\SELT\ has been heard for many centuries; \KELT\, just a few.
Celtic refers to Irish culture and heritage, along with the historical people who migrated from the British Isles throughout much of Europe. While the early pronunciation was with an /s/ sound, reflecting its nearest origin in French, the modern standard is a hard "c" sound like /k/. This is because language historians desired the word to better reflect its Greek and Classical Latin origins. The soft "c" sound is usually reserved for sports teams now, like the Boston Celtics.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Mon Jun 20, 2022 5:33 pm
by Blackhawk
So, the original words it derived from were 'K', and the modern pronunciation is 'Keltic'. And sports teams are the exceptions because reasons.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2022 11:41 am
by Daehawk
I watched Shanghai Noon yesterday and ruined my memories of it. I remembered it as a funny good movie. Of course I was 31 or so and in the middle of my Jackie Chan fanaticism. Yesterday I saw it through Amazon Prime at 53 years old and with a strong dmx buzz on. It was not funny, Owen kept talking too quietly. And the scenes just seemed to be stitched together with no reason to them. Its like ok Im watching them here and now here and now they are here in this scene.
The only thing that stayed the same for me and my memories was the ending church stuff and Lucy Liu.
Awful movie.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2022 2:48 pm
by hitbyambulance
streamed one of the latter-day 'post-retirement' Jackie Chan films when it came out a few years ago (i think english title was Kung-Fu Yoga) - omg cringebad
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2022 4:39 pm
by LordMortis
Stupid cottonwood seed. Not a week after I cleaned my AC of debris, it burns out last night because the radiator(?) was caked in cottonwood seeds. I figured it was a fuse because the house and unit are too old to have a circuit breaker go off when something like that is working too hard and overheats but I'm not smart enough to know it's a fuse or if it's something and a fuse... I am glad I got someone out today but, oi, $250 to replace a fuse in the unit.
I need to get smart enough to do this stuff myself. Things ain't gonna get cheaper.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Wed Jun 22, 2022 9:13 am
by Daehawk
Anyone else ever have a pill they are swallowing get stuck on the very back of their tongue down in your throat? I take my meds when I first get up in the mornings and my blood pressure and thyroid pills are tiny. I dont know if my tongue is extra soft and spongy back down there or if theres some mucus that builds up there while I sleep during the night but a lot of times Ill have a pill just stick there while the rest go down. Then its a race to eat something quick or drink and drink until it goes on down before I inhale the thing.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Wed Jun 22, 2022 9:40 am
by Blackhawk
About one in three, ever since my surgery/radiation. I seem to have a little 'pocket' back there now that likes to catch everything. You should see me try to eat peanuts - I end up coughing and choking every time.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Wed Jun 22, 2022 6:54 pm
by hitbyambulance
if you have any Raspberry Pi boards sitting around unused, you can resell them now on eBay/craigslist for a pretty good markup if you wanted (and this goes for any of the models, but especially the 4)
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2022 12:25 pm
by Isgrimnur
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2022 3:45 pm
by Daehawk
Ever wonder why we dont have 2 thumbs? ...on each hand. I mean its a pretty important digit the thumb. Why did evolution leave us with just one? What if something happens to your thumb? It could break off or fail. How would we cling to each other or the trees or hold a tool? Why dont we have a backup? We got 4 fingers but only 1 opposable thumb.
Using digital imaging techniques - whereby a 3D digital scan of an animal's body part can be studied in detail without destroying said body part - the researchers studied the hands of six aye-ayes, male and female, across a range of ages, from juvenile to adult.
They found the digit, which they identified as a pseudothumb, on both hands of all six animals.
...
The digit is not without precedent, even though it marks a unique discovery for primates. Most famously, the giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) has just such a pseudothumb structure sticking out of its own wrist, which it uses specifically for gripping the bamboo it eats.
Digging moles also grow a second thumb out of their wrists. It's not for gripping in this case; the pseudothumb widens the animals' pawspan, presumably to make them more efficient spades. And some frogs have pseudothumbs too, increasing their digit count to five from the usual four we see in frogs.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2022 4:06 pm
by Smoove_B
More than you could possibly ever want to know about why we have five fingers.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2022 5:16 pm
by Kasey Chang
Let me rewrite the blurb for entertainment:
An innocent kidnap victim was hunted down by police using high-tech means and surveillance footage, then executed, after an informant spotted the victim in public. Its only crime: having being kidnapped.
Spoiler:
A pet store employee called the police when a couple brought in a raccoon looking for pet food (presumably for raccoon). The police arrived later, and managed to locate the couple via surveillance footage and then their license plate number. They were tracked to Attica in suburban New York. Upon police's arrival, the raccoon was surrendered peacefully after each was fined $500. The raccoon got the death penalty due to the need to test it for rabies. (It was negative)
EDIT: I had to do some digging, but it appears that something invented and publicized by FDA in 2018, were still very UNpopular in 2022...
Spoiler:
I tried to look up why is rabies test on animals "fatal". Turns out, they need to cut a piece of the brain out and do a "direct fluorescent antibody test". FDA had a much better rabies test much like the COVID "rapid test", called the Ln34 test. It detects virus RNA from brain fluids. So far, there's still no non-destructive way of detecting rabies in animals.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Thu Jun 23, 2022 5:29 pm
by Brian
Smoove_B wrote: ↑Thu Jun 23, 2022 4:06 pm
More than you could possibly ever want to know about why we have five fingers.
Pics of the breastfeeding in the underwear or it didn't happen.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Fri Jun 24, 2022 11:11 am
by stimpy
NSFG
Spoiler:
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Fri Jun 24, 2022 1:52 pm
by Daehawk
Ok it happened. Dayem. Poor widdle duckie
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Fri Jun 24, 2022 2:32 pm
by dbt1949
I once saw an owl take a cat in our backyard. Nobody came to it's rescue tho.
Re: Random randomness
Posted: Fri Jun 24, 2022 4:19 pm
by Daehawk
Theres some big birds around these parts..and coyotes. I always go out with my little dog on the porch if he wants to go out.Im right there. Here is only 3 lbs. Tiny. Could be gone in an instant. He thinks he is a German Shepard.