nor any reticence about plugging yourself or your books in places where you have no right to. So far, you haven't sunk to the level of a spammer, but you're not far off. Blatant and shameless self-promotion is an abuse of your editing privileges, and will lead to your being blocked. Chuck Entz (talk) 22:14, 9 February 2020 (UTC)
First, we don't have the right to just take Bonewits' definitions. That's getting into copyright infringement range. Second, definitions like this are nigh useless to us. We should not copy or even stress about the definition of science from a scientist or philosopher of science, and ultimately I think internal definitions of science are going to be more coherent and useful than something like magic.--Prosfilaes (talk) 04:34, 10 February 2020 (UTC)
"An adult female human"? I know this might spill out in awkwardness all over the place, but "elf woman", "halfling woman", "gnome woman", "kitsune woman" and "goblin woman" are trivially citable, "dwarf woman" is only harder in that the fantasy sense has to be separated out, I can find cites for "hobbit woman", "lizard woman" (in the sense of a lizardfolk), "insectoid woman", etc. I don't know how to rewrite it, but it's clearly not limited to humans.--Prosfilaes (talk) 04:56, 10 February 2020 (UTC)
How about "person" or "individual"? Also, for non-human examples, maybe Wonder Woman (Amazons are goddesses, not humans, right?) or Superman's cousin Power Woman (usually appears in DC Comics as Power Girl, but not always). 96.244.220.17807:58, 10 February 2020 (UTC)
Should we have an "especially" clause, like "an adult female person, especially a human" (and on man, "an adult male person, especially a human")? That would cover cases where the words (especially man) denote humans specifically as contrasted with non-humans. OTOH, it might be awkward/confusing/unnecessary (Merriam-Webster evidently considers it unnecessary; Dictionary.com on the other hand does specify "human" in a separate, poorly distinguished sense, "female human being, as distinguished from a girl or a man"). - -sche(discuss)18:07, 10 February 2020 (UTC)
The prompting of this was lesbian: "A homosexual woman", as I was thinking about whether lesbian anthropomorphic animal characters would count as "women". I guess age-specific issues are there too; sexual orientation in children is debated, but we certainly can find enough examples of teen lesbians.--Prosfilaes (talk) 08:40, 10 February 2020 (UTC)
I don't know how much it applies here, but bear in mind that adding an adjective can actually change the normal "definition" meaning of a word: you could also say "Martian woman", which makes her no longer a "human", or "toy gun", which makes it no longer a (real) weapon, or "giant hamster", which makes it no longer a small animal, and so on. Equinox◑14:59, 10 February 2020 (UTC)
I'm pretty sure a "giant hamster" is still a hamster, whether it was giant by simple mutation, selective breeding, or amazing kablamo enlarging ray. In this case, I feel that woman applies to any adult female person, though there's some clear cites where "elf woman" does seem to be disjoint from "woman", and it's hard finding elf+woman that isn't literally "elf woman".--Prosfilaes (talk) 12:11, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
I had a go at revising woman and man to account for the non-human uses mentioned above. I was and remain on the fence about whether it's better to have a separate sense or merely expand the first sense, but I went with a separate sense because man in particular seems to often denote a human or Homo sapiens in particular, and I also noticed that man already had a "supernatural" sense, marked obsolete (for references to God or the devil as a man), which I added the elf-encompassing sense into, removing the "obsolete" label since one can still find references to God as a man as well as to God as a woman. Please revise or discuss further if there are still issues. I have not yet added a sense for any female/male regardless of age, but probably will if I find more and better citations of it. - -sche(discuss)18:49, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
According to that Wikipedia article, prepositional adverbs "modify the verb". Does "inside" in "He's inside" modify the verb "is"? Mihia (talk) 10:02, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
Avoiding controversial examples is good, but many locatives and some temporals (whether considered adverbs (here), prepositional phrases (at home), or nouns (home), usually considered adverbial) can also follow forms of be and sometimes other copulas. In the case of English prepositional phrases, we decided to allow them their own header to eliminate the duplication of semantic content. CGEL does one better by putting many of what we call adverbs into the class of intransitive prepositions. DCDuring (talk) 19:19, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
As I may have mentioned somewhere before, I feel uneasy about recognising intransitive prepositions, partly on basic principle and partly because I feel it may be too radical a departure from what the great majority of our readers and users are familiar with. On the other hand, I also feel unhappy that "inside" in "He's inside" is either an adverb or an adjective, so I don't have any good suggestion. (I think that allowing "prepositional phrase" was a good decision by the way.) Mihia (talk) 20:19, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
By the way, if you would prefer to restore the original "He's inside" adverb example alongside the new one that I added, please go ahead. Mihia (talk) 20:58, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
This seems more encyclopedic than lexical, though it doesn't seem very encyclopedia-worthy either. The phrase seems quite NISoP: clown car (used attributively) + primary. Not every cute, topical turn of phrase deserves an entry. In fact, few do, IMHO. DCDuring (talk) 19:25, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
I have never heard of this, but the present definition seems more specific than could reasonably be understood from "clown-car" + "primary". If the definition is correct then keep. Properly the phrase should be hyphenated. The fact that it may often be seen unhyphenated is zero surprise since these days nobody understands hyphens. Mihia (talk) 02:15, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
By the way, the definition at clown car reads "A circus clown routine in which an implausibly large number of clowns climb into or out of a small car." Is the primary definition of "clown car" the routine, or is it actually the car? Mihia (talk) 02:19, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
The routine. I remember it as a college-kid prank to have six or ten people (NOT wearing clown costumes) get out of a car while stopped at a traffic light, run around the car in different directions and then get back in before the light changed. The term is used to refer to all kinds of silly-seeming bits of frantic activity by multiple actors, animate or inanimate.
This is yet another example of a phrase based on a cute metaphor that some contributor has to memorialize, without first examining other uses of the key term used in the metaphor. DCDuring (talk) 06:55, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
Yep. "Clowncar primary" isn't a thing. "Clowncar" is a thing, being used as a descriptive modifier of "primary". It's the same case as, say, "buck-toothed grandma". — SMcCandlish‹(-¿-)›01:40, 21 February 2020 (UTC)
omohyoid is an English word but (since recent edits by a Chinese user who ignores me on talk) it's in a bunch of Latin categories (generated from ety templates). What's the best fix? Equinox◑19:30, 11 February 2020 (UTC)
Given the inflections, I don't think that's the case. It isn't "copies/pastes" or "copied/pasted", but "copy/pastes" and "copy/pasted". If it were merely a normal use of the slash, one would expect the former rather than the latter. Andrew Sheedy (talk) 01:15, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
Seems like the opposite of the sleptwalked phenomenon where people try to treat a compound verb (whose first member is actually a noun) as two verbs and inflect them separately. —Mahāgaja · talk11:02, 14 March 2020 (UTC)
Ugh, and that leads me to notice sleptwalk. (Are we sure that one's common enough to mention on the headword line stead of in a usage note anyway? I know some rare forms get moved out of the headword line, like low as a form of laugh.) - -sche(discuss)19:40, 14 March 2020 (UTC)
I highly doubt it—the entries for all the irregular forms say that they're rare—so I've moved the information to a usage note. Andrew Sheedy (talk) 02:59, 15 March 2020 (UTC)
The macrons in the page sic transit gloria mundi after the word "Phrase" are invisible, and the pronunciation is also wrong (the pronunciation assumes all vowels to be short, which they're not). I don't know how to fix this, as the source code looked reasonable, but the templates don't seem to work right. Mölli-Möllerö (talk) 07:54, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
Fixed. For the IPA: how could the template know which vowels are long on its own? You have to tell it. For the headword line: I don't know why {{la-phrase}} is stupid, and it's helpfully undocumented. I just replaced it with a template that isn't stupid, although that's not generally the best way to handle these things. —Μετάknowledgediscuss/deeds08:07, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
Found art is the set of artworks, in general, consisting of found objects; so by definition found objects are part of found art; so of course it's fine. For anyone who hasn't been following this bit of drama, "Bus stop" hates the phrase found art and has been repeatedly trying to delete or remove it, and having failed there is now trying to undermine it by other means. He/she is wrong. Equinox◑14:22, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
You are saying that "Found art is the set of artworks, in general, consisting of found objects" but you don't know that to be the case. Bus stop (talk) 14:29, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
Have you look at the "found art" entry, where I specifically took care to add citations proving it? You need to read the most basic newbie stuff of Wiktionary because you are embarrassing yourself. This entry will stay. And I wasn't going to mention it but I've got a little bet with another Wiktionary user that you will be banned before the start of March. I've got 15 quid on it. Equinox◑15:18, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
Are all found objects used as part of found art? Does that matter to whether or not "found art" can be a holonym or is better as a "see also"? Meh. As an aside, there are a number of other "found _" terms, currently listed on found (but do we normally have ====Derived terms==== sections on inflected form of entries? is there a better place for these?). - -sche(discuss)22:18, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
Thank you, -sche, for calling attention to the found page, and especially the "Derived terms" section of that page. Found footage, found literature, found music, and found poetry are focussed applications of the concept of the found object, meaning that they address specific creative pursuits. Found art is basically a variation on the term found object, as would be terms such as "found object art" or "found materials"—if Wiktionary had entries for those terms. By the way, these are terms in use. There are over a million Google hits for "found materials" and one can hear sophisticated art aficionados refer to "found materials". (There are 1.5 million g-hits for "found object art". "Found literature", for which we have an entry, barely has 100,000 hits.) But it—"found art"—would just be a variation on the core term which inevitably is "found object", which is not only a translation of the original French term, but more importantly is the term that all the best quality sources seize upon to serve as an umbrella term under which to expound on the meaning of the underlying concept originated by Marcel Duchamp. I am referring to museums of contemporary art and glossaries of art terms both online and in print—they all converge on only one term and that is "found object". Bus stop (talk) 18:42, 13 February 2020 (UTC)
Can we change "Holonym" at found object to "Related term" or "Alternative form" or "Derived term"? Can Users DTLHS and Equinox weigh in on that? My opposition is to the term "Holonym", which I do not think correctly describes the relationship between terms such as "found object" and "found art". Bus stop (talk) 15:35, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
User:Equinox—how many more places are you going to pursue this issue? I've tried to engage in rational discussion with you but that has proven exceedingly difficult. The term "found" has a special meaning in respect to art beginning in the first half of the 20th century. Wiktionary can properly cover this subject. It wouldn't be hard to do. But it would take an overhaul of the subject, beginning with the French term of origin, and progressing through its various uses. Importantly, the term "found" doesn't vary in meaning in each of its uses. There is no more a need for an entry on "found art" than there is a need for an entry on "found materials". In this video, at 14:55,Ivan Karp uses the term "found materials". It is the word "found" that matters, when it is used in relation to art. Bus stop (talk) 19:50, 20 February 2020 (UTC)
Yeah... in cases where the language can't shorten its phrase for soaked to the bone to just the to the bone part, I would preserve the translations in to the bone#Translations with qualifiers. This has been necessary in other cases where we've lemmatized a different part of speech for some cross-linguistically common idiom than other languages — usually, where we've shortened it do drop a verb or noun other languages can't, like how some of the translations for of one's word are of the noun "man of one's word". - -sche(discuss)17:20, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
Sense 1 is too specific: "to physically rotate horizontally 360 degrees". The usex is for trying on clothes, which is precisely the only time I think "turn around" means "rotate 360 degrees". If you're driving and you turn around, it's definitely a 180. Should these be two senses, or should 1 be broadened? Ultimateria (talk) 18:56, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
I assume that “rotate horizontally" is meant to mean, “rotate around a vertical axis”. “To make a U-turn” is IMO opinion a different sense (and the literal sense giving rise to the figurative sense of assuming the opposite opinion of what one held before). This is a half turn, but also a change in the direction of motion. And when a person is said to turn around in a narrative, it is typically a half turn (, , ). This is then a change in the direction the person is facing and looking; no further motion is implied. In “The world turns around once every twenty-four hours”, we see a clear case of whole (360°) turns. (Whether the world rotates “horizontally” is a whole nother question.) Finally, there is a whole class of uses where the amount of rotation is indeterminate (, , ). In the last example, it is dubious that the axis of rotation has a vertical orientation. --Lambiam20:15, 12 February 2020 (UTC)
Do we want to try to clean up the other definitions while we are giving this out attention? All of definitions 5-9 seem odd to me. For example:
6 (transitive, idiomatic, of an idea) To consider from a different viewpoint.
Let's turn that around and look at it from another angle.
7 (transitive, idiomatic, colloquial) (often with a unit of time) To produce; to output; to generate
We can turn around 500 units by next week.
Def. 6 when substituted into the usage example yields a pleonasm. Perhaps it could be cleaned up by rewording the predicate after and, but the definition might be better combined with others.
I'd be very surprised if def. 7 meant "produce", "output", "generate" in any general sense. I am familiar with the usage only in the context of taking in a well-defined unit of something and repairing or modifying it, as a car, an engine, an airplane, a power tool, and electrical appliance, a draft document. Would any native speaker ever say "I turned around 30 pancakes." There might be usage with a word like order, meaning "fulfill". DCDuring (talk) 22:35, 20 March 2020 (UTC)
User:Atitarev, maybe you can help with this question. Can the word "подруга" be used to translate "girlfriend" in the sense of "a female partner in a romantic relationship"? My Russian textbook says it is only used for a female friend of a female, and that for a female friend of a male one uses a word such as "знакомая" or "знакомая девушка". (Please ping me.) Eric Kvaalen (talk) 08:22, 13 February 2020 (UTC)
@Eric Kvaalen: Yes, подру́га(podrúga) CAN also mean "girlfriend" in the sense of "a female partner in a romantic relationship" but it's not explicit, it just what people MEAN when they say it. There's no perfect equivalent for this sense in Russian, they are either very generic like подруга/подружка/приятельница, too explicit like возлю́бленная(vozljúblennaja, “beloved”) or even worse любо́вница(ljubóvnica, “lover”), that's why гёрлфре́нд(gjorlfrɛ́nd) is the closest one but not everyone accepts it yet. BTW, if someone says "это моя девушка", literally "this/that is my girl", it can only mean "it's my girlfriend". This usage is with mostly with possessives "my/your/his", etc. --Anatoli T.(обсудить/вклад)09:00, 13 February 2020 (UTC)
@Eric Kvaalen: The word is ambiguous and there is no way around it. It all depends how you say it and what you mean when you say it. Russian is not unique on this issue. You will here different opinions on the topic and I don't think the textbook is out of date. What is their translation or explanation? --Anatoli T.(обсудить/вклад)19:20, 13 February 2020 (UTC)
Anatoli: It says (Russian for Everybody, edited by V. Kostomarov):
подру́га is only the girl firend of a girl, not of a fellow. For the girl friend of a fellow the most common expression is знакомая (девушка) (Note that the plural is regular — подру́ги.)
The author may have had the noble aim to help foreigners avoid getting into awkward situations, but by not being entirely clear could actually cause them. Russian speaker: "Is Olga your подруга?". Male foreigner, having studied Kostomarov, "No, she is a знакомая." This while Olga is what we would call ”his girlfriend”. In English the ambiguity is avoided by contrasting “my girlfriend (romantic) with “a girlfriend of mine” (not romantic). --Lambiam10:11, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
Somewhat tangential: I see at подру́га(podrúga)#Related_terms a link to "друг(drug)(drug)", but should this not refer primarily to the sense "friend"? Or is that considered adequately covered by the link in "masculine друг(drug)" (which is easily overlooked if you are looking at #Related_terms)? PJTraill (talk) 20:30, 20 February 2020 (UTC)
The toy/animation franchise character's name is based transparently on a term already in wide use for more than half a century at the time. There's no need to mention character names or titles of works based on ordinary words and phrases in the entries for those words and phrases. I would hate to clutter entries like joker and Irishman, not to mention twilight, it, them, etc. with movie references. Chuck Entz (talk) 06:51, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
i wouldn't have guessed the term pre-dated the character. Neat! Your point is good, although i wonder if i'm not the only one who thought calling someone a he-man was a metaphorical reference to He-Man, whereas even the most die hard fans of your other examples know that the movies aren't the primary topic. (The primary meaning of joker, obviously, is the comic book character.)
The pronunciation of alimony is listed as /ˈæ.lɪ.mə.ni/ for UK and /ˈæ.lɪ.moʊ.ni/ for US. Is this correct? I've long thought that since an English word cannot end in the phonemes /æ/ nor /ɪ/, so those phonemes couldn't appear syllable-finally. Thus, before I looked at another dictionary, I'd have expected the American pronunciation to be /ˈæl.ɪm.oʊ.ni/. This dictionary: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/alimony lists the following pronunciations: /ˈæl.ɪ.mə.ni/ for UK and /ˈæl.ə.moʊ.ni/ for US, so the /l/ is in the first syllable in both accents (but the /m/ is in the third in both), but the vowel in the second syllable is different in that dictionary's American pronunciation than here. By the way, the Finnish Wiktionary lists this as an American English word. Is there any merit to that claim? Mölli-Möllerö (talk) 10:41, 14 February 2020 (UTC)
There is considerable linguistic evidence that single consonants after stressed checked vowels in English are actually ambisyllabic; i.e. the /l/ in alimony is simultaneously the coda of the first syllable and the onset of the second (just like a geminate consonant, but without the longer duration). Since there's no convenient way of indicating that in an IPA transliteration, different conventions can be found: (1) transcribe ambisyllabic consonants as belonging to the preceding syllable (e.g. /ˈæl.ɪ.moʊ.ni/); (2) transcribe them as belonging to the following syllable (e.g. /ˈæ.lɪ.moʊ.ni/); (3) since syllable boundaries in English are murky at best, don't transcribe them at all (e.g. /ˈælɪmoʊni/). I personally prefer option 3, but if marking syllable boundaries is insisted upon, then I prefer option 1. —Mahāgaja · talk13:04, 14 February 2020 (UTC)
However, I don't know what to make of a sentence such as "I immediately fell head over heels for Don". The verb is fall for; head over heels is an adverbial modifier, but I think none of our definitions fits ("fall madly/hopelessly for someone"?) Canonicalization (talk) 09:47, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
Why “however”? The sense of fall for here is “to fall in love with”. Using the synonym “madly”, the sentence means: “I immediately fell madly in love with Don”. I find it more difficult to place “head over heels in trouble”. The sense seems to be merely “utterly”. --Lambiam10:33, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
Lexico:head over heels has this as sense 2, and they have an example where "in love" is missing; Collins says "If you are head over heels or head over heels in love, you are very much in love" and has an example sentence where "in love" is missing. For non-native speakers, I very much recommend careful work with sources to supplement their hunches. --Dan Polansky (talk) 13:44, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
All right, you've/I've (see the edit history) restored the sense, and I will RFV it right now. Lexico's example sentence ("I immediately fell head over heels for Don") doesn't fit with the proposed sense. Collins is a different story. Canonicalization (talk) 13:57, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
It does, if you separate "hopelessly" from "smitten", that is, "I immediately fell head over heels for Don" can be rephared as "I immediately hopelessly fell smitten for Don", which sounds odd until we replace "smitten" with "in love", and we get "I immediately hopelessly fell in love for Don. --Dan Polansky (talk) 14:11, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
Given the evidence provided at RFV, I was wrong, and shouldn't have removed that sense peremptorily. However, the entry needed some cleanup, and I think it's clearly in a better state now. Canonicalization (talk) 14:56, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
Alone among OneLook references Oxford has to distraction "(in hyperbolic use) intensely. / ‘she loved him to distraction’". That seems entryworthy whatever the longer expression from which it may be derived. DCDuring (talk) 16:08, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
Our 'jiffy test' would suggest that, if driven to distraction was the first common MWE to include to distraction with its current meaning, then driven to distraction merits an entry. IMO, all the other expressions using this sense of to distraction should have a much higher bar to clear, such as being the most common MWE in current use that includes to distraction. DCDuring (talk) 17:05, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
I think I agree completely. I would paraphrase what I think you are saying like this—the core phrase warrants an entry, and the first and most common usage of that core phrase warrants an entry—but that all subsequent usages may not warrant entries. Bus stop (talk) 17:24, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
Not quite. The idea is that the longer expression came first, so the "core expression" was derived from it. Once the "core expression" existed, it would be presumed to be the source of the other expressions. Chuck Entz (talk) 18:07, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
The "jiffy test" (WT:JIFFY) requires that determination to be made before you can apply it. It's not always easy to determine, and one can be mistaken- but if someone says the jiffy test applies they're also saying that the longer expression came first. Chuck Entz (talk) 18:21, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
I note some other verbs that behave the same way, such as "agree", "disagree", "argue" and "quarrel", e.g. "Mary and John disagreed" can mean "Mary and John disagreed with each other". We don't have separate "reciprocal" senses for any of the other ones I checked. Should we? I mean, is "Mary and John disagreed (with each other)" a different sense of "disagree" than "Mary and John disagreed (with a third party)", or do we treat this as just a regular feature of English? Note that we can say e.g. "Mary and John got on" to mean they got on with each other, but we cannot say "Mary and John put up" to mean that they put up with each other. All this may be beyond the scope of a dictionary, however. Mihia (talk) 12:18, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
I think the word is very broad in meaning. I think these 8 senses provide shades of meaning and show how the word can be used. Yes, 6 and 7 could be said to be the same, but how would we know that a reply to a question and a musical rendition could both be described as "mechanical"? Also, "mechanics" as a branch of physics (def. 2) is very different from the "mechanics" of machine construction (def. 3). Bus stop (talk) 16:13, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
And having both still wouldn't tell you that a consultant's presentation or a painter's brushstrokes could be mechanical. DCDuring (talk) 01:32, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
This gets at something I've been thinking about with regard to other entries, e.g. take and its two "consume" subsenses: is it better to distinguish subsenses like that (as other big dictionaries do) because they exist, or merge them because they're not contrastive with each other and both types of usage could be adequately defined by a combined definition? - -sche(discuss)23:23, 16 February 2020 (UTC)
Looking at the two senses of take, I would say the first is current and the second dated or archaic. Accordingly, I suppose they should remain separate. IOW, they are lexically distinguishable based on my idiolect and might be so distinguishable for our purposes, given some objective evidence. DCDuring (talk) 01:32, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
This apparently has a special meaning in astronomy: "Of the lower-frequency region of the (typically visible) part of the electromagnetic spectrum which is relevant in the specific observation". Is it the sense used in red dwarf? Is it used with other nouns than dwarf? Canonicalization (talk) 17:23, 15 February 2020 (UTC)
Citations of whatever this is intended to cover would help us answer what to do. Like, if it's only that we currently define a banjo as round but google books:"square banjo" is attested (it is), then I've prefer to just tweak our definition to say "typically round" (for example), like Wikipedia does. I just did that. - -sche(discuss)23:20, 16 February 2020 (UTC)
Aha, and "doshpuluur" was moved to being a synonym when it would only be one example (a hyponym). I've partially re-revised the entry. More citations might help show how best to revise the sense further and/or recombine it. - -sche(discuss)23:38, 16 February 2020 (UTC)
Where this says "In white French", can I change that to "In European and North American French"? (Or even just "In European and Canadian French", as I'm not seeing either businessman or tennisman in dictionaries of Louisiana French?) Also: given the contrast the entry makes with "sub-Saharan Africa", what is the situation in North Africa? - -sche(discuss)03:23, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
I have zero intentions to involve in the edit warring I am being dragged to on this entry, nor am I willing to edit war on any WMF platform. Therefore, I have decided to open this matter for discussion. As far as I am concerned, reverting an edit that is well justified (as M. I. Wright (talk • contribs) agrees in the correspondent discussion on his talk page) without giving proper rationale is highly discouraged in Wiktionary and, if continued, might be an instance of vandalism. Long story short, as mentioned in the correspondent edit summaries, the demographics of Arab speakers clearly predicts a disproportionate usage of two senses of لوط: the Biblical figure and the Islamic one, which are admittedly distinct enough to worth a note. Further, for an anglophonic speaker, such note might help eliminate cultural bias or eurocentrism. Some users/visitors, however, might view this stance as drawing attention to a specific culture and hence is a deviation from the cherished multiculturalist environment of WMF. To this I would remind that objectivism is as well a cornerstone thereof.
Assem khidhr (talk) 13:04, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
I think the issue is that "Lut" and "Lot" are held to be the same figure. Your usage note said لوط "can be used to refer to either the Islamic or the Biblical figure, the former sense is more common among Arab speakers" as if the two were different figures. What seems to be the case is merely that Muslims view the figure as having the attributes laid out in the Quran and Arabic-speaking Christians or Jews would view him as having the attributes laid out in the Hebrew Bible, like is also the case with other prophets who are held to be the same between, but ascribed somewhat different attributes in, the Hebrew Bible vs the Quran, like نوح and موسى. I see that عيسىdoes have a note about Islamic vs Christian usage, but it's about the fact that two different words are used. For figures like Lut/Lut of Noah/Nuh, perhaps we should just add links to Wikipedia's "X in Islam" articles...? - -sche(discuss)16:48, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
I agree. It is to be expected that different but related religions hold different views concerning the same entity. Unitarian Christians have a different view on the nature of Jesus than Trinitarian Christians. But this does not mean we should distinguish between the Unitarian figure and the Trinitarian one. --Lambiam18:18, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
I would, however, add that in cases where both a different word/form is used and different attributes are meant, usage notes or different definitions can be appropriate; عيسى and يسوع have slightly different definitions and usage notes; Mahound has a definition that explains its connection to but also major differences from Muhammad. - -sche(discuss)19:10, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
@-sche, Lambiam: I do agree with your suggested middle ground. Also, I was and am totally open to fine-tuning the wording of my usage note, for example replacing figures with narratives or any other solution that would emphasize the fact that it is the same historical character. However, adding a Wikipedia link versus a usage note is after all a matter of Wiktionary convention which I don't claim to be all aware of. Finally, I'm happy with your positive attitude and objectivist theme. Keep the good work up! Assem khidhr (talk) 20:13, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
@TAKASUGI Shinji, Eirikr, can you (or anyone else familiar with Japanese/food) look at these entries? The definition of musubi was edited last October. The entries claim that English usage of musubi is a back-formation from the Hawaiian dish of spam musubi, which until today claimed "the original Japanese meaning is not recognized in English". But phrases like google books:"nori musubi" seem to be attested. Is nori musubi (ever) called by that name in Japanese? Does musubi exist as a word for a food (onigiri?) in Japanese? Please revise the English and/or Japanese definitions and/or etymologies if necessary. - -sche(discuss)21:33, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
You can find 海苔むすび (nori musubi) in the results of this GBS; although all are snippet view, in most the context suffices to identify that nori-wrapped rice is meant. --Lambiam22:36, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
This suggests that we're missing a sense at むすび (and, of course, that the etymology given for English musubi is wrong), unless Japanese indeed borrowed the usage from Hawaiian English, which seems unlikely. - -sche(discuss)22:39, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
According to the KDJ entry, the Japanese term musubi has had the sense of "a ball of rice compressed with both hands" as a synonym for お握り(onigiri) since at least 1715. The Hawaiian English term spam musubi is clearly just that subset of musubi that happens to contain spam.
As to whether the mainstream English term musubi entered the lexicon directly from Japanese結び(musubi) or indirectly via Hawaiian English, or whether the Hawaiian English angle is even significant for etymology purposes, I have no clear idea. ‑‑ Eiríkr Útlendi │Tala við mig22:53, 17 February 2020 (UTC)
This looks like SOP to me. かける(kakeru) as an auxiliary or the second half of a compounded verb basically imparts the meaning "to start to ".
わすれかける(wasurekakeru) means "to start to forget something", rather than "to almost forget something". While the latter implies that the agent is successfully not forgetting, the former implies that an outcome of actually fully forgetting is still a possibility.
Our current entry at かける(kakeru) probably needs reworking.
Our current entry at わすれかける(wasurekakeru) probably needs deleting, as an SOP non-idiomatic compound. Most monolingual dictionaries that I've consulted don't include this, presumably as it's an SOP construction. See the lack of entries at Kotobank, and the paucity of resources that list this at Weblio.
If we are to keep this entry, it should be converted to a soft-redirect using {{ja-see}}, and point users to 忘れかける instead.
To clarify Huhu9001's post, the key difference here may be hard to see visually at first glance -- the middle character in the lemma form 駄洒落(dajare, “bad pun, dumb joke, dad joke”) is 洒 (“solemn; steep, high”), while the middle character in the alternative form is 酒 (“sake, alcohol”). Note the extra horizontal stroke along the bottom of the second character.
@Huhu9001, the "misspelling" is not so much a mistake, and instead is itself a kind of intentional visual dajare, adding in the implication that this is a dumb joke made when one has been drinking. This form is not uncommon: see google:"駄酒落"+"は" (including the は to filter specifically for Japanese results), even the stricter google books:"駄酒落"+"は" produces thousands of hits. ‑‑ Eiríkr Útlendi │Tala við mig17:37, 18 February 2020 (UTC)
"Sweared" should be "swore", right? (Or "sworn"?) Or is there a present-tense form to lemmatize? I'm mentioning this here rather than just fixing it, as I suspect the editor could have contributed other nonfluencies. - -sche(discuss)21:17, 18 February 2020 (UTC)
Strong verbs tend to be slowly transformed into weak verbs. This website appears to be anticipating the eventual outcome. Actually, there is a long trail of attested use of the weak forms that may not bode well for its enduring strength: . Some are meant to imitate children’s or illiterate speeach, but surely not all. --Lambiam18:13, 19 February 2020 (UTC)
Interesting, but since a nonstandard form should not be a gloss here, I've boldly revised the entry, taking a guess that "swore" and not "sworn" was meant. - -sche(discuss)18:39, 19 February 2020 (UTC)
Recent edits by an anon have conflated religion with the law – I vehemently oppose these changes, but I want input from the community. Is fornication first and foremost a term used in a religious and legal context? Is the term always used to mean "illicit sex" or can it be used in, for instance, biology? I'm also having difficulties with the wording of the second sense "between two persons not married at all" – is there such a thing as partially married? --Robbie SWE (talk) 10:19, 19 February 2020 (UTC)
Some may make a legal distinction between the terms adultery and fornication, but surely this is not universal but depends on the jurisdiction. In English translations of the Bible the term is used with more meanings. See both the legal use and the Biblical uses in the 1828 Webster’s. --Lambiam15:15, 19 February 2020 (UTC)
Based on the etymology (ultimately from Latin fornix(“brothel”)), it would be a malapropism for a biologist to describe animal mating as fornication (excepting a tongue-in-cheek description of an affair in a usually monogamous species). --Lambiam15:26, 19 February 2020 (UTC)
@Robbie SWE Well, canonical and worldly law? Partial marriage perhaps wedlease, which is only accepted by Shiites and not by Sunnis and is thus partial (and as one knows muslims have it hard to keep religion and state law apart); or if a marriage is valid in one country but not in the other which happens sometimes with private international law, for example according to the new and controversial Art. 13 III EGBGB in the FRG if one party is not sixteen but the marriage is valid according to another country’s law. The intercourse probably wouldn’t be called fornication only because of this? The definition should probably be seen as depending on social norms, which may or may not be codified by law or prescribed also by religion. It’s the old distinction ius, mos, fas. Anon has indead improved the article, for what was there before hardly caught the use. Fay Freak (talk) 15:30, 19 February 2020 (UTC)
@Fay Freak, well that's where I'm having an issue – it's generalising and it makes it seem like the term is used in a specific way universally. We've had similar issues before with other terms and it is not up to Wiktionary to list every specific instance of use. --Robbie SWE (talk) 18:54, 19 February 2020 (UTC)
Citations would be a big help. The first definition has only a mention in its support. The second has only 17th century cites. It would be useful to have 20th and 21st century cites. DCDuring (talk) 19:28, 19 February 2020 (UTC)
Oxford has it being either formal or humorous. We seem to omit architectural senses that Century 1911 had and the sense "idolatry" that some dictionaries have. It would be interesting to see what the OED has. DCDuring (talk) 19:37, 19 February 2020 (UTC)
Supposedly, the fornix meaning "vault" came to apply to "brothels", which were in vaulted spaces in cellars. Does that make it a separate etymology? DCDuring (talk) 02:31, 20 February 2020 (UTC)
@Robbie, "not married at all" meant "not married to anyone" - the intended distinction was between sex where the people involved are not married at all (to each other or anyone else), vs where people are not married to each other, but are married (thus making the sex adultery). I'm not convinced the two are distinguished from each other well enough to merit separate senses, especially since the "extended" sense ("any illicit sex") could be ascribed to either or split off as a third sense if we were being splittist. I boldly revised the entry to combine the two "illicit sex" definitions. For the other sense, "sex (in general)", we may need to tag in Kiwima for her top-notch citing skills... it's the only sense I was familiar with until now(!), but it's really hard to find sentences where the narrower interpretation ("unmarital/illicit sex") is explicitly ruled out; the same goes for fornicate; it seems like you'd have to find cites of people specifying that they were fornicating with their spouses in order to rule out the narrower sense, even though a lot of (e.g. humorous) uses that never mention legality or marital status probably just mean this sense ("sex"). I did find one cite where a person having sex with a beast is called fornication, btw. - -sche(discuss)05:03, 20 February 2020 (UTC)
鸡鸭, literally "chicken duck", is defined as a Min Nan form for poultry, with 家禽 being the Mandarin equivalent. A native Mandarin-speaking friend says 鸡鸭 is used in Mandarin with the restricted meaning of only chickens and/or ducks exclusive of geese. Can somebody confirm this use? If it's widespread, we should have another definition. Vox Sciurorum (talk) 13:25, 20 February 2020 (UTC)
Well it's literally "chicken ducks". It may not be a word in Standard Chinese. It is not in any dictionary I have access to, including the 漢語字典. ---> Tooironic (talk) 04:09, 21 February 2020 (UTC)
сверхъестественный: Text variants in quote from The Master and Margarita
My copy arrived on 2020-02-15, and I think it has ISBN 978-5-699-79851-3, but there are a couple more. It says on it "Библиотека Всемирной Литературы" and at the front "Москва: Эксмо, 2019", but my Russian is not yet good enough to identify the relevant details.
The English translation (follow the second GBS link above) contains the following section: Note on the Text — The text used for this translation, approved by the Bulgakov estate, is found in M.A. Bulgakov, Izbrannye proizvedeniia v 3-kh tomakh (Moskva: ‘Natasha’, ‘Literatura’, ‘Algoritm’, 1996), reproduced in Mikhail Bulgakov, Izbrannye proizvedeniia v 2-kh tomakh (Moskva: RIPOL Klassik, 2004). The section History of the Wikipedia article on The Master and Margerita gives an account of various versions, the variations being mostly due to censorship. --Lambiam15:23, 21 February 2020 (UTC)
AFAICT you are right. The fact that we have adjective definitions at both entries, and different adjective definitions to boot, is bad. Brits also use "honourable" to mean "worthy of respect" (as our definition at "honorable" puts it), and Americans also use "honorable" as an honorific (see also google books:"the right honorable", where many uses are clearly intentional and not misspellings). I'll see if I can clean this up. - -sche(discuss)09:32, 22 February 2020 (UTC)
The term "idempotent" is used with configuration management systems (Puppet, Chef, Ansible, etc.) mostly meaning that when the configuration management job is run on a system that the system matches the specification. When the job is run again no changes should be made and the job should complete quickly because the system already matches the specification (unless the specification or the system have been changed, of course).
That just seems to be 1. (mathematics, computing) Said of a function: describing an action which, when performed multiple times on the same subject, has no further effect on its subject after the first time it is performed.--Prosfilaes (talk) 22:09, 21 February 2020 (UTC)
I agree that it is very similar to 1. (mathematics) but it has a unique meaning among the DevOps community (if there is such a thing) that includes not changing anything if the job is run again and the conditions have not changed. The fact of the conditions not changing I think makes it unique from the mathematics definition.
Here is a case I just ran into where it is used in context:
The yum module does not support clearing yum cache in an idempotent way, so it was decided not to implement it, the only method is to use command and call the yum command directly, namely “command: yum clean all” https://github.com/ansible/ansible/pull/31450#issuecomment-352889579
(Thanks for your patience with me, I'm new on Wiktionary, having been more of a Wikipedia and MediaWiki guy myself. More used to commenting on talk pages.) WilliamsJD (talk) 16:30, 23 February 2020 (UTC)
I've added a valid sense ("to shoot a ball"), which is found in many contemporary dictionaries and widely attestable in standard texts. I've also added a viewable quote from google.books. Nevertheless I have my edit deleted by an IP from Saudi-Arabia, who spends all his days deleting stuff in Arabic entries that he doesn't like. In this case, I think, loanwords. I won't try to reason with him again, which I've done several times and which is pointless. If necessary, the entry should be protected. Thank you in advance for your help. 2.202.159.8417:38, 21 February 2020 (UTC)
Are the two senses of camwhore really different, or is it a single meaning that can be offensive or not? (Cf. usage note on girl.) Vox Sciurorum (talk)
English Wiktionary says the German word Katze is pronounced /ˈkʰɑtsə/. German Wiktionary says . Is this a real conflict or my failure to understand the difference between slashes and braces? Vox Sciurorum (talk) 16:37, 22 February 2020 (UTC)
@Vox Sciurorum: The IPA lacks a sign for the open central unrounded vowel, which every ⟨a⟩ is in the standard pronunciation of German, unlike of most other languages. The International Phonetic Association deemed a dedicated sign unnecessary because no language distinguishes a open central unrounded vowel from a front or back one, or some obscure physical reasoning. Fay Freak (talk) 17:07, 22 February 2020 (UTC)
The German Wiktionary links /ts/s to show it's one sound (formerly, they used the deprecated symbol ʦ for that); our entries usually forgo that AFAIK, although it's not wrong. Aspiration is not normally marked in our broad transcriptions of German AFAIK and it's amusing that our broad transcription marks it where they don't even mark it in their narrow transcription. I've removed it. I also commented out /ɑ/ after reviewing other German entries and confirming that our general practice seems to be to use /a/; a decision on what symbol to use should be made centrally; random entries should not deviate and imply that Katze has a different vowel from e.g. Katzenjammer. - -sche(discuss)18:37, 22 February 2020 (UTC)
"going off the rails"
Should off the rails mention "going off the rails"? It does not. That may be an omission. Perhaps that entry somewhere should mention the longer phrase "going off the rails". Bus stop (talk) 19:40, 22 February 2020 (UTC)
It says in the Usage Note "Most commonly used with the verb to go'", which I would think is probably sufficient, although it could also be reinforced by usage examples. Mihia (talk) 21:14, 22 February 2020 (UTC)
Yeah, looks like an educational sense was mentioned in the verb section, but the adjective hasn't been applied to grading or test scores. Techhead7890 (talk) 17:35, 2 May 2020 (UTC)
I think this is attributive use of a noun, not an adjective. It looks like we need to add a noun sense having to do with a horizontal region in a vertically-organized continuum. The spectrum band and the chemistry/electrophoresis band senses are based on such a sense. The educational sense is probably something along the lines of such a band on a statistical graph of values such as test scores. Chuck Entz (talk) 19:41, 2 May 2020 (UTC)
Scope of synonymous Thai grammar terms มาตรา and แม่
What languages do the Thai grammar terms มาตรา(mâat-dtraa)กก and แม่กก apply to? I've seen the latter term used in Thai, Northern Thai (Lanna script) and mid-20th century Lao (Lao buhan(?) with tone marks, describing Lao in the Lanna script). I find it very hard to believe that they wouldn't be used in a Thai grammatical analysis of Northern Thai or Lao. I don't have any Tai-language grammar texts in the Khom script.
I strongly suspect that they would be used in a Thai description of languages with roughly similar phonologies. However, the lists of consonants then fail for languages that also have final /l/, /r/, /s/, /c/ or /ñ/. I therefore propose to qualify at least some of the lists in the definitions by 'in Thai'. The immediate example of such a language is Northern Khmer, especially as written in the Thai script. (There is also the issue that final so so in Thai is quite likely to be pronounced /s/, as in ก๊าซ(gáat).) --RichardW57 (talk) 13:03, 23 February 2020 (UTC)
แม่X, and later called มาตราX, are the names especially invented for teaching Central Thai (or Siamese) for centuries. The concept of แม่X originated in the reign of "King Narai the Great" of Ayutthaya Kingdom (as it said in จินดามณี). So, other dialects or Lao did not have the concept at first; they imported from Thai. List of แม่X/มาตราX can be seen in แม่/มาตรา definitions. Todays, we do not much say about it. There are also loanwords that do not fall into any traditional แม่X. (We could call new endings as แม่กล for -l, แม่กส for -s, etc but no one would accept.) How to spell words correctly is more important. --Octahedron80 (talk) 15:11, 23 February 2020 (UTC)
Previously it had a "US" label, which I removed on the grounds that e.g. "I'm all set for my vacation" (or "holiday" as we would say) is ordinary BrE too. Then I was about to question the "content" sense, but looking further into this, it seems that there may be various US-specific senses, including perhaps "content", that need to be split out. For example at they give the definition "used for saying that you do not need anything, especially food, when someone offers you something", which is unfamiliar to me in BrE, and at are examples and senses such as "Are you all set with that?", said to be used e.g. while pointing to an unfinished meal, and "not requiring assistance", neither of which I recognise as being used in BrE. As far as I can think, in BrE, we use "all set" just to mean "ready and prepared" or "ready to do something that one has prepared for". I am reluctant to fiddle with these potential US-specific senses as I am not familiar with them; I wonder whether someone else may be able to take a look and do whatever is needed? Mihia (talk) 18:58, 23 February 2020 (UTC)
I've removed "thoroughly". I associate all these senses as branching off the main meaning of "ready"; in example 2 I think it's heavily implied that the party is not just done eating but ready to leave. I don't think "satisfied" or "content" really applies. The comment by lmpr8r at your second link sums up its uses perfectly. Ultimateria (talk) 23:04, 24 February 2020 (UTC)
@Ultimateria: Thanks, so do you think that we should delete the senses "satisfied" and "content"? It seems to me, from the content that I linked to, that there definitely are US-only (or at least non-British) usages, such as the ones I mentioned. For example, in Britain we would not (AFAIAA) ask "Are you all set with that?", where "that" refers to a meal, to mean have you finished with that and are you all set (i.e. ready) to leave, or use "all set" to mean that we do not require assistance from a salesperson etc. If these senses are not adequately covered by "satisfied" and "content", then can we devise better definitions? Mihia (talk) 21:03, 25 February 2020 (UTC)
@Mihia: Here's a first draft, trying to include but consolidate everything in that Stack Exchange comment:
Ready, prepared.
I'm all set to leave for my vacation.
Is everything all set for the wedding?
Not wanting something, especially more of something offered or to continue using something; finished; done with.
-Do you folks want any dessert or coffee? -No, we're all set.
-Are you all set with that?
-Can I use those scissors now? -Yeah, I'm all set.
Not requiring initial or further assistance.
-Can I help you with anything? -Nah, I'm all set.
Are you all set, or do you need help getting down the stairs?
I just had to change your brake pads. You're all set now.
I'm not very sure about "It's all set" for "keep the change" because I'm in my 20s and I don't use cash ¯\_(ツ)_/¯. You would label senses 2 and 3 with US, right? Ultimateria (talk) 17:35, 26 February 2020 (UTC)
I might combine 2 and 3 into one sense like "Not requiring initial or further assistance with, additions to, or use of something"; notice how similar in form and (seemingly) meaning the "Do you folks want any dessert or coffee? / No, we're all set" vs "Can I help you with anything? / Nah, I'm all set" usexes are. I don't believe I'm familiar with "Can I use those scissors now? / Yeah, I'm all set" = "I'm done with them" type use, but it may just be slipping my mind. - -sche(discuss)05:29, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
@Ultimateria: Thanks, that looks great to me. Yes, as far as I know, senses 2 and 3 should be labelled US, and sense 1 is universal. I am neutral on whether senses 2 and 3 should be combined, as I am not really familiar with these uses. Mihia (talk) 18:30, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
Oh, just one other small thing, the final usex, I just had to change your brake pads. You're all set now, may be slightly confusing under a "US" label, as this could be said in BrE too, with a sense like "all set to resume use of the car / get on your way / etc." I would be inclined to delete that one. Mihia (talk) 19:01, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
@Mihia: I've added the combined sense proposed by User:-sche (what can I say, you're a good lexicographer :]), and I've left out the brake pad usex at your recommendation. I insist on the "I'm done with them" sense, but it might be regional. Ultimateria (talk) 19:20, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
I have created the page for Proto-Slavic *rana. Can someone help with adding etymological information and descendants?
I am unfamiliar with all the templates used to create etymological links between things. The Vasmer entry gives several cognates, and appears to link it to Sanskrit व्रण(vraṇa) (though with a final /s/) and to Albanian varrë. At the Albanian page, the PIE antecedent is given as *wer(H)-, and there is also an entry given for Avestan.
By the way, with *rana created, I believe that accentual tables at w:Proto-Slavic#Nouns are finally complete with entries on Wiktionary. I guess you can say that the existence of missing entries there has been a bit of a... sore... spot. :P BirdValiant (talk) 20:33, 23 February 2020 (UTC)
A related issue is that Belarusian рана(rana) now needs to have two etymologies/senses: one for "early" and one for "wound", because the two are homonyms, see: . BirdValiant (talk) 21:45, 23 February 2020 (UTC)
No. The English and German words have the wrong initial, and indeed the current etymology of the English word derives it from the turris. --RichardW57 (talk) 21:43, 2 March 2020 (UTC)
A little puzzle. Is there a (reasonably neat) substitutable definition of "for" in the sense of "in exchange for" that does not include the word "for"? I sure as hell can't think of one. Mihia (talk) 15:22, 24 February 2020 (UTC)
The very shortest, simplest words often require the use of longer, more complex words. But even with that, I can't think of such a definition off hand. I'd try to come up with a non-gloss definition. DCDuring (talk) 04:47, 25 February 2020 (UTC)
I'm sure we've all pretty much heard of big pharma by now, but now there's big insurance, big soap, etc...is this a new sense of big with connotations in addition to just merely large size ? Leasnam (talk) 15:52, 24 February 2020 (UTC)
We define this as both "an act of prostitution (generally used with turn)" and "a customer to a prostitute". (We also have turn tricks.) Are these really distinct? I mean, aren't the tricks that one "turns" actually the customers, rather than abstract sex acts? How can we be sure? Equinox◑01:48, 25 February 2020 (UTC)
After digging through a lot of chaff about magic tricks, I managed to find sense 1 also used with "perform", although the uses form a kind of continuum, one end of which ("'live shows', in which girls perform tricks with their private parts") bleeds into the more general senses of the word. Incidentally, one of the citations seems to use it to refer to a sex act performed by someone before they became a prostitute. I revised the definition a bit to also define it as "a (paid) sex act". - -sche(discuss)03:35, 25 February 2020 (UTC)
However, I'm not sure "turn tricks" is using the "act" sense of "trick"; I think you're right that it's more a reference to customers. Perhaps the usex about "turning ten tricks a day" and the {{qualifier}} referring to "turn tricks" should be moved to the "customer" sense. (Perhaps the link to "turn tricks" should not be next to any sense at all, but just present as a related/derived term.) - -sche(discuss)03:43, 25 February 2020 (UTC)
So in your two citations "perform tricks" specifically means "have sex"? I can't tell for sure, but I suppose so. (Evidently it's not pulling rabbits from hats.) Equinox◑03:51, 25 February 2020 (UTC)
I think the Lindquist cite, and Petrakis cite on Citations:trick, are reasonably clear in referring to performing some kind of sexual act(s), and the Draskoczy cite makes clear that it's something more than (or at least, distinct from) stripping. Btw, I also see references to google books:prostitutes "doing tricks" (in cars, etc), but one can "do" a person as well as an act so it's not clear which sense those are. And I find examples of prostitutes "doing sexual tricks", which can't mean "clients", but in those cases someone could argue it's just something like our "an entertaining difficult physical action" sense. - -sche(discuss)05:23, 25 February 2020 (UTC)
DCD has answered the question why the dictionary calls it passive, but not why English should prefer the passive voice in a situation that is semantically not passive. (See also Deponent verb on Wikipedia.) It is not entirely clear to which of these two fundamentally different questions an answer is being sought. Actually, uses of reunite in the active voice are common enough; if you think of reunited as an adjective, the issue kinf of disappears. --Lambiam20:35, 26 February 2020 (UTC)
@Lambiam: Could it be that it was labeled as passive instead of adjective because of the attestations of the prepositional intransitive active voice? I cannot find similar examples to check whether there's a pattern here --Backinstadiums (talk) 16:50, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
I don’t think so. The subjects of the sentences under OED sense 1 that use the active voice have the same semantic role as the subjects of the examples that use be+ reunited, regardless of any prepositions. Here are some sentences for consideration.
After having been looking forward for so long to reunite with her children, last night she was, at long last, reunited with both of them.
The family was reunited after the war, unlike so many others who could not reunite.
The band will reunite for a world tour, but they will not remain reunited indefinitely.
Yes, you’re right, grammarians frown upon this. It is common enough, though. English has two ways of making verbal nouns: gerunds, made by adding a suffix -ing to the verb stem (as in “seeing is believing”), and to + infinitive (as in “to understand all is to forgive all”). The second way has many restrictions; it cannot be used after a preposition, and also not in combination with an adjective or determiner. Uses of “look forward to INF” are nevertheless fairly common, perhaps because of the semantic similarity with “want to INF”, “wish to INF”, “desire to INF”, “hope to INF” and “expect to INF”. --Lambiam17:14, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
Considering that the movement behind the practice of "freebirthing" is strongly linked to quackery, is it worth adding a note about the obvious positive spin that is present in these terms? ←₰-→Lingo BingoDingo (talk) 10:48, 26 February 2020 (UTC)
Is it needed? "A childbirth delivered without medical assistance or the attendance of a midwife." is a neutral definition, and the bias of free + birth is pretty clear to any English speakers (or from the etymology).--Prosfilaes (talk) 06:34, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
What note do you propose to add? What do we have references to support? If, for example, a term were chiefly used by non-medical proponents of the practice, and medical professionals / other people used another term, I suppose usage notes could say something like that (with references). (In a much more extreme case, we have a note about Nazi use of will to power.) - -sche(discuss)09:22, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
on <program-name>
on has a definition:
Used to indicate a means or medium.
I saw it on television. Can't you see I'm on the phone?
This is the closest definition to "on The Goon Show", etc. with the name of a television or radio program but it doesn't seem exactly the same to me because the medium of television or radio seems different from a specific program. Do we need another definition or does that one cover it? --Danielklein (talk) 22:50, 26 February 2020 (UTC)
To me “Trump is on the radio” and “Trump is on the phone” feel like different senses of on, but “Trump is on the radio” and “Trump is on the Howard Stern Show” feel like the same one. --Lambiam10:23, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
Whenever I get such a feeling I lie down until it goes away.
But seriously, it is little help to proliferate senses in an already overlong entry. I've added three more usage examples, which include a broader range of "media". We may be missing examples of other "means".
Dictionaries are relatively little help in distinguishing cases in which, say, in rather than on applies (in the script; in the play; but on the TV show). That is, the can readily help users decode text, but not help as much with encoding. DCDuring (talk) 12:43, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
We define Qur'an as a proper noun, "The Islamic holy book", but also as a common noun, "a specific version or copy of the above-mentioned book". We do likewise at Bible and a few other books. Why? We don't do this at Aeneid or Iliad, though they function the same way: we are fine letting one sense handle both someone reading the Aeneid and buying multiple Aeneids . We don't do this with languages, we let one sense handle someone studying Latin or comparing the Latin of Cicero to the Latin of the Vatican today . We don't do it with religions themselves, though one can believe in Christianity / Islam or believe in a Christianity or an Islam that is intolerant of foobar. It's not as if the common noun section is needed to handle countability, since we already admit that both Qur'an#Proper_noun and Bible#Proper_noun can be pluralizable, as we do for Islam, etc. To my surprise, we don't list plurals for many languages, though most have attestable plurals and I just added e.g. French's. Should we delete the "a specific version of..." senses, or what am I missing? - -sche(discuss)05:17, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
Maybe it's just a matter of what's common. I would say "I have three Bibles/Qur'ans on my bookshelf" but I probably wouldn't say "I have three Aeneids on my bookshelf". Instead I'd say "I have three copies of the Aeneid on my bookshelf". But I agree that the former isn't ungrammatical, just less common (at least in my idiolect). At any rate that judgment could be the reason why we have the "specific version" sense listed for some works but not others. —Mahāgaja · talk09:15, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
I agree with -sche, personally. It should not be separate senses. (I also feel the same way about things like coffee meaning "a drink" and also "a serving of that drink" as a separate sense. This is daft: it's a function of how the language works.) Ƿidsiþ10:29, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
I stumbled across a book about Texan 'Mexican' cuisine which mentions that ataúd can also be a kind of oven for roasting/smoking food outdoors (compare a caja china). Sure enough, if you do a Google Image search for e.g. ataúd horno, there are lots of pictures of the thing in question being referred to as an ataúd. I can even find one book which I think is using it this way (by an author from...Asturias?):
2019, Víctor Manuel, El gusto es mío, AGUILAR (→ISBN):
El lechón al ataúd tiene diferentes versiones, pero siempre es un cochinillo pequeño que se puede hacer al horno, a la parrilla o empalado si es un asadero de pollos. Este previamente se impregna unas horas de achiote, jugo de limón y sal.
Can anyone find two more? I've tried every collocation I can think of with horno/hornear, asador, lechón, etc, but there's too much interference from the more common meaning of "coffin". - -sche(discuss)06:16, 27 February 2020 (UTC)
Over at सृगाल, we find the following Etymology section:
«Several etymologies have been proposed: literally "howling"; or from Proto-Indo-Iranian *śr̩gʰu- (Blažek); or from Proto-Sino-Tibetan *s-k-jwal (“wild canine”).»
Apparently, *śr̩gʰu- means "Blažek". Except, what does that mean? It seems to be a name… proponent of the theory? But the reference is by Michael Witzel, not by a Blažek… is it «Blažek apud Witzel», meaning that Witzel paper cites Blažek's proposal? Then why not refer to a Blažek work? Is that proposal not recorded in writing before the Witzel paper? And in the end, what does *śr̩gʰu- mean? Was it created specifically for the Sanskrit word, or are there other descendants? Which?
@MGorrone: Yes, it's Blažek apud Witzel, apparently in a then unpublished paper. I suspect it's “HIC ERANT LEONES: Indo-European "lion" et alii”, in Journal of Indo-European Studies, volume 33, 2005, pages 63-102. @RichardW57: Try searching for it, though Witzel may be more accessible. The etymology on Wiktionary now leads to the Iranian word for "lion" as a large bunch of cognates. --RichardW57m (talk) 14:52, 16 November 2022 (UTC)
Hi. I found this delightful, clunky synonym for "bitter" today. We have "amarus" as the root word. I don't have the skill to add a good entry. Is anyone willing? Thanks.
This is interesting. It's a slang word for a Microsoft Xbox One console. After recent edits, there are three separate etymologies (from one, bone, etc.) by which people arrived at this slang term, but they all have the same meaning (i.e. an Xbox One console)! I've never seen anything like that on here before. When the meaning is the same I'd be inclined to merge the etys and just say "variously from X, Y, and Z" origins but I suppose they are technically separate etys. Thoughts? Equinox◑00:43, 28 February 2020 (UTC)
What a fascinating entry! I agree they should be merged here, if the meaning, pronunciation, and inflections are all the same—there's no way to distinguish a citation of one from a citation of another! (Indeed, I wonder to what extent there were three independent origins, versus just competing ideas about or re-interpretations of what the origin was—especially in the case of "X+bone" vs "X+throw a bone".) I don't recall seeing three competing or combining etymologies before, but merging is consistent with e.g. beardo, misfire (and mis-, though that might need to be sourced...), flan (even before my recent edits), capon, and thrush (a combination of two Old English etymons which themselves apparently both come from one PIE form). - -sche(discuss)01:41, 28 February 2020 (UTC)
Or, at least the last two should be merged; the first might have a different pronunciation ("X B one"?), although that could still be handled with sense-specific pronunciation info as is done for e.g. use, if someone wants to merge them all. - -sche(discuss)16:29, 28 February 2020 (UTC)
Yeah, I was sceptical of that sense, but I figure it may well exist in lax usage, like lax usage of Java to mean "either Java or Javascript, whatever". - -sche(discuss)10:04, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
God
The English God page has a number of issues (particularly in the Christian definitions, definitions 2 and 3):
1.) I would say that the reason that Christians use the word "God" when referring to the Father and the Son is not so much a matter of shortening as it is a matter of trinitarian theology: the Father is God and the Son is God, so both are called "God". (Same with the Holy Ghost. The Holy Ghost is called "God" not by shortening, but simply because the Holy Ghost is God.)
2.) The second definition (the one pertaining specifically to God the Father) is poorly worded. Is it saying that Christians believe that the Trinity is the God of the Old Testament? Or is it saying that Christians believe that the God the Father is the God of the Old Testament? (If the latter, I think many Christians would object. Many Christians hold that the God of the Old Testament was the pre-incarnate Christ.)
3.) Neither of these two Christian definitions seem particularly useful in my opinion.
4.) The most useful Christian definition is one that's not even listed (though it is briefly mentioned in the final paragraph of the usage notes). "God", in Christian usage, should be defined in two respects: 1.) as a name or word which refers to the Holy Trinity (i.e. the divine essence or divine nature), and 2.) as a name or word which refers to each of the three divine hypostases or persons (Father, Son, and Holy Ghost) even when considered separately.
5.) Another (unlisted) definition is the philosophical definition (used in philosophy of religion and natural theology), wherein "God" is a name or word which refers to an infinite transcendent being who is (or has) all of the divine attributes (e.g. omnipotence, omniscience, omnipresence, etc.). This is a definition which I think is noteworthy enough to be listed; whereas all the other definitions make explicit reference to religion, this philosophical definition has nothing to do with religion per se.
Re point 5: if it's used in "philosophy of religion" and "natural theology" then evidently it is a religious context. Equinox◑22:23, 28 February 2020 (UTC)
I made the two Christian senses subsenses, for now of the current sense 1. I am inclined to agree a sense should be added (presumably after the existing sense 1?) for the Christian God "overall", at which point the two subsenses should be moved to being subsenses of that...but the Christian God is widely considered to be the same deity as the Jewish and Muslim God, and neither of them can be defined as a Trinity, so the wording of the sense would have to be careful, but could still be doable and a good idea. (Regarding not having separate senses for the Jewish vs Christian views of God even though they ascribe him some different attributes, compare #لوط, above.) I think it's useful to have a specific subsense distinguishing God the Father, since many bare uses of "God" are in reference to him, even in a way that's contrastive with the other (sub)sense, like in a sentence saying God let his son Jesus be crucified, where God means only the Father and not Jesus. The "Mother of God" cite/usex (where Mary can be seen as the mother of only Jesus, not of the Father who supposedly existed eternally) suggests the other subsense may exist distinctly/contrastively enough to merit its own subsense, too. But you're right that there should be some sense to cover e.g. references to the Holy Ghost as God. - -sche(discuss)22:55, 28 February 2020 (UTC)
I expanded the first sense to say "especially the deity of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam", and expanded the Father subsense to mention that he's still around in the New Testament. I think this at least partially (whether or not satisfactorily to you) addresses points 1-4. I am familiar with the usage described in point 5 but not convinced it's distinct from our sense 1 (though sense 1 could be expanded to mention use in philosophy, if appropriate). - -sche(discuss)10:02, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
That's better :)
Regarding the philosophical definition, maybe I'm just splitting hairs, but the distinction I'm making is that the word "God" (in philosophical contexts) does not refer (at least not necessarily) to the single deity of any monotheistic religion nor to the single male deity of any bitheistic religion.
(Despite the name, "philosophy of religion" has nothing to do with religion. "Philosophy of religion" is an academic discipline which is completely distinct from "religious studies" (the study of religion and religious beliefs). "Philosophy of religion" also does not presuppose any religious beliefs (as is the case with "theology"). Philosophers of religion argue for or against the existence of God, and also discuss related topics (such as the "problem of evil", etc.), without making reference to religion or religious beliefs. So whether or not the word "God" in philosophical contexts refers to the same God as the God signified by the word "God" in religious contexts is beside the point. Though I do admit that the philosophical arguments, when carried over into the realm of theology, are aimed at religious belief.)
I don't think the philosophical definition falls under the first sense, except perhaps as used in philosophy of religion, since it is used completely outside of (though not without influence from) religious systems. Spinoza, for instance, held that there was only one substance, comprising everything that exists, which he termed alternately "God" or "Nature". He was excommunicated by his Jewish community for his atheistic views... Aristotle also wrote about a God in his metaphysics that sounds suspiciously like the Christian definition of God, but he predated Christianity and had no contact with Judaism (that I am aware of). I would define it as something like: "(by extension ,philosophy) An infinite and eternal being, typically possessing such attributes as omnipotence, omnipresence, omniscience, and self-sufficient existence." Andrew Sheedy (talk) 04:52, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
I think Deism is religious, but not a religion. It would probably fall under the philosophical sense I proposed, perhaps with an additional context label, and maybe tweaked wording. Andrew Sheedy (talk) 22:08, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
I would say that whether or not deism counts as a religion, or is even "religious", really depends on how you define "religion". I don't entirely agree with the definitions on the religion page, but by those definitions it doesn't seem to be, since it has no rituals. (Deism itself is based in the belief that God created the world but does not interact with it. Hence deism's lack of religious texts, lack of prayer, lack of rituals, and lack of basically everything that makes religion a "religion" as opposed to a mere "belief system".)
But insofar as deism professes a belief in the existence of an intelligent creator, or even any sort of first cause at all, I would say that this falls under the proposed philosophy definition. (But also, I think it needs to be understood in its historical context. Christianity was the dominant religion in the west, so I think when deists used the word "God" they were probably just referring to the same God that the general public already believed in. If this is the case, then it falls under the religious definition regardless of whether or not deism is a religion.) 2601:49:C301:D810:D9A0:98C:3F36:6E1516:17, 9 March 2020 (UTC)
With regard to the proposed philosophy definition, one change that I would make would be to emphasize the fact that God is a "necessary" (i.e. non-contingent) being. Because that's how the arguments for God's existence are set up (at least the cosmological arguments). They begin by asserting that contingent beings (such as trees, cats, humans, etc.) are observed to exist; then they argue that the existence of contingent beings is incompatible with the non-existence of a necessary being (and thus a necessary being is also known to exist), and then they assign the name "God" to that necessary being.
“You taught me language, and my profit on’t / Is, I know how to curse.” (The Tempest, Act I Scene 2.) --Lambiam11:16, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
@Equinox: What about hae? LPD gives /hEi/ for some hae, but OED gives ta for to hae/have. Also, the pronunciation of both meanings of i'?
“To hain is to hae.” (Scots proverb.) The OED version raises the question, what is the pronunciation of ta? /ta/? I’m fairly sure a Scot will pronounce the proverb with one syllable for each word. --Lambiam11:16, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
Since they were formed by apocope from /ɪn/ and /ɪt/, I expect /ɪ/ in either case – but when the pronunciation of the unclipped words would have been /ən/ or /ət/, one should expect /ə/. I am not aware of actual uses of i’ meaning “it”. The editor adding this gave the edit summary “+English - in or is”, which does not inspire much confidence in the correctness of the second sense. --Lambiam15:45, 2 March 2020 (UTC)
Hmmm. It might be nice for us to have some kind of expanded or supplemental search when a search in principal namespace fails. At the very least :Citations, :Appendix, and :Thesaurus should be included in such search. DCDuring (talk) 04:31, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
I found enough citations that I created the entry: fourth point of contact. Hard redirects are not normally used in cases like this. Soft redirects using {{no entry}} could point users to the appendix (and do for e.g. formulaic, unattested SI units), but have drawbacks (the bluelink makes it harder to track, e.g. in lists of wanted entries, that an entry has not been created), so should be used with care. I think adjusting the default search to include more namespaces, or to run a second search on more namespaces if the first fails, is something to propose on Phabricator if there's consensus for it here (probably something to ask about in the Grease Pit),rather than something we control locally. - -sche(discuss)09:53, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
I would not want to alter the default search, only to make available a supplemental search with the namespaces mentioned above in the event that search in primary namespace failed to find an entry. One can already select additional namespaces for a given search, but this does not help someone not familiar with the way we use these other namespaces. There would seem to be a BP issue: Are we willing to offer users such an option? and a GP issue: Are we able to do it ourselves? I mentioned it here because we have a real use case. DCDuring (talk) 12:26, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
I found it interesting that this YouTube video at 2:50 includes a caption for the words "Shove it up my fourth point of contact". I had never heard the terminology before and it sent me searching for the significance of the phrase. Bus stop (talk) 17:05, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
Found online: "When the week leaves you feeling like you just can't even... FRIDAY ARRIVES", and "When your emotions are so fucked up that you just can't even." Equinox◑14:26, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
A couple of red flags here (ho ho). Sense 1 is the national (or other) emblem but is described as "a piece of cloth", though of course in reality it's still the national flag if it's on a vinyl bumper sticker or anything else. Sense 2 tries to deal with this: "An exact representation of a flag (for example: a digital one used in websites)", but falls into the trap where we would have to define "ship" as "a representation of a ship, e.g. a small model in a bottle".
I think we should somehow make sense 1 the general abstract one, where a flag is a sort of "pattern of colour" having a certain meaning, regardless of the material it appears on.
And separately, what's this other sense trying to say? "The use of a flag, especially to indicate the start of a race or other event." How is that used in a sentence? Equinox◑14:20, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
I agree. Another idea would be to simply tack something like "or a representation thereof in aqnother medium" onto the existing "piece of cloth" sense, but I like your wording about a "pattern of colour", tackling the issue directly, a lot better. I might add "and sometimes symbols or words" or something for flags like Mozambique's and Brazil's which have symbols and words. Re "the use of a flag": I'm guessing it's for something like "the drivers went at the flag". If that's the case, I'm not sure it's separate, since runners can go "at the gun", "at the bell", etc. And/or perhaps it's for a driver, player, etc who "objected to the flag" (that was thrown or flown to indicate some foul or hazard on the racetrack). In both cases, I'm not sure that's a different sense. - -sche(discuss)18:14, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
We define white flag, sense 1, as: “A flag with a white color ...”. What sense of flag is meant here? Could it be a vinyl bumper sticker with a particular “pattern of colour”? As to national flags, not only do they have a pattern of colours, symbols and words, but they can also have a defining shape. I think, though, that fixating on national flags is not productive. See for example blue peter, defined as: ‘A blue signalflag with a whiterectangle in the centre, signifying "P".’ Some flags only have a right to material existence in the original sense of a piece of cloth that can be flown and flutter in the wind, but one can of course nevertheless make imitations of such flags in paper or other materials and call these imitations flags. Other flags have no aspiration beyond a paper existence, like Mexican papel picado. Flags can be symbols of something, whether a state or a nautical signal, and then they have a characteristic design. That design can be replicated in all kinds of media, and also be named, metonymically, a flag. --Lambiam09:32, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
Do these plural nouns actually exist? I wasn't able to find any attestation to these plural forms in ngram, or through even a simple Google search. Maybe there's some more complicated method I haven't tried, but I feel like "invisible primary" and "money primary" are uncountable. Imetsia (talk) 15:13, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
Uncountable doesn't mean "no plural is used": it means you say SOME (rice, sugar) not A/AN (apple, dog). And yes I found plurals. Equinox◑15:41, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
I've added some cites. I can find some people (including, apparently, a former government minister) using it together with British spellings like realise, both in books and on twitter, so it doesn't seem to be just American, either. - -sche(discuss)18:31, 29 February 2020 (UTC)
Well, it's like "all week" or "half the day". Clearly is a noun but probably mostly used in adverbial contexts... Equinox◑02:58, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
I suppose I didn't state my case fully :D This feels like an entry created as a translation. If that is true then I still think "the whole time" would be a better one because (IMO, haven't checked figures TBH) it's far more common. If I didn't think "the whole while" existed at all I would have RFVed it. Most GBooks results are not for this, though: they seem to be largely along the lines of "NP VP the whole, while..." i.e. at the same time. Equinox◑02:58, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
Created as a translation? A translation of what? (And did you mean “idiomatic” in the sense of “how native speakers speak” or in the sense of “having a non-literal meaning”?) Since while means “a period of time”, the whole while means “the whole period of time”. To me it looks like a NiSOP. You can also find uses of the whole damn while. --Lambiam08:02, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
A translation of I-don't-know-what, but (since as you say it's pretty much SoP) that might have been a rationale. (However, the creator seems to be a Spanish speaker and todo el tiempo did not exist until a year later.) By "idiomatic" I meant something like "set phrase", in the way that "he does it all the time" is idiomatic but "he does it throughout the time" isn't. Yes it seems sum-of-parts to me too, though I've become less antsy about this and frankly you can put anything into anything (absobloodylutely, etc.). Equinox◑08:41, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
Ah, I see your point now, sorry. I'd say it's "idiomatic" in the first sense, that it's a fluent/natural phrase, though less common than "the whole time" (about 1% as common, in Ngrams). I've heard (and see cites of) the phrase in dialects, supporting my sense that it's native to English and not just a calque of another language. But as far as being "idiomatic" in the CFI sense, it seems just as transparent/SOP as the whole time, which we don't have (though Merriam-Webster does), so I guess we should RFD this one... - -sche(discuss)08:33, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
Extra-rhotic pronunciation of familiar: to add or not to add?
I came across a r/boneappletea video long ago which contained a post which suggested there is a pronunciation of familiar with an extra r after the first a, something like /fǝr'mi:l.i.ǝr/ or /fǝr'mi:l.jǝr/, or perhaps -mıl-. Where is this pronunciation used? How widespread is it? Is it proscribed? Should we add it to the entry here?
That pronunciation sounds familiar to me... I'm pretty sure I've heard it a number of times here in Canada (with /-mıl-/), but it's not standard. Andrew Sheedy (talk) 01:55, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
We already list a US pronunciation /fɚˈmɪl.jɚ/; it was added in 2016 with edit summary (note the weird alternative pronunciation "fermilier"). You can find plenty of attestations of the corresponding eye dialect spelling fermilyer. --Lambiam07:47, 1 March 2020 (UTC)
"Superman was almost like Batman in this regard, taking on the little problems and making sure that people who would otherwise skate through the cracks in a damaged legal system got what they deserved."
"The failure to pay attention to prosecutors, that’s the one I find hardest to understand—why they’ve been able to skate through the cracks for so long."
"Criminals like that neighbor skate through the cracks in the system forever, simply because it's far too much effort for the system to deal with them."
"You want a few frivolous douchebags to skate through the cracks so that truly meritorious cases have a chance?"
It seems to be a real term with a fixed meaning. At the least a Google search should take one to Wiktionary. It seems to me that it relies on the combined meanings of "skating", implying "with ease", and "cracks", essentially "loopholes" or "oversights". Bus stop (talk) 22:59, 3 March 2020 (UTC)
To me it seems as if it is based on a mishearing of escape through the cracks. Skate through the cracks cannot be found at Google NGrams, whereas escape through the cracks can. The usages found in the blogosphere wouldn't count as attestation. DCDuring (talk) 11:55, 4 March 2020 (UTC)
I hadn't thought of any of that. Good points. But the instance from The Atlantic seems to be spoken by John Pfaff. Do his educational credentials make his language-usage more noteworthy? Bus stop (talk) 16:21, 4 March 2020 (UTC)
Again not sure we should create every wax + Adjective combination. ("Wax lyrical" is another very common one.) Look at wax verb sense 1: it's the first sense: who can miss it? Why create the sum-of-parts entries? Equinox◑07:22, 31 May 2020 (UTC)
Should we have an entry for the phrase "moral beacon", the figurative phrase for someone or something that shows the correct or proper way forward or is regarded as in some ways similar to moral compassBus stop (talk) 05:41, 31 May 2020 (UTC)
No. We have a figurative sense "that which gives notice of danger". You can find many uses of ethical beacon, religious beacon etc. if you search Google Books. We should not create those sum-of-parts phrases, but just extend beacon to indicate that it can be a figurative thing that guides on the correct path beyond merely warning of danger. Equinox◑07:21, 31 May 2020 (UTC)