T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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386.1 | As close as your nearest dictionary | SUPER::MATTHEWS | Don't panic | Thu Jul 23 1987 12:23 | 8 |
| You should be able to look these up in any dictionary (except maybe the
paperback American Heritage). Some dictionaries put abbreviations and
foreign terms in a separate section, which would make it easy for you
to locate all the Latin expressions if that's what you want to do.
"Sic" (which is a word, not an abbreviation) is Latin for "thus".
Val
|
386.2 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Strange days, indeed. | Thu Jul 23 1987 14:24 | 5 |
| E.g. (also spelled eg) means "exempli gratia." I have also seen a
dictionary (a Webster's New World?) define it as "example given" and
give other plausible English definitions for other Latin abbreviations.
Jon
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386.3 | i.e. = id est = `that is' | RUTLND::SATOW | | Thu Jul 23 1987 15:22 | 1 |
|
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386.4 | cf. -> confer -> compare | MTA::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Thu Jul 23 1987 15:46 | 1 |
|
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386.5 | qed | IOSG::DUTT | | Fri Jul 24 1987 05:35 | 2 |
| quad erat demonstrandum = which was to be demonstrated
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386.6 | quad vise? | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Fri Jul 24 1987 17:39 | 3 |
| I know that q.v. means "which see", but
I don't know any latin and my AHD doesn't
list the abbreviation.
|
386.7 | | SQM::BUFORD | One with the Cosmic Giggle | Mon Jul 27 1987 11:08 | 4 |
| q.v. -- quod vide. Cf. qq.v. (quae vide)
John B.
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386.8 | Mensa (voc) - "Oh table!" | ESDC2::SOBOT | Beware of the parrot ! | Tue Jul 28 1987 09:00 | 7 |
| I'm still not happy with 'sic'. How would I use it ? An example ?
While we're on Latin, who knows what "Caesar adsum jam forte" mean ?
It's NOT about what Caesar ate last night !!
Cheers, Steve
|
386.9 | | PSTJTT::TABER | I live for stress | Tue Jul 28 1987 09:50 | 12 |
| > I'm still not happy with 'sic'. How would I use it ? An example ?
In English, it's helpful to turn it into the acronym "said in context."
Thus, if you were quoteing someone who had made a typo, you'd do like
this:
"Thus, if you were quoteing [sic] someone who..."
This means that it was wrong, you knew it was wrong, you know that your
readers will know it's wrong, and you want to let them know that you
knew. Got it?
>>>==>PStJTT
|
386.10 | And sic it is | RUTLND::SATOW | | Tue Jul 28 1987 17:12 | 8 |
| `Sic' is used with most effect when you are trying to rebut a point. Then it
means, "Not only is this moron's logic faulty, but his spelling and grammar
are faulty also."
One of life's great embarrassments is to see `sic' and not understand what the
error is.
Clay
|
386.11 | o me miserum ! | ESDC2::SOBOT | Beware of the parrot ! | Tue Jul 28 1987 18:09 | 9 |
| re .10
>One of life's great embarrassments is to see `sic' and not understand what the
>error is.
In that case I must be pretty high up the embarrassment charts, not
understanding that "sic" means that there's an error to be understood :-)
Cheers, Steve
|
386.12 | | PSTJTT::TABER | I live for stress | Wed Jul 29 1987 10:17 | 15 |
| >One of life's great embarrassments is to see `sic' and not understand what the
>error is.
'Tis a far, far greater embarassment to annotate something with "sic"
and be wrong.
Although I have seen "sic" used in a snotty manner, it has legitimate
and I think greater use just to alert the reader that there has not been
a typo in a source being quoted. Newspapers used to annotate puns that
way to try and head off vast numbers of letters pointing out an "error."
You have to be careful when going after someone for spelling or phrasing
problems, since I've never met anyone qualified to throw the first stone
on that charge.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
386.13 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | I want a hat with cherries | Thu Jul 30 1987 05:07 | 7 |
| re:.12
There's a Murphyish law somewhere that one cannot comment on
someone's poor spelling without making at least one spelling
error.
--- jerry
|
386.14 | some more latin abbreviations | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Sun Aug 02 1987 22:39 | 12 |
| getting back to the subject
how about
ps - post script
nb - nota bene
op cit - opus cited
and ibid
and I know that my translations need refinement
Bonnie (the other one)
|
386.15 | | BEING::DUNNE | | Thu Aug 06 1987 16:18 | 6 |
| Sic does mean "thus," but more specifically its meaning is "as the
author intended." Its usage is usually sarcastic, a critic's way
of pointing out a writer's error, ostensibly so that the reader
won't think it's a typo.
Eileen
|
386.16 | Not that sic | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Thu Aug 06 1987 19:29 | 11 |
| In scholarly writing, the use of 'sic' is not at all sarcastic.
It is a straightforward way of attributing the error to the original
text, which, in many fields of scholarship, is very important
information.
I have used 'sic' in writing that could hardly be called scholarly,
but I meant only to avoid responsibility for the error while quoting
accurately. No sarcasm was intended. I suppose it can be used
sarcastically, especially by critics, but other users are sincere.
Bernie
|
386.17 | A multitude of sics | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Pour encourager les auteurs | Mon Aug 10 1987 13:55 | 18 |
| 'Sic' means 'thus'. 'Thus' doesn't have to refer only to typos. 'Said
in context' (thanks, .9) is a useful pneumonic [sic]; but not many
people insist that the word 'context' can refer only to what is
textual.
So '[sic]' can imply sarcasm, but needn't.
Exemplorum gratia:
1 "A pneumonic [sic] is an aid to memory." - spello
2 "Under this Government there has been an improvement [sic] in
health care." - disbelief
3 "All men are equal. I am a man. Therefore I am equal [sic]."
- faulty argument
b
|
386.18 | more sicness... | ESPN::KELLIHER | Ed Kelliher | Tue Aug 11 1987 18:26 | 9 |
|
The concern I have with the usage of 'sic' is its careful
placement, or element (word, phrase, etc.) emphasis. Calling
attention to non-spelling or non-typo errors which seem so
painfully obvious to the critic are not always so blatant to the
readership.
|
386.19 | | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Tue Aug 11 1987 20:17 | 17 |
| Re: .17
I don't recommend the use of 'sic' as in your #2 and #3 examples.
I've seen it used as in #2, but don't approve; never seen it used
as in #3 (of course, my experience may be limited here). Fowler
would seem to back up this view:
Latin for _so_, is inserted after a quoted word or phrase to
confirm its accuracy as a quotation, or occasionally after the
writer's own word to emphasize it as giving his deliberate meaning;
it amounts to Yes, he did say that, or Yes, I do mean that,
in spite of your natural doubts. It should be used only when
doubt _is_ natural; but reviewers and controversialists are
tempted to pretend that it is, because _sic_ provides them with
a neat and compendious form of sneer.
Bernie
|
386.20 | Yes, he did say that | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Pour encourager les auteurs | Wed Aug 12 1987 11:15 | 35 |
| I don't disagree with Fowler; he's the most able and witty and
commonsensical writer on grammar that I've come across.
The expression 'neat and compendious sneer' is typically good.
But I'm afraid the 'it is' (in the second-last line of .-1) isn't
clear. Is there a typo here? Are we dealing with a case of
[sic [sic]]?
I think my #2 and #3 are tolerable as examples of the usage
he prefers:
>it amounts to Yes, he did say that, or Yes, I do mean that,
>in spite of your natural doubts
in #2, 'doubt _is_ natural' if you consider - as recommended by
someone else - the context (which might be, for example, a student
nurse who borrows the _Daily_Worker_ every day, and sells
_Militant_ on street-corners on Saturday)
in #3, I'm pointing to a fallacious argument and saying
'Yes, he did say that'
('tho in this case I was aware of the problem Ed mentioned -
how to make it clear that _sic_ was applied to the whole
argument and not just to one jot or tittle)
I thought #1 was my weakest example, because of the quotation marks.
I meant it as a comment on someone elses's [a mythical someone else's]
malapropism, but it looked like the 'Yes, I do mean that' version
of _sic_ - misused, because I didn't; as though _sic_ could mean
'Yes I know I'm making a mistake, but you know what I really mean'
(does anyone think it can mean that? I don't)
b
version
|
386.21 | I don't know if it comes from a style book, but | PSTJTT::TABER | Out of sight, out of range. | Wed Aug 12 1987 11:47 | 10 |
| > ('tho in this case I was aware of the problem Ed mentioned -
> how to make it clear that _sic_ was applied to the whole
> argument and not just to one jot or tittle)
The times I've seen "sic" applied to a whole argument it was done by
having "sic" introduce a quote.
...but so-and-so argues, [sic] "<argument goes here>"
>>>==>PStJTT
|
386.22 | Meeting one's quoter | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Wed Aug 12 1987 20:33 | 18 |
| Re: .20
The "it is" is accurately quoted; he's referring back to the word
"natural."
The reason I believe that Fowler excludes the use of your #2 is
that he says 'sic' "is inserted after a quoted word or phrase to
confirm its ACCURACY AS A QUOTATION..." [my emphasis]. In your
#2 example, you say its purpose is to express "disbelief." In other
words, the quotation is accurate, but the user of 'sic' disagrees
with the meaning of the quoted statement or the conclusion it reaches.
Fowler is saying that the criterion for the use of 'sic' after
quotations, is quotational accuracy only, not disbelief or opinion
about the quoted material. That has always been my understanding
of its proper use with quotations; a handy device for saying that
the error (not wrong opinion) is the writer's, not the quoter's.
Bernie
|
386.23 | Accuracy - agreed | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Pour encourager les auteurs | Thu Aug 13 1987 08:46 | 23 |
| Aha,
'It should be used only when doubt _is_ natural; but reviewers and
controversialists are tempted to [use _sic_ to give the impression that
they] pretend that [doubt is natural]...'
Sorry for misunderstanding.
'To confirm its accuracy as a quotation' - agreed. Where we (and
others) differ is over interpretation. Two possibilities:
o 'To confirm [something's expression in writing] as
a quotation'
o 'To confirm [something's] accuracy as a quotation
[in its context - sociological, historical or whatever]'
I think Fowler's 'quoted word OR PHRASE' [my emphasis] suggests
the second interpretation.
b
Afterthought - dangerous word, 'it'. I'll never use it again (oops).
|
386.24 | | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Thu Aug 13 1987 20:25 | 11 |
| Yes, even Fowler can contract the dreaded 'faulty pronoun reference'
disease; is anyone safe?
I suppose we'll have to agree to disagree. 'Sic,' in my experience
and in all the references I've found means literally 'the quote
is accurate' with no judgements or opinions permitted.
The broader use _is_ becoming more and more popular. You'll have
to pardon us purists while we take a dim view.
Bernie
|
386.25 | wot a clevver bunch o' skolars | ESDC2::SOBOT | Beware of the parrot ! | Mon Aug 17 1987 10:58 | 7 |
| re .all
Brilliant !
What about "viz" ?
Cheers, Steve
|
386.26 | a saber (savvy?) | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Men's sauna in corpore sano | Tue Aug 18 1987 09:20 | 11 |
| viz abbreviated version of _vide_licet_, heaven knows why.
Vide means 'see' (as in q.v.) and licet means 'it allows'. Should
videlicet be one word? If so, what does it mean? Whatever the
original, unabbreviated, version means, 'viz' means 'namely'.
e.g. [NB: viz .neq. e.g.; any list that follows 'viz' has to be
complete]
There are three primary colours, viz red yellow and blue.
Bob
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386.27 | Viz, e.g., etc. | SKIVT::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Tue Aug 18 1987 10:02 | 12 |
|
I remember that "viz" is equivalent to "namely" (as in .-1) and is used to
introduce a complete list. "E.g." is the same as "for example" and
introduces an incomplete list. I also recall that it is incorrect to
terminate a list begun with "e.g." with "etc." (e.g. "There are many colors,
e.g. red, blue, brown, etc.")
Is there a good reason for this rule that harks back to the original Latin, or
is it just an arbitrary usage convention?
Larry
|
386.28 | Some suggested reasons | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Men's sauna in corpore sano | Wed Aug 19 1987 09:20 | 26 |
| Re: .27
Reasons, off the top of my head. I prefer the last one.
Etymological reason
"Gratia" (in _exempli_gratia_) can mean many things to do
with grace and graciousness. It's not at all gracious to say
'there are lots more reasons, but I can't be bothered to
think of them'.
Logical reason
If (as is true) _viz_ introduces a complete list and _e.g._
introduces a incomplete list, it's part of the meaning of
_e.g._ that what follows it, if it's a list, must be incomplete.
To say 'etc' after saying 'here comes an incomplete list'
is pleonastic.
Pragmatic reason
Using 'etc' after a list introduced by 'e.g.' is a waste of
space or a waste of breath or a waste of ink; 'etc' adds
nothing in this context.
b
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386.29 | Caesar really was [sic]! | IPG::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading-UK | Mon Aug 24 1987 09:52 | 27 |
|
Re: .8
> While we're on Latin, who knows what "Caesar adsum jam forte" mean ?
>
> It's NOT about what Caesar ate last night !!
Ah, but it is! It's a parody, using Latin words with an English
sense. The complete thing:
Caesar adsum jam forte,
Brutus aderat.
Caesar sic in omnibus,
Brutus sic in at.
Notice 'sic' creeps in here too. And US readers have to note that,
in British usage, 'to be sick' means to throw up.
Here's a similar one, using Spanish-like words, but with an English
pronunciation:
Si, Se�or, dere dago,
Forte lorez enaro,
Sumare lorez, sumare trux,
Fula cousan ensan dux.
Jeff.
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386.30 | sock it to me | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | All Hail Marx and Lennon (Bros. & Sisters) | Tue Aug 25 1987 14:10 | 22 |
| re:.-1
That reminds me of a Spanish pun.
A Hispanic gentleman entered a shoe store in Gringoland. He wanted
to buy some anklets, but didn't know the word for them. So he walked
up to the salesman and pointed to his ankles and said, "you have?".
The salesman pointed to the shoes on the wall and said, "you like
one of those?"
The man said, "No" and pointed to his ankle again. The saleman
missed the cue and pointed to the shoelaces. Once again the visitor
shook his head and pointed to his ankle. Finally the saleman walked
over to the corner and pointed out a rack of socks. The visitor
suddenly smiled and said,
"Eso s� que es!�"
The salesman said, "Why didn't you say so in the first place?"
�(which means "yes, that's it!").
|
386.31 | AAAAAARRRRRGGGGGHHHHHH!!!!!! | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Science Is Golden | Wed Aug 26 1987 04:03 | 3 |
| re:.30
--- jerry
|
386.32 | 40 trucks on Via Appia | DELNI::CANTOR | Dave C. | Tue Oct 06 1987 09:45 | 11 |
| Re .29
The second poem given is similar to this one using Latin words:
Si, villi, siemgo:
Fortibus esinero.
Nobili, demis trux.
Sivatis inem? Causandux.
Dave C.
|