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decuran

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Emptiness in the Origin of 'Evanescence'

etymologyexplorer.com
1 points·by decuran·il y a 5 ans·0 comments

22 Words Related to “Platypus”

etymologyexplorer.com
1 points·by decuran·il y a 5 ans·0 comments

Why flatulence, flavor and conflate all “blow”

etymologyexplorer.com
1 points·by decuran·il y a 5 ans·0 comments

The “flatness” of plateau, platypus and Plato

etymologyexplorer.com
1 points·by decuran·il y a 5 ans·0 comments

platypus means “flat foot”

reddit.com
1 points·by decuran·il y a 5 ans·0 comments

The strange word families of “platypus”

etymologyexplorer.com
3 points·by decuran·il y a 5 ans·1 comments

Show HN: EtymologyExplorer – word origin trees

etymologyexplorer.com
1 points·by decuran·il y a 5 ans·1 comments

Show HN: EtymologyExplorer – visual navigation of word family trees

etymologyexplorer.com
4 points·by decuran·il y a 6 ans·1 comments

comments

decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
Can you extract from wiktionary with this?
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
I love this! I had no idea about the Etymological Wordnet and it probably would have saved me a ton of time developing my app for finding "interesting" cognates: https://etymologyexplorer.com

I've always loved the same thing—finding hidden connections between everyday words. I recently did this with "vain". It comes from Latin vanus, meaning "empty". More obvious with the "in vain" meaning, but the modern day comes from the idea of an exaggerated self image, with no substance behind it. It has a ton of "empty" cognates: vanish, evanescence, vanity (table), vaunt, vacuous, vacuum, vacation, void, devastate, wanton, wane
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
Yes, this is the site that inspired me! I was frustrated that it was so hard to navigate to cognates (word cousins) or from roots to descendants. So mine is focused on navigating between words like that
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
If people are interested in diving deeper into etymologies, I made an app that allows you to visually explore all the roots, descendants, or relatives of a word: https://etymologyexplorer.com
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
Looks cool! May use this for my toddler
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
Thanks so much! Would love any other feedback you have. I'm making updates often
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
Yes, this is the site that inspired me! I was frustrated that it was so hard to navigate to cognates (word cousins) or from roots to descendants. So mine is focused on navigating between words like that
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
I'm making a tool for exploring word etymologies.

I'm fascinated by the hidden connections in our language—like "galaxy" being connected to "galactose" because of the Milky Way.

I used NLP to convert written etymology paragraphs from wiktionary into a database of words and connections.

Also interesting are the Proto-Indo-European roots, like "h₂enh₁", which is a 10k-year-old reconstructed word meaning "breath", that has about 1k modern day descendants ranging from "animate" and "unanimous" to "anemone".

https://www.etymologyexplorer.com
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
I've been working on a tool that lets you see connections between words in your own language and one you're learning. It is based on following etymology trees up and back down. It has helped me a lot and I enjoy browsing around in it.

For example you can see the connection between Spanish 'mano' ("hand") and English 'manufacture', 'manipulate', etc.

https://www.etymologyexplorer.com
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
I made this because I'm really interested in how similar words relate to one another. I used NLP to convert written etymology paragraphs from wiktionary into a database of words and connections.

The most interesting thing has been finding Proto-Indo-European roots, like "h₂enh₁", which is a 10k-year-old reconstructed word meaning "breath", that has about 1k modern day descendants ranging from "nose" to "anemone".
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
deus ex ATM
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
Is there a repo to reproduce the results? I didn't see anything in the article
decuran
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
That's interesting about Xanthippe and the fancy-fancy horse names. I had recently learned about the etymology of Hippopotamus (water horse) so I was excited to see another use.

As a plug, I'm really into etymologies as well and made EtymologyExplorer for visually navigating roots and descendants https://www.etymologyexplorer.com/
decuran
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
An app called EtymologyExplorer that allows exploration of word origins.

It shows word family trees in a visual layout. I made this because I'm really interested in how words relate to one another. For example "magnanimous" can be understood through its relatives "magnificent" and "unanimous"

Working on it has been both a blast and a slog (~6 years on & off). I used DL NLP (thanks fast.ai!) to convert written etymology paragraphs into a database of words and connections. The accuracy is roughly 99%. There are about 1.4M words and 1.3M word-pair-connections across 13k languages. The most interesting thing has been finding Proto-Indo-European roots, like "h₂enh₁", which is a 10k-year-old reconstructed word meaning "breath", that has about 1k modern day descendants ranging from "nose" to "anemone".

I'm just started making some revenue from sales of premium (to removes ads), which I'd like to grow. I'm also thinking of adding more visualizations to show interesting connections.

https://etymologyexplorer.com
decuran
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
Hello! Creator here. This app shows word evolutions in a visual format similar to a family tree. I made this because I'm really interested in how words relate to one another. For example "magnanimous" can be understood through its relatives "magnificent" and "unanimous"

Working on it has been both a blast and a slog (~6 years on & off). I used DL NLP (thanks fast.ai!) to convert written etymology paragraphs into a database of words and connections. The accuracy is roughly 99%. There are about 1.4M words and 1.3M word-pair-connections across 13k languages. The most interesting thing has been finding Proto-Indo-European roots, like "h₂enh₁", which is a 10k-year-old reconstructed word meaning "breath", that has about 1k modern day descendants ranging from "nose" to "anemone".

I've had about 30k downloads since 2017 and I'm making a modest amount from sales of premium (to removes ads), which I'd like to grow. I'm thinking maybe another visualization style that's only available in premium? So I'd be very appreciative of any feedback at all!
decuran
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
That's a really good question and I worry about that myself. I think it might be incorrect to think that there is a "true self" inside you. More realistically I think there are many autonomous modules in your mind that run when needed or called. Your ego is one of these modules. This fear of losing our drive is probably the ego doing self-preservation (for itself).

Meditation helps you to see when these different modules are acting "illogically". Being run or called when unnecessary. A good example is the fear of public speaking. Whichever module is running is based on instincts learned millennia ago. Now it merely hinders us. I very strongly believe that meditation will make you (anyone) more happy and content. I haven't gone as far as I'd like to with it because of this same fear of losing my drive.
decuran
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
More than likely something is going on from the changes to the active neural circuitry. Usually the "Default Mode Network" is active. When this is quieted down, which is similar to what happens when you're on LSD, it's possible that very unusual states of mind and body (the "currents" mentioned, which I've experienced as well) can arise.