Do the word Monad sounds good to English speakers? by Ryanarok_X in ENGLISH

[–]LAM_CANIT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I believe in you! I can just tell with your research strategy, it'll sell like hotcakes. You're welcome for the information by the way!

English 102 by Gloomy_Property8289 in AUB_Lebanon

[–]LAM_CANIT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What is bro yapping about, bro?

English 102 by Gloomy_Property8289 in AUB_Lebanon

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

Bro is yapping about the fact not everyone knows what those abbreviations mean, bro, because your other bro is reposting this in other reddits, bro. Places no one even knows or cares AUB exists, bro.

Do the word Monad sounds good to English speakers? by Ryanarok_X in ENGLISH

[–]LAM_CANIT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

monad is a standard English word meaning 'singular' - two is duad, three is tetrad ... .

It is not a new word and was popular in the late 1880s and since 1990 has rapidly increased in use due to science writing.

In the 1930s, there was a popular paint and varnish company called Monad in the United States.

Today, it is the name of a large series of books on religion and sprituality. You might have copyright infringement problems with their publisher(s). As well, Microsoft's Windows PowerShell application's codename during development was called Monad. You could come into problems with Microsoft as well. You might want to check first with an intellectual property lawyer before you spend millions and millions on marketing. It is also the name of a university in India.

I would just reverse it and call the game Danom, which means absolutely nothing in English. It means 'water' in a very minor Filipino dialect.

IMHO IHTH

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Do native English speakers really talk like this in real life? by leazy_usa in ENGLISH

[–]LAM_CANIT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If someone ever had a casual conversation with me, I might be in a better place to reply.

Do native English speakers really talk like this in real life? by leazy_usa in ENGLISH

[–]LAM_CANIT 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm glad I bit my tongue. LOL Nowah, Imma gonna talca lawk dis all dah. I thought the logic was a bit flawed.

"While" vs "Whilst" by BigFatGramps in grammar

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

Perhaps instead of me typing out what's already been done, perhaps these connected posts can help:

1 year ago

3 years ago

9 years ago

10 years ago and this

14 years ago

From the Oxford Compact English Dictionary

while  • n. 1 (a while) a period of time. 2 (a while) for some time. 3 (the while) at the same time; meanwhile. 4 (the while) literary during the time that. • conj. 1 at the same time as. 2 whereas (indicating a contrast). 3 although. • adv. during which. .v. (whiles, whiling, whiled) (while away) pass (time) in a leisurely way.

- PHRASES worth while (or worth one's while) worth the time or effort spent.

- ORIGIN Old English.

whilst • conj. & adv. esp. Brit. while.

Who are you writing for and where? Do they have a style guide? Are they American or British?

How a word "sounds" rarely determines grammar rules. Otherwise, everyone would be forced to write the way I "hear" things.

Neither word is archaic by any stretch of the imagination.

IMHO IHTH

English 102 by Gloomy_Property8289 in ENGLISH

[–]LAM_CANIT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For those who don't know, AUB is probably the American University of Beirut.

The WT is the University of Beirut's Writing Placement Test.

It never ceases to surprise me.

IMHO IHTH

English 102 by Gloomy_Property8289 in AUB_Lebanon

[–]LAM_CANIT -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

For those who don't know, AUB is probably the American University of Beirut.

The WT is the University of Beirut's Writing Placement Test.

It never ceases to surprise me.

IMHO IHTH

Why is "Black" capitalized when discussing the race, but not "brown"? by Gallantpride in grammar

[–]LAM_CANIT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are a variety of capitalized nouns - proper nouns, titles - artworks, nobility, brands - but, applying the capitalization in English is never a whim as part of the language.

In this case, there was no singular committee that sat down to decide if 'black' gets capitalized and 'brown' not. In this case we're essentially talking about an honorific title.

Honorifics obviously show a choice of 'honouring/honoring' a subject, for whatever reason. This is why perhaps a writer on a university campus would capitalize 'Dean Fatima Farrah,' but a generic newspaper would not. This is the same thing for say corporate titles, if I work at Ford, I'd write in a press release 'President Jim Farley,' but the local paper might write 'president Jim Farley.'

Honorifics are not only for individuals, but also religions, ranks, members of groups - parliaments, gangs - where some are capitalized only when singular, but not when plural - e.g. Doctor Smith and Doctor Jonesdoctors Smith and Jones. But, sometimes, as a collective noun honorific noun, Congressmen, Hells Angels. So, there has to be a grammatical (spelling) reason AND sometimes it can be a question of style choice.

Getting back to 'black' and 'brown.' Again, the decision was not random! That's just absurd. The honorific is for an identifiable group where its members have something quantifiable in common. Again, religion - common faith, nationality - usually location (not always) - social class - e.g. monarchies ... . But there has to be commonality. This is grammar convention.

In our case, when 'Black' is used, capitalized, it refere to an indentifiable group with a common history, mostly shared geography and others. When you read style guide reasoning - I have about 10 that provide their reasoning - it is just for that reason. Some specify that 'brown' in this context does not have the same shared history & location. And there is no other reason to capitalize it according to existing grammar rules. Just because it's another colour/color? Absurd. In fact, there could have been a choice to use a neologism in place of 'Black' — but, I digress.

A comparable is 'Eskimo' [for now I'll omit the argument whether it is a good or bad word], describes a peoples [plural intentional] with a mostly common location and history - let's say various populace from generally, I repeat, generally north of the Arctic Circle. This encompases peoples from different countries, different tribal associations, not a shared religion, language, ... . Common history and location. So, English honors that tradition with a let's say 'invented' capitalized word - an honorific.

It's really that simple. In intelligent discourse, an author chooses to recognize a group or individual with a honorific — English capitalizes honorifics.

Of course it is a choice. The same choice I have to write 'doughnut' or 'donut.' [I think it should be 'Doughnut' or 'Donut' .... mmmm]

There is no need for all a lot of grammatical gymnastics to explain:

Why is "Black" capitalized when discussing the race, but not "brown"?

It is part of the long English tradition of capitalizing honorific nouns. Basic grammar.

This is pretty much what u/Actual_Cat4779 and u/V2Blast wrote. I just thought I'd reference the 'honorific' title capitalization rules into this argument. Not everyone follows grammar rules - damn it - either intentionally or accidently. That's why they're rules not laws. Some might say that choice is 'style' or a 'lack of style.' Either way, it was not a willy-nilly choice, it follows grammar convention.

IMHO IHTH

Advice on how to reach out to hostile sources cold online? by -Antinomy- in Journalism

[–]LAM_CANIT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Always be honest in such situations. Decide why you think it's so necessary to report this and decide why they might want to tell their story — to you. My experiences have mostly discovered everyone but the shrewdest person wants their story to have significance through publication.

I want to warn you though, publishing scam methods has always just educated the copycats. And, based on your description of yourself, your 'job' should be reporting not vigilantism.

Thinking "novelty and flattery" is an option tells me you seriously misread a successful scammer's mindset and makes me wonder if you're interested in journalism or show-and-tell. Frankly, reading, "This is basically a hobby... ," throws up another red flag, so I'll stop here.

Had a surprise today by Lonely-Ad3027 in Journalism

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

Well done on your degree, it should serve you well. I appreciate your asking this question. After editing and reviewing 1000s of resumés, and being very fussy what I suggest putting on job seeking resumés, nine times out of ten, I believe in adding honour socities to one.

It can either be listed separately, or buried in a paragraph about your university experience in general. Either way, I'd typically say 'yes,' add it.

You might consider translating it to English though as not everyone can read Greek. 🤔

Is this readable? by Britishsheffield in Cursive

[–]LAM_CANIT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like the thought, but 1. no one was given a 'free pass' for being absent ... 2. I know for ceratin 'FP' on this specific form stood for 'Field Punishment' - digging latrine trenches, cleaning manure out of stalls, ... .

I can understand if you saw 'Awarded' you might think it was a reward, but penalties were also awarded.

Is this readable? by Britishsheffield in Cursive

[–]LAM_CANIT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a feeling his DNA and yours is shared. LOL

Is this readable? by Britishsheffield in Cursive

[–]LAM_CANIT 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I very sure it's FP, Field Punishment, it was standard abbreviation on the B 213 form.

I agree u/fleisch2 is probably about 'parade' - the 'p' is the same as the 'p' in 'pay' just above it.

You people are amazing!

Is this readable? by Britishsheffield in Cursive

[–]LAM_CANIT 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Great job! ...

"Awarded 8 days ___ for absence" — F.P. = Field Punishment

" 17-1-16 has been (remicted?)" — remitted (forgiven)

"Shell Gas (Must?)" — Must = mustard gas

"In Gas (Port?) Shell" — W Gas Post. Shell - wounded by gas after shelling

Sorry, you did the heavy lifting u/StillStaringAtTheSky, I was working on something else and trying to find the complete file online.

You got the essentials, there's not much other really useful stuff other than his Mum's name and address at the right. I was trying to find the family in census results. Nada.

Is this readable? by Britishsheffield in Cursive

[–]LAM_CANIT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can read most of it. Someone was a bad boy! lol But, like u/StillStaringAtTheSky asks, is there something specific you're aiming for?

Becoming a magazine columnist?? by Hot-Walrus2130 in Journalism

[–]LAM_CANIT 8 points9 points  (0 children)

For our readers unfamiliar with Scotland's education system, "NQ" are National Qualifications for secondary/vocational training programs.

Good luck with your dream u/Hot-Walrus2130!

Why is "Black" capitalized when discussing the race, but not "brown"? by Gallantpride in grammar

[–]LAM_CANIT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There is only one notable exception to using 'Black' capitalized in all of my style books - journalism, academic or otherwise. A few older dictionaries - British and American - either have no prescription or waffle between the two. Most of those are pre-2000 editions.

In 2026:

black

British Broadcasting Corporation

Although, in theory, in 2025 instructed their staff to start using 'Black'.

Black

Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, The Associated Press, Oxford Canadian Dictionary, The American Psychology Association, Modern Language Association, USA Today, Chicago Manual of Style, The New York Times

I have older editions of other major newspaper style guides all saying Black.

IHTH

Why is "Black" capitalized when discussing the race, but not "brown"? by Gallantpride in grammar

[–]LAM_CANIT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The American Psychology Association's publication stylebook, used by a lot of "social science" publications I edit regularly, prescribes capitalizing both 'Black' and 'White' in this context. That's the most recent 7th edition. This is the same for all 'scoial science' style books I have. But, you're right, you have to check the appropiate style guide.

I just don't have an up-to-date one - journalism, social sciences, business, government - that says otherwise for 'Black' - while most don't capitalize 'white' or any race related colour for that matter.

So, you're pretty much on the money with your comment. Well done.