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cwnyth

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Omniglot: The Online Encyclopedia of Writing Systems and Languages

omniglot.com
17 points·by cwnyth·30 giorni fa·4 comments

comments

cwnyth
·15 minuti fa·discuss
Separately, your facts are wrong, because it was centuries before that the word Byzantine was first used to describe this era of the latter eastern Roman empire. Oops, might want to read a book instead of looking at memes.
cwnyth
·18 minuti fa·discuss
I'd love to see that! I can't take credit for the term. There are some people who are extreme fans of the Byzantine empire and defend it at every turn. I can kind of get recent history, but being a fanatic about an ancient polity strikes this trained historian as utterly bizarre.
cwnyth
·21 minuti fa·discuss
There are a lot of people who only learned about history through memes or online talking points, but this is one of those things that is passed around that way.
cwnyth
·21 minuti fa·discuss
There are a lot of people who only learned about history through memes or online talking points, but this is one of those things that is passed around that way.
cwnyth
·27 minuti fa·discuss
Well, I should have qualified my statement: Anki is inefficient compared to better methods, but more efficient than haphazardly trying to memorize things. Yes, it's better than nothing, but there are better SRS implementations, including most readers.

I saw a lot of this from personal experience. I had to learn not only Latin and Greek, but also French and German just for my doctorate, and I learned Russian, Thai, and Swedish separately. And then I taught Latin and Greek for years, inquiring often how my students were learning. Anki (vel sim.) is fine, but there are better ways (and none of those ways start with the letter D and end with the letters lingo).
cwnyth
·30 minuti fa·discuss
That's why I used the word varied. But at the end of the day, you're still memorizing sentences, rather than how the word actually functions. It's inelastic.
cwnyth
·30 minuti fa·discuss
Tell me, do you call people from China Chinese? Japan Japanese? Germany German? If so, you're a hypocrite.

You're also arguing against a strawman. I never said they weren't Roman. I only said there's nothing wrong with Byzantine.

Maybe if you weren't so smugly self-righteous, you'd have better reading comprehension.
cwnyth
·5 ore fa·discuss
You've missed the point.
cwnyth
·8 ore fa·discuss
They actually called themselves Ῥωμαῖοι, not Romani, and not every description needs to be emic. There's nothing wrong with the label "Byzantine" except to Byzaboos.
cwnyth
·9 ore fa·discuss
My problem with Anki is that it's very, very inefficient. It will take much more time and effort to memorize the vocabulary words you learn, and losing those words is very quick. It's much better to use SRS with actual and varied sentences.
cwnyth
·9 giorni fa·discuss
LinuxForums has been going strong for decades. My account there dates to 2004.
cwnyth
·9 giorni fa·discuss
Even there, though, a lot of the forums are dead or decayed or have disappeared. It's not like it was even 10 years ago.
cwnyth
·9 giorni fa·discuss
Except that most people just go with best. Tons of new comments are shouted into the void, never to be heard by anyone except for a handful of the curious.
cwnyth
·9 giorni fa·discuss
There is no reason to lump forums and IRC/Discord together here. If anything, the latter is closer to places like here or Reddit, where the discussions are ephemeral regardless of topicality, whereas with forums a single topic can go on for years.
cwnyth
·10 giorni fa·discuss
[dead]
cwnyth
·11 giorni fa·discuss
What's wrong with MariaDB?
cwnyth
·11 giorni fa·discuss
We Japanese importers also knew it as Pang.
cwnyth
·11 giorni fa·discuss
I still have two, a Trinitron and an RCE. For a while, you couldn't give these away.

I sadly had to part with a 52" projector TV that had s-video inputs. Classics games on that was a thing to behold.
cwnyth
·11 giorni fa·discuss
I disagree. Time and time again, it's been shown that people are more moved by a single emotional instance, not the broader statistics. Not everyone has a mind for numbers or scale. What can actually inspire change in them if not a single representation of the problem? Classically, effective rhetoric needed pathos in addition to logos. There is no problem in zooming in on this one instance (especially if it's effective in fixing the larger problem).
cwnyth
·13 giorni fa·discuss
Fair! Chronologically, at least, Diocletian's time is closer to us, though not technologically or population-wise. And by Diocletian's time, inflation was already out of control. If anything, the political stability that came with Diocletian's reforms actually helped bolster the economy, though it wouldn't last, as soon the center moved to Byzantium, leaving Rome (and Italy) to whither and die over the next century.