T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
390.1 | | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Mon Jul 27 1987 20:08 | 5 |
| It isn't called a "rotary" everywhere in America. Where I grew
up it was called a "traffic circle," or sometimes simply a "circle."
Each was given a name, like "Dupont Circle," "Scott Circle," etc.
Bernie
|
390.2 | | GENRAL::JHUGHES | NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest | Mon Jul 27 1987 22:18 | 52 |
|
> THE LIFT
>
> This is the "elevator", and perhaps the "escalator" (do they use
> a different word for each, I don't remember?).
No, "escalator" = "escalator" (or it did when I grew up there).
On a side topic, I have a British friend who is a "Brain Drain"
U.S. aerospace engineer. His group once had the task of designing
a lift|elevator to carry a stewardess plus food cart between the galley
and two levels of passenger deck on a special model of the 747.
As team leader, he decided that they were working on a "lift", and
his American colleagues decided that to avoid aeronautical confusion,
they might just as well go along with the word.
> BOOT
>
> This is the trunk of the car.
This one has an interesting history in both versions of the language.
The British version came about because early automobile|car bodies
were styled on the horse carriages of the day, in which the main
body -- the passenger-carrying part -- looked like a "D" rolled
on its back (flat side up). This left a wedge-shaped space at the
rear, and the practice with the horse carriage (look at the stage
coach in some old Westerns) had been to fit a large leather receptacle
into this space. The result was something like a giant's boot, ane
the name stuck.
The American version came a little later, when the vehicle had acquired
a more boxy look: a folding luggage grid was fixed to the back of
the vehicle. Car owners would typically secure a single large trunk
on this grid, rather than a stack of suitcases. Eventually the automobile
manufacturers decided to make this a feature, rather than a user-supplied
option, and again the name stuck.
> ROUND-ABOUT
>
> This is what we call a rotary here in America. Same but goes
> the other way around !
Two minor comments:
In Britain the word roundabout is also used for the U.S. merry-go-round
(i.e. the hand-propelled version for children, not a full-blown carrousel)
and as I recall (and someone will rush to correct me if I am wrong)
merry-go-round (British) == carrousel (U.S.).
Re "rotary == same but goes the other way around !" -- perhaps it
should more properly be called a contra-rotary? ;-)
|
390.3 | Scala mobile | MLNIT5::FINANCE | | Tue Jul 28 1987 04:53 | 6 |
| MLNOIS::HARBIG
Re .2
Also when I grew up there escalator invariably meant
"moving staircase" as opposed to lift which was the
closed box.
Max
|
390.4 | rotary yg (anagram) | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Pour encourager les auteurs | Tue Jul 28 1987 09:00 | 4 |
| A big roundabout with lots of squiggly roads joining it is called
(in one case I know of) 'a gyratory system'. There's no choice about
the way you go round it (like the sun, like a card dealer, like
a bottle of port).
|
390.5 | rotaries from hell | WEBSTR::RANDALL | I'm no lady | Tue Jul 28 1987 09:29 | 4 |
| Where I grew up we didn't allow such inventions of the Devil. Just
nice square corners, thank you, with traffic lights as necessary.
--bonnie
|
390.6 | Words, words.. | RDGENG::HALL | | Tue Jul 28 1987 10:16 | 12 |
|
US RENT vs British HIRE is interesting.
In Britain we HIRE everything except houses, which we RENT. Eg hire a car,
tools, person..., but rent a house.
In the US, you RENT everything, except people, which, like Britain, you HIRE.
That seemed right when I was living in the US. Only question I had was - do
you rent or hire a horse?
Martin.
|
390.7 | Dust and ashes! | BAEDEV::RECKARD | | Tue Jul 28 1987 13:29 | 1 |
| When in a repentant frame of mind, you can also rent clothes.
|
390.8 | I can't testify for the rest of the country | WEBSTR::RANDALL | only 3 days left | Tue Jul 28 1987 23:08 | 3 |
| In Montana you hire a horse.
--bonnie
|
390.9 | Inquiring minds want to know | PSTJTT::TABER | I live for stress | Wed Jul 29 1987 10:21 | 5 |
| > In Montana you hire a horse.
Do you pay Social Security for it? Does OSHA get upset of you rent
a hired horse?
>>>==>PStJTT
|
390.10 | you hire a horse because horses are more human than people | WEBSTR::RANDALL | only 2 days left | Wed Jul 29 1987 13:55 | 8 |
|
OSHA doesn't get upset if you hire a horse, or buy a horse, or lease a
horse, for that matter, as long as you clean up after the horse.
However, others may become quite upset if you fail to pay for said
horse in some acceptable manner. Hemp neckties were designed to deal
with this situation.
--bonne
|
390.11 | Hire services. Rent things. | DSSDEV::STONE | Roy | Wed Jul 29 1987 17:58 | 16 |
| I think the American distinction is that we HIRE services but RENT
things (including houses). I'm sure there may be some exceptions,
but I'll list some examples:
We HIRE a taxicab or limousine (because it comes with a driver),
but we RENT a car.
We may HIRE a person to do housecleaning, but we might RENT a
rug shampooing machine.
We would HIRE a hall if it comes with a catering service, otherwise
we would probably only RENT the room.
As for HIREing a horse....? I'd HIRE a livery rig if it came with
driver, but the horse alone....I guess I'd defer to what the owner
called the transaction.
|
390.12 | | BAEDEV::RECKARD | | Thu Jul 30 1987 08:09 | 2 |
| Attributed to Richard Lederer: Americans and British are separated by
a common language.
|
390.13 | Oscar Wilde ? | MLNIT5::FINANCE | | Thu Jul 30 1987 12:47 | 17 |
| MLNOIS::HARBIG
If I'm not mistaken it was Oscar Wilde who first
made a statement something like this but it's
not surprising that, paraphrased, it has been
said by someone else since one of the better
known Wilde stories is that after he had come
out with one of his aphorisms someone said to
him admiringly,"I wish I had said that Oscar."
To which he replied, with his characteristic
modesty, "Don't worry, dear boy, you will, eventually."
Max
|
390.14 | Close... | ERIS::CALLAS | Strange days, indeed. | Fri Jul 31 1987 12:21 | 5 |
| It was actually the painter Whistler, who said something clever and
Wilde said to him, "I wish I'd said that." Whistler replied, "You will,
Oscar, you will."
Jon
|
390.15 | George did it | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Fri Jul 31 1987 19:23 | 5 |
| The version I heard has been attributed to Bernard Shaw:
"America and England are two countries divided by a common language."
Bernie
|
390.16 | What's the time? Half ten guv! | IOSG::DUTT | Nigel Dutt | Tue Aug 11 1987 09:35 | 6 |
| Having ploughed (sic!) through this I didn't notice anyone clarifying
"half ten". It always means "half past". I've got a feeling that
this has become common relatively recently.
I get similar problems in the US with "quarter of", which I always
have to stop and think about - it's "quarter to" isn't it?
|
390.17 | Boot and bonnet | REX::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Thu Aug 13 1987 13:59 | 3 |
| On the subject of car parts, what is the etymology of
'bonnet' for what we Americans call 'hood' (for that
matter, where did 'hood' come from?)?
|
390.18 | A tip of the hood to Webster | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Thu Aug 13 1987 20:38 | 7 |
| A quick check with the dictionary indicates a relationship between
'hood' and 'bonnet.' 'Hood' comes from German 'hut' for hat (which
is what a bonnet is). Also, both make sense for their automobile
use since hoods, hats, and bonnets are all protective coverings --
whether for heads, engines, or whatever else is under them.
Bernie
|
390.19 | Danish by halves | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Sun Aug 23 1987 22:43 | 30 |
| In Swedish (for telling time only) half-ten would mean 9:30. I.e.,
a half hour before ten. Swedish also uses "X over half-ten"
and "X before half ten" for times between 9:25 and 9:35 inclusive
(i.e., I've never heard "six over half ten").
The Danish number system is based on twenties (for large numbers):
40 fyrti
50 halvtres (one-half of 20 less than 3*20)
60 tres (3*20)
70 halvfyrs (one-half of 20 less than 4*20)
80 fyrs
90 halvfems
100 fems (not often heard)
110 halvseks (very seldom heard)
120 seks (very seldom heard)
(I may have the spelling wrong -- my dictionary's upstairs.)
Danish uses the German numeric form, putting the one's place before
the ten's place: 56 is "seks og halv tres" (six plus (one-half ...))
When I started at Dec, the Copenhagen office's phone number was
Hellerup-9490. This was a manual office, so you connected to the Hellerup
operator and said "fyr halvfems, halvfems." Fortunately, the Hellerup
operators knew that Dec was one of these odd-ball American companies
that probably got more international calls than the rest of the exchange
combined, so calls got shuffled to the office with little confusion. And,
of course, they were too polite to snicker openly at my attempts to speak
Danish.
|
390.20 | A Churchillian input ... | GENRAL::JHUGHES | NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest | Fri Oct 09 1987 15:38 | 19 |
| Returning to the base topic of (British) English vs. American, I
am currently re-reading Winston Churchill's magnum opus on the Second
World War. In Volume Three -- "The Grand Alliance" -- I came across
the following passage, referring to December 1941 and the setting up of
a Joint Chiefs of Staff Comittee:
The enjoyment of a common language was of course a supreme
advantage in all British and American discussions. The delays
and often partial misunderstandings which occur when interpreters
are used were avoided. There were however differences of
expression, which in the early days led to am amusing incident.
The British staff prepared a paper which they wished to raise
as a matter of urgency, and informed their American colleagues
that they wished to "table it". To the American Staff "tabling"
a paper meant putting it away in a drawer and forgetting it.
[Whereas to the British it meant placing it on the agenda for
immediate discussion ... JHH]. A long and even acrimonious
argument ensued before both parties realised that they were
agreed on the merits and wanted the same thing.
|
390.21 | | ELIS::KEW | Shake your tailfeather | Thu Jan 31 1991 16:41 | 58 |
| Some *late* comments!
>================================================================================
>Note 390.4 English vs. American, my experience 4 of 20
>MARVIN::KNOWLES "Pour encourager les auteurs" 4 lines 28-JUL-1987 08:00
> -< rotary yg (anagram) >-
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> A big roundabout with lots of squiggly roads joining it is called
> (in one case I know of) 'a gyratory system'. There's no choice about
> the way you go round it (like the sun, like a card dealer, like
> a bottle of port).
>================================================================================
>Note 390.5 English vs. American, my experience 5 of 20
>WEBSTR::RANDALL "I'm no lady" 4 lines 28-JUL-1987 08:29
> -< rotaries from hell >-
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Where I grew up we didn't allow such inventions of the Devil. Just
> nice square corners, thank you, with traffic lights as necessary.
>
> --bonnie
In Swindon, Wiltshire, they have a roundabout officially called the 'Magic
Roundabout' which is composed of 5 roundabouts in a circle fed by 5 roads. You
have a choice of two ways from any road to any other. There is a diagram of
it just before you reach it. It's quite entertaining watching people from out
of town approaching and the look on their faces. It does, however, work very
effectively, and has disposed of the old traffic jams that used to be there
every morning and evening.
>================================================================================
>Note 390.20 English vs. American, my experience 20 of 20
>GENRAL::JHUGHES "NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest" 19 lines 9-OCT-1987 14:38
> -< A Churchillian input ... >-
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Returning to the base topic of (British) English vs. American, I
> am currently re-reading Winston Churchill's magnum opus on the Second
> World War. In Volume Three -- "The Grand Alliance" -- I came across
> the following passage, referring to December 1941 and the setting up of
> a Joint Chiefs of Staff Comittee:
>
> The enjoyment of a common language was of course a supreme
> advantage in all British and American discussions. The delays
> and often partial misunderstandings which occur when interpreters
> are used were avoided. There were however differences of
> expression, which in the early days led to am amusing incident.
> The British staff prepared a paper which they wished to raise
> as a matter of urgency, and informed their American colleagues
> that they wished to "table it". To the American Staff "tabling"
> a paper meant putting it away in a drawer and forgetting it.
> [Whereas to the British it meant placing it on the agenda for
> immediate discussion ... JHH]. A long and even acrimonious
> argument ensued before both parties realised that they were
> agreed on the merits and wanted the same thing.
This happened to me in DEC. We had quite a good row before discovering we
were all in violent agreement.
Jerry
|
390.22 | disposed of and recycled, no doubt
| CSSE32::RANDALL | Pray for peace | Thu Jan 31 1991 17:30 | 7 |
| .21>and has disposed of the old traffic jams that used to be there
.21>every morning and evening.
I would imagine it has disposed of them! And no doubt enriched a great
many local body shops and junk dealers!
--bonnie
|
390.23 | One of us don't speak proper | COMICS::WEBSTERC | | Fri Apr 26 1991 03:09 | 28 |
|
Being a "Brit" and having worked in the U.S. and with american contracters
I have come accross quite a few differences of usage. To make things worse,
my wife speaks "American" English and now we live in England She find
she can't understand anyone who comes from north of London or west of
bristol.
U.K. U.S.
-----------------------
Spanner Wrench (U.K. Wrench- to pull violently)
Torch Flashlight (U.S. Torch- a burning brand)
Biro Ballpoint (Biro- Blank stares in U.S.!)
Pissed (as a..) Pissed (U.K.-drunk U.S.- Angry)
Fortnight ? (U.K.- Two weeks)
petrol gas
Manual Stick shift (about cars)
Windscreen Windshield "
Bumper Fendor "
And so it goes on.... there ia a whole lot more that I can't think
of just now, but then to make things worse, the Slang in common use in the
U.K. and the U.S. is very different:- except people in the U.K. sees a lot
more American made T.V. shows and Films (Movies) so WE know what YOU mean
but YOU don't what WE mean, if you see what I mean?!?
Colin.
|
390.25 | Just to throw a wrench into the works | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Fri Apr 26 1991 20:41 | 4 |
| A wrench (UK) is also a specific type of spanner ... typically a Monkey
Wrench (Plumbers adjustable spanner/wrench) or a Stilson Wrench (like
a Monkey wrench but with toothed jaws and an adjustable lower jaw).
|
390.26 | Hey, y'all! | ODIXIE::LAMBKE | ACE is the place | Fri Apr 26 1991 21:28 | 11 |
| > Spanner Wrench (U.K. Wrench- to pull violently)
I usually wrench (pull violently) my spanner.
>more American made T.V. shows and Films (Movies) so WE know what YOU mean
>but YOU don't what WE mean, if you see what I mean?!?
Those of us who watch Python, Yes Minister, and Dr Who probably think
we know what you mean. Those of us who watch East Enders and Bennie
Hill probably DO know what you mean, if you see what I mean.
|
390.27 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Fri Apr 26 1991 22:51 | 12 |
| re: .23
> Biro Ballpoint (Biro- Blank stares in U.S.!)
Isn't Biro a trademark? The "Biro" tradmark isn't used much in the U.S. but I
would bet that folks in the U.S. would understand "Bic", which, I believe, is
manufactured by the same company.
And to be more exact, isn't it a relatively cheap, disposable, ballpoint?
Clay
|
390.28 | | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Fri Apr 26 1991 22:53 | 4 |
| The problem with BIC in the U.S. is that they've advertized BIC
disposable cigarette lighters as much as they have their pens.
|
390.29 | As stated in an earlier reply... | VMSMKT::KENAH | The man with a child in his eyes... | Fri Apr 26 1991 23:59 | 4 |
| In the US, if somebody said "Hey, toss me a BIC", they'd probably get a
cigarette lighter rather than a ballpoint pen.
andrew
|
390.30 | It's not what I say... | COMICS::WEBSTERC | | Sat Apr 27 1991 00:05 | 8 |
|
re .26 I know what you mean
re. 27 We have a habit of calling things by branded names, I
suppose whoever got to the market first, such as Hoover for
Vacuum cleaner
Bic ball points are popular but we still call 'em Biro's
|
390.31 | | BOOKIE::DAVEY | | Sat Apr 27 1991 00:06 | 11 |
| > except people in the U.K. sees a lot
> more American made T.V. shows and Films (Movies) so WE know what YOU mean
> but YOU don't what WE mean, if you see what I mean?!?
Well, almost. There are all those words that people don't warn you about --
how many Brits wouldn't splutter when they heard an exercise video advertised
on daytime American TV as "Great Ways to Trim Your Fanny"??? This word does
*not* have the same meaning in the UK!
John
(A Brit in the US)
|
390.32 | | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Mon Apr 29 1991 00:55 | 23 |
| Several years back I had spent a lengthly business trip in the south
of England near Portsmouth and befriended some locals in an area
called Hayling Island.
I had been invited to have dinner with a family on the island and asked
by the host to bring some champagne. I ended up buying the champagne
from the hotel and when I arrived for dinner with the (extremely
overpriced) bottle, the host's daughter giggled and informed me
that "Daddy was just takin' the piss outa you. He does that to
everyone." Oh, your father's a urologist, then? I had no idea
what to say so I said nothing.
During the same trip, the secretary who was taking care of me informed
me one morning that she had asked one of the other girls to take
over during the lunch hour as she had to get to Southleigh by noon
for a "blow job". I had no idea what to say so I said nothing.
I hate to admit this but it's easier for Canadians to communicate
with Americans that to communicate with British.
Kris
|
390.33 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon Apr 29 1991 11:06 | 6 |
| English<->French seems easier that English<->American.
When I moved to France I went to group French lessons that included
some Americans. We discovered that many common sayings could be
translated word-for-word between French and English, but would be
misunderstood by Americans.
|
390.34 | these two are the same | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Mon Apr 29 1991 16:42 | 18 |
| > Fortnight ? (U.K.- Two weeks)
Means the same thing, it's just not a word that's used much.
> Manual Stick shift (about cars)
Huh? My car's manual -- 4-speed, not exactly the kind of car I
thought I'd drive when I grew up but then I didn't expect the kind
of car I wanted to drive to cost $15K by the time I grew up,
either.
But family car is automatic, so the kid can drive it. She hasn't
learned how to work the clutch pedal yet.
You do hear stick-shift a lot, but plenty of people use the other
term.
--bonnie
|
390.35 | By way of explanation... | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | No limits, Jonathon? | Wed May 01 1991 08:10 | 30 |
| G'day,
I was told that fortnight was an American term....
Apparently when the west was being won, a US cavalry unit was held
captive in a military establishment by the Apaches. The seige went on
for a long time and food became scarce. Eventually the Colonel in
charge of the military men asked for a volunteer to take a message
through the enemy lines to the nearest major town, some five days ride
away. The volunteer duly fronted and was given the message and under
cover of darkness, slipped away.
Just as dawn came and the volunteer thought all was ok, he was captured
by the Apaches. They grabbed the message bag and opened it. Inside
there was the message scrawled on a piece of linen, for all the paper
in the camp had been used for other things. The messenger was pressed
for to read the message, since the Apaches were not too hot in those
days in reading the pioneers' writing.
He resisted strongly, but under terrible pressure read the message:
.............
Send help.
Send food.
Do not delay.
In two weeks, Fort Night will be over.
|
390.36 | a fortnight today <=> d'aujourd'hui en quinze | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed May 01 1991 08:44 | 8 |
| A curious thing is that the French word for "2 weeks" is based on
fifteen. I haven't been able to discover whether this is the fifteen
nights that bracket the fourteen days or the fifteen days that bracket
the fourteen nights.
The English were obviously only interested in the fourteen nights,
so I suppose the French would have to claim that it was fifteen nights
to maintain their reputation as lovers.
|
390.37 | se'nnight | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Domimina nustio illumea | Wed May 01 1991 15:09 | 9 |
| Not only `en quinze'; also `quinze jours' (isn't it Denis? - if not
I must be thinking of Spanish or something). So they are thinking of
the fifteen days bracketing the fourteen nights.
Which is at odds with the obsolete English word "se'nnight" meaning
a week. The seven nights must bracket six days, and the sabbath
doesn't count.
b
|
390.38 | | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Fri May 03 1991 20:18 | 4 |
| If one works a 6-day work week, then "quinze jours" is the length of a
2-week vacation.
-dave
|
390.39 | C'est facile | VOGON::JOHNSTON | | Mon May 13 1991 20:21 | 6 |
|
Just count the days, say from Tuesday to Tuesday, and after a week you'll
get eight days (hence seven nights) and after two weeks you'll get quinze
jours.
Ian
|
390.40 | Do Re Mi Fa So La Ti Do = 8 | DATABS::LASHER | Working... | Mon May 13 1991 21:37 | 5 |
| Re: .39
That's the same method by which they came up with "octave."
Lew Lasher
|
390.41 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Tue May 14 1991 02:50 | 1 |
| 2 * 8 = 15. Mathematicians will be evicted from this conference forthwith.
|
390.42 | | SOS6::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Tue May 14 1991 17:23 | 6 |
| Re the last few: not only is French using "quinzaine" or "quinze jours"
to mean two weeks, but we also use "huitaine" or "huit jours" to mean
one week, what would be called a sevenday in English (I think). I've no
explanation available for that. Maybe Dave has got the correct reason
with his hypothesis of one more night...;^)
Denis.
|
390.43 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue May 14 1991 22:25 | 9 |
| How many days from Good Friday to Easter?
"And on the third day ... ", so Friday, Saturday, and Sunday makes
three. That method of counting extends at least back to Biblical
times.
It's identical to the "fence post" problem. You have 100 feet of fence
in 5-foot sections. How many posts does it take to build the 100-foot
fence? The answer is 21.
|
390.44 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Wed May 15 1991 03:34 | 9 |
| >How many days from Good Friday to Easter?
>"And on the third day ... ", so Friday, Saturday, and Sunday makes three.
----------------
Yes. Not "Three days later ...."
>That method of counting extends at least back to Biblical times.
Yes. But after that, people learned to count.
|
390.45 | | ULYSSE::LIRON | | Wed May 15 1991 12:43 | 31 |
| It will not be said that we, in Descartes' own country,
can't count ! :)
In fact, "huit jours" and "quinze jours" are NOT equal to
"one week" and "two weeks".
"One week" translates to "une semaine" in French and in the
word semaine you will spot the number sept ("semaine" is
Latin for seven mornings).
The usual translation of "two weeks" is "deux semaines".
"Huit jours" or "quinze jours" are not an exact number of days.
They refer to some approximate length of time.
If I had to put "huit jours" into English, it would be something
like "one week or so".
For "quinze jours", perhaps my translation would be "roughly two weeks".
Now the mathematicians amongst you can verify that
2 * (one week or so) = (roughly two weeks)
Correct ? :)
There are a number of usual expressions in French that use
numbers as symbols; their value is kind of indicative, rather
than arithmetic.
Now if you want to say "eight days", as an exact quantity,
such as a number of work days, don't say "huit jours", as it would
be ambiguous. You would use another wording, depending on context,
eg "huit journ�es de travail".
Cheers, roger
|
390.46 | soi-meme | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Wed May 15 1991 15:53 | 6 |
| > There are a number of usual expressions in French that use
> numbers as symbols; their value is kind of indicative, rather
> than arithmetic.
You're not kidding, Roger. I can think of 36 different expressions
like this!
|
390.47 | no, tells us about James and the boys | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Wed May 15 1991 16:09 | 19 |
| re: on the third day
This tells us how the English counted in the days of King James
when they translated the Bible into English. It doesn't tell us
how the Jews in Roman-controlled Palestine counted the days --
anybody know what the Aramaic phrase translated as "on the third
day" is? I've seen several other English translations of the same
phrase including "three days later."
There's also a very good argument that dates the crucifiction to
something like 10 A.D. based on the fact that the count comes out
right if the sabbath that started the night of Jesus' crucifiction
were a special sabbath, followed by the regular Saturday sabbath.
That combination isn't very common but occured during Herod's
tenure. Sorry, I don't know enough about Jewish festival customs,
Roman history, or historical astronomy to go into more detail
about his data.
--bonnie
|
390.48 | Not possible | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Wed May 15 1991 19:16 | 23 |
| Re: .47 et prev.
The crucifixion of Jesus could not possibly have taken place in A.D. 10,
for the simple and inescapable reason that it occurred during the
procuratorship of Pontius Pilatus, who did not assume that office in
Judaea until A.D. 26. Sorry.
:-)
On the "three days" thing, Jesus is quoted in modern translations of
Matthew's gospel as saying, "I am able to destroy the temple of God and
rebuild it in three days." This quotation is generally agreed to refer
to his death and resurrection, which events supposedly occurred over a
span from the ninth hour on Friday to dawn on the following Sunday. The
ninth hour of the day would have been at that season about 3 P.M.; hence
the total time involved was only some 39 hours. But - and this is the
critical point - the action occurred over three separate days: Friday,
Saturday, and Sunday. Hence the "in three days" statement.
Bonnie, FYI, the quotation in question was not originally written in
Aramaic; Jesus himself probably spoke in Aramaic, but the entire New
Testament was written in Greek.
-d
|
390.49 | the scholar's dates fit even if mine didn't :) | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Wed May 15 1991 20:22 | 14 |
| >The crucifixion of Jesus could not possibly have taken place in A.D.
>10, for the simple and inescapable reason that it occurred during the
>procuratorship of Pontius Pilatus, who did not assume that office in
>Judaea until A.D. 26. Sorry. :-)
I'm probably remembering wrong. I remember the Pilate dates being
part of it, but as I said, I am not a Biblical scholar or a
historian.
I was, however, under the impression that at least two of the
gospels were written in Aramaic. I shouldn't say "under the
impression"; I learned it in a class on The Bible as Literature.
--bonnie
|
390.50 | Aramaic v. Greek in the gospels | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Thu May 16 1991 03:57 | 13 |
| Digression into Bible scholarship...
Two of the gospels (Matthew and Luke) do show the influence of a common
source that may have been written in Aramaic. This source was most
likely a collection by the real Matthew consisting mostly of Jesus'
oracular sayings and believed (according to my sources) to have been
translated into Greek before being absorbed into the gospel we now call
Matthew (written in Greek but quite probably not by Matthew himself).
Luke draws from that same source, and this fact may be the reason your
instructor indicated that two gospels were written in Aramaic.
-d
|
390.51 | translated timing | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Thu May 16 1991 16:05 | 19 |
| That sounds quite likely. I think the prof. also indicated that
some manuscripts that weren't finally included in the "authorized"
Bible were written in Aramaic; I could be confusing that.
The only thing I really remember from that course is that the
prof. basically thought everything religious was deliberate fraud.
He was just as down on Hindus and wicca as he was on
JudeoChristianity, so he was consistent. But he firmly believed
that the prophet Habbakuk was legitimate, because "habbakuk" means
"cucumber" and nobody trying to write a fake prophecy they wanted
people to take seriously would make up a name as silly as that for
a prophet. . . but I digress from the digression.
But that adds yet another layer of complexity on the day-counting
problem. Jewish people expressing their concept in Aramaic
translated into Greek translated into English . . . no wonder it
doesn't come out even.
--bonnie
|
390.52 | Going forward or backward? | CPDW::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Thu May 16 1991 20:59 | 9 |
| Re: 390.44
>> >That method of counting extends at least back to Biblical times.
-------- ----
>> Yes. But after that, people learned to count.
----
No, before that. After that came innumeracy.
------ -----
|
390.53 | Not the originals, anyway! | SOFBAS::TRINWARD | Careful Don't Step in DECrap | Fri Jun 21 1991 21:58 | 11 |
| RE; several previous, on Greek vs. Aramaic
Given that King Constantine destroyed all original copies of the Bible
(except, perhaps, the `Scrolls' themselves? Soon we may know?), and had
it re-written the way HE wanted it to sound (pro-priest, etc.), we have
NO evidence as to the language in which the Gospels (or even the non-Torah
books of the Old Testament) were written!
Seems like a good argument, though...! ;^}
- SteveT, who_didn't_come_here_for_one_but_couldn't_resist
|
390.54 | Oh, really? | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Fri Jun 21 1991 22:35 | 6 |
| Re: .53
Until you can prove incontrovertibly that all copies were indeed
destroyed, your argument is specious.
-d
|
390.55 | On the contrary... | SOFBAS::TRINWARD | Careful Don't Step in DECrap | Fri Jun 21 1991 23:00 | 4 |
| Until YOU can prove conclusively that a current copy has survived, the
argument is academic...
- SteveT
|
390.56 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat Jun 22 1991 14:56 | 9 |
| The Coptic church in Ethiopia and probably in Egypt too was not
within Constantine's range of influence. "Current copies" are hard to
come by since papyrus and parchment have a limited lifetime, but we can
be reasonably sure that anything from the Christian church in Ethiopia
was not influenced by him. Later the Muslim libraries collected and
meticulously copied documents from other sources (such as Persia) that
were unavailable to him. I don't think he had too much influence over
the Irish church, but maybe my herstory (the church is "the bride of
Christ") is faulty.
|
390.57 | reality check | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Sun Jun 23 1991 09:46 | 16 |
| .53> Given that King Constantine destroyed all original copies of the Bible
.53> (except, perhaps, the `Scrolls' themselves? Soon we may know?), and had
.53> it re-written the way HE wanted it to sound (pro-priest, etc.), we have
.53> NO evidence as to the language in which the Gospels (or even the non-Torah
.53> books of the Old Testament) were written!
.54> Until you can prove incontrovertibly that all copies were indeed
.54> destroyed, your argument is specious.
.55> Until YOU can prove conclusively that a current copy has survived, the
.55> argument is academic...
The Dead Sea Scrolls, which include some books of the Jewish Bible (Old
Testament), pre-date Emperor Constantine. Since some of those scrolls
definitely survived him, I think that we can safely say that he did not destroy
all copies of them.
|
390.58 | Eagerly awaiting... | SOFBAS::TRINWARD | Careful Don't Step in DECrap | Mon Jun 24 1991 16:49 | 14 |
| >> The Dead Sea Scrolls, which include some books of the Jewish Bible (Old
>> Testament), pre-date Emperor Constantine. Since some of those scrolls
>> definitely survived him, I think that we can safely say that he did not
>> destroy all copies of them.
Point well taken -- I withdraw my motion, Your Honor...
However, consider also that, until they have been translated and presented
to the public, all we have to go by is the "accepted" text, which was by and
large a fabrication born of the aforementioned Emperor for his own purposes...
BTW, how'd we get into this in the first place...?
- SteveT
|
390.59 | Depends which translation you use | DATABS::LASHER | Working... | Mon Jun 24 1991 17:00 | 10 |
| Re: .58
"BTW, how'd we get into this in the first place...?"
I think it goes something like this: In the beginning there was
darkness. And God said, "Let there be Light."
Or something like that.
Lew Lasher
|
390.60 | yeah? | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Mon Jun 24 1991 18:55 | 7 |
| Re: .58
> And God said, "Let there be Light."
Bud Light?
-d
|
390.61 | or maybe it was just a long process | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Mon Jun 24 1991 20:54 | 5 |
| re: .60
Well, that's what He wanted, but the angel got it wrong.
--bonnie
|
390.62 | I know it was a long time ago... | CURRNT::ALFORD | An elephant is a mouse with an operating system | Wed Oct 30 1991 03:13 | 7 |
| Re: .42
> one week, what would be called a sevenday in English (I think). I've no
Not as a word it isn't. Seven days, a week, or senight (old English) take
your choice.
|
390.63 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Nov 09 1994 08:17 | 2 |
| The apparent Britishism "sugar soap" is mentioned in another notesfile.
Can someone translate this to American English?
|
390.64 | | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Wed Nov 09 1994 16:25 | 12 |
| G'day,
depends onthe context (doesn't everything?)
Sugar soap is a product used to clean walls after the wallpaper has
been removed. It takes off all the dirt and old size before the wall is
re-sized and new paper hung. Size is a sort of sealer/bonder to allow
paperhanging glue o stick to the wall, rather than be sucked away bythe
porous plaster.
derek
|
390.65 | | JRDV04::DIAMOND | segmentation fault (california dumped) | Wed Nov 09 1994 16:43 | 6 |
| >Size is a sort of sealer/bonder
Aww. Until I got to that part, I was hoping someone could take the
old size off of my disks.
-- Norman Diamond
|
390.66 | | GIDDAY::BURT | Scarabs get disenchanted too | Wed Nov 09 1994 17:16 | 10 |
| I can recall having heard the expression "soft soap" used in the same context
as "sugar soap".
One example that comes to mind is
"You have encountered an application misfeature.
It may be corrected in a possible future release".
Chele
|
390.67 | | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Wed Nov 09 1994 23:45 | 11 |
| G'day,
"soft soap'ing someone is to try and get round them - a child being
coy and smiling at a parent and saying things like 'my lovely mummy
will give me toffee because she is just soooo kind" is softsoaping...
Not to be confused with sugar soap which is so harsh it will strip skin
off sensitive (= normal_ hands)
derek
|
390.68 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Nov 10 1994 00:16 | 24 |
| My English dictionaries suggest that while "soap" is sodium salts
of fatty acids, "soft soap" is potassium salts of fatty acids.
From a chemistry textbook:
"
Soap consists of the sodium or potassium salts (according to the
variety of soap) of the complex acids present in fats and oils. The fat
is boiled by means of steam with an aqueous solution of caustic
soda..."
(further details of production of hard soap skipped)
"Soft soap is made by using caustic potash instead of caustic soda and
the glycerol is left in. Oils containing more oleate are used here.
Since, in general, potassium salts are more soluble than the
corresponding sodium salts, soft soap is more soluble in water than is
hard soap.
"
It goes on to mention the use of soft soap in shaving cream.
No book that I have has any mention of "sugar soap", and I had not
heard of the term before, so I assume it must come from one of our
colonies ;-)
Dave
|
390.69 | wot? dontcher bleeve me? | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Thu Nov 10 1994 15:24 | 25 |
| G'day,
heard of the term before, so I assume it must come from one of our
colonies ;-)
Ohh really?
Try the local hardware store - or should that be cancailler?
BTW is this you?
Common Name: BRIAN MONAHAN
Search Surname: MONAHAN Search Given Name: BRIAN DTN: 828-5120
Telephone: [33]92955111 Intrnl Mail Addr: VBE Location: VBE
Node: PASTIS Username: MONAHAN
or is the family name a coincidence? or were you borrowing a desk?
derek
|
390.70 | example of soft soaping.. | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Thu Nov 10 1994 15:26 | 8 |
| G'day again,
please coat the previous note in smilies.... I'm sure Dave meant no
harm and he really is a nice fellow, and he just loves to tease but he
does it oh so gently and with smilies and oh he is just so nice...
dj
|
390.71 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Nov 11 1994 01:07 | 21 |
| Even my French-English dictionary, while it has "soft soap" as
"savon vert", has no mention of "sugar soap", so I wouldn't be sure
what to ask for at the quincaillerie.
(Yes, I'm the same person as the ELF entry you quoted, but it says
"Dave" on my DEC badge. I have known of other Monahans in DEC. In 1974
I was working in the Ealing office, and since it was the only office in
the London area and served all of S.E. England it was commonly referred
to as the London office, and I used to get crossed mail with a Monahan
working in the London Ontario office. There was also a Denise Monahan
in New York, but I had no more contact with her than occasionally
seeing her in notes files. Finally, my son worked for DEC for a year in
Reading before he was TFSO'd. What this is really leading up to is that
80 years ago my grandfather went to some trouble trying to trace the
family tree because a Monahan died intestate in Australia leaving 2
million quid and no known relatives. Apparently in those circumstances
the Australian government holds the money in trust (and adds compound
interest) until a claimant appears. If you know an Australian Monahan
he could be very rich, and if it could be shown that I was a relation
too then we could both be very rich. End of family and financial
rathole ;-)
|
390.72 | Try an English Dictionary :*) | KERNEL::MORRIS | Which universe did you dial? | Fri Nov 11 1994 02:59 | 13 |
| Hey folks,
If you're going to discuss Englishisms, you need an Englishish
Dictionary :-)
Chamber's 20th Century Dictionary Revised Edition (1979) (ISBN 0 550
10226) contains:
...sugar soap, an alkaline cleansing or stripping preparation for paint
surfaces;...
Jon TheEnglishMan Morris
|