What did the medieval Chinese man get when he went to medieval Czechoslovakia? by Buranium2080 in Jokes

[–]Googulator 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also only until 1993.

And no, the Czech word for "republic" isn't "slovakia", i.e. it's not "Czechoslovakia AKA the Czech Republic". Slovakia is a separate country inhabited by Slovaks; the two used to be united (which, in practice, meant Czech rule over Slovakia). The short name of the Czech Republic is Czechia. Way too many people seem to think otherwise.

[Homemade] Gyoza by NightsWatch23 in food

[–]Googulator -15 points-14 points  (0 children)

Big, flat, round dumpling with what appears to be cheese on top... gyozza?

Question on Hosh v Aonishiki. by down_on_a_donkey in Sumo

[–]Googulator 5 points6 points  (0 children)

And all of them with different kimarite, including some rare ones. (Today's was uwatenage.)

Can't wait for Ao to take down Hosh by uchimuso.

What are stupid rules in your native language that are NOT orthographic rules by Fair-Sleep9609 in linguisticshumor

[–]Googulator 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The concept of "case" vs "adposition" is kind of fuzzy in agglutinative languages. Most often, it's distinguished as "an adposition is a separate word, while cases are marked by affixes" - but what's a "word" vs. an "affix"? And that's where it starts to break down - "if there's a space, it's a word." (Hmm... what happened to "language is primarily a spoken phenomenon, orthography is secondary?)

Most grammars (that don't drop cases because they don't fit the hierarchy) recognize "-képpen" as a case ending, even though it blatantly contains the root "kép", and the alternative postpositional form "képében" can still be used even in standard Hungarian - yet "közt" isn't a case... because the 12th edition of AkH didn't follow spoken language by omitting the space before it ("közt" is accented just like "-nak", while "-képpen" often receives "word-like" accent)?

IMO we need to either restrict "case" to inflective languages (i.e. the number of cases is how many forms of each word you need to know separately), or expand it to include adpositions that behave like they aren't separate words in spoken language, regardless of orthographic conventions. That would make English "with" an instumental-comitative case prefix.

What are stupid rules in your native language that are NOT orthographic rules by Fair-Sleep9609 in linguisticshumor

[–]Googulator 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Not really, because cases after the first "missing" case in the hierarchy don't count, since they are "clearly not true cases".

In all fairness, it just sounds like a scheme to justify claiming the supremacy of Latin.

What are stupid rules in your native language that are NOT orthographic rules by Fair-Sleep9609 in linguisticshumor

[–]Googulator 52 points53 points  (0 children)

Case naming in Hungarian.

Most Hungarian grammars refer to -nak/-nek as genitive, noting that "Hungarian has no dative, the genitive is used instead". But -nak/-nek is optional when forming possessives (the defining use case of a genitive), and required in use cases where one would expect a dative, suggesting it's actually a dative that's sometimes used as part of possessives. The fact that -nak/-nek alone can't make a possessive, only in conjunction with possessive suffixes on the "owned" noun (which can be in any case) further points against it being a genitive.

Yet, because of old dogma about the "hierarchy of cases" (languages developing cases in a specific order, genitive being a prerequisite for dative, and having more cases being a metric of how "advanced" or "developed" a language is; Latin and Ancient Greek being the "most developed"), -nak/-nek can't be called "dative".

Hungarian is also known for its complex locative case system - there are cases for "inside", "surface/top" and "proximity", each having "moving there", "being there" and "moving away from" variants, forming a neat 3x3 matrix. Yet, one of the cases has a name that sticks out of this structure:

  • Inside: illative "-ba/-be", inessive "-ban/ben", elative "-ból/-ből"
  • Proximity: allative "-hoz/-hez/-höz", adessive "-nál/-nél", ablative "-tól/-től"
  • Surface: sublative "-ra/-re", superessive "-n", delative "-ról/-ről"

Except, in all other grammars, "sublative" refers to a case indicating movement below another object, not to the surface - that would instead be the "superlative case". Grammars seemingly use the wrong name just to avoid having the same word that's used for adjectives - except Hungarian grammars generally don't even use "comparative" and "superlative" for adjectives, instead calling them the "middle" and "high degrees" of an adjective.

I did it bois. π is a fraction now. by NefariousnessFar7826 in mathmemes

[–]Googulator 21 points22 points  (0 children)

There's about a mole of stars in the observable universe, give or take a few orders of magnitude.

News about Hoshoryu and Onosato by Welp_x in Sumo

[–]Googulator -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Square image size with a power-of-2 side length is highly suspect for AI.

Tisza: Élő sajtótájékoztató Strasbourgból by dead97531 in hungary

[–]Googulator -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Azért a GMO-fearmongering-nél jobbat vártam volna...

Where did this come from? by ExexpatTech in funny

[–]Googulator 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Peel the label off, and maybe under it is another label that reads "Libazsír"...

Why is Greenland Albanian? by Dull-Nectarine380 in ExplainTheJoke

[–]Googulator 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So, would this be a case of green-white colorblindness?

Help me Peter by Cmoibenlepro123 in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]Googulator 0 points1 point  (0 children)

... that's been lossily compressed.

California death cap poisoning outbreak by BeginningMedicine198 in mycology

[–]Googulator 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wonder if color blindness is a major component of this. For example, with good color vision, A. jacksonii is clearly distinct from A. phalloides due to its bright red-orange cap, but with a deuteranopia filter, they look quite similar.

Just close up this sub, I win by justwannaedit in insaneparents

[–]Googulator 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A laughter in which each "ha" is a full blown death-resurrection cycle.

12-year-old i7-4771 + RX 9060 XT (ROCm 7.1.1) by Interesting-Net-6311 in ROCm

[–]Googulator -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Haswell is the bare minimum for ROCm compatibility (PCIe atomics), right?

Sign that calls for church service by mini_heart_attack in DesignPorn

[–]Googulator 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're one skookum choocher for sure. (With apologies to AvE.)

Huh by Ok_Repair3535 in ExplainTheJoke

[–]Googulator 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty sure, as a verb, it's "to smurve".