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Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 27 May 2020 23:56
by Salmoneus
Ser wrote: 27 May 2020 19:21
Omzinesý wrote: 29 Feb 2020 23:01A line on a vowel marked what is written with n not even a nasal vowel in some old orthographies. Maybe this is rather what I suppose. I must check again.
Yes, this was the case in various orthographies around the 13th century. You definitely see this in Old Spanish and Old French, e.g. OSp /ˈantes/ could be written <ãtes> (with ~ on the <a>) or <antes>.
Something I was just reminded of today is that there was something this in English once.

I was looking at a map today, drawn/written in the 18th century, and on it, there's a placename ending -stone. But on the map, this was written as -stoe, with a horizontal line above, running from the midpoint of the 'o' to the midpoint of the 'e'. Having seen it, I remembered having seen it before. But I'm afraid I don't know anything about it.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 28 May 2020 01:10
by Salmoneus
Anyway, he's something entirely non-linguistic.

I actually learned this a few months ago (or maybe late last year), but I forgot, and have just been reminded of it again.



So, you're on a building site, let's say. A guy wants to lift a heavy pallet by attaching them to a cord with a hook on the end. The cord can be steel, jute, kevlar, whatever, doesn't matter. I believe it can also be a twisted rope or cable, though it might get a bit trickier in that case; I'm not sure if it applies to more complicated plaited cords, linked chains, etc - I suspect it basically does but there's more complicated factors in practice.

So, they lift the pallet, but you want to save trips so you load more and more items onto it. But oh no, you overload it! The steel wire (for example) holding up the pallet snaps. Oh dear. But it's OK, the guy has another steel wire. It's the same type of wire - in this case, the same type of steel (I believe if it's a twisted rope it needs to have the same number of strands, degree of twist, etc, for this trick to work), but it's not the same thickness.

Now, you've already found out how much weight the first wire could lift without snapping. But this wire is a different thickness, so how do you calculate how much weight the new wire can lift before IT snaps? It's OK, you can measure the thickness of both wires to compare. But what's the equation you have to use?

.
.
.
And what I've learnt/remembered is: it doesn't matter!

You can solve the problem through a practical method, without any equations. All you have to do is, if necessary, go back in time (or have been lucky/clever all along), and, as you put more weight on the pallet, keep flicking the wire with something to make it go 'twang' slightly. Observe how high-pitched the 'twang' is just before the wire snaps.

Now, in the current time, with the new wire, keep flicking it as you add weight, and stop when the 'twang' has risen in pitch to just before the pitch it made just before it snapped last time.


Why does this work? Because of a beautiful law of nature: for a given material and shape, a string will always snap at the same pitch, regardless of its thickness. The thicker the material, the higher the tension it can withstand (in this thought experiment, the more weight it can bear). The higher the tension, the higher the pitch of the twang it makes when you flick it. so the thicker the material, the more you can raise the pitch of the twang, by increasing the tension. But the thicker the string is, the lower the pitch of the twang it makes at a given tension. And miraculously these two factors exactly cancel out, so that the string always breaks at the same pitch, no matter how thick it is!



This has almost no real-world utility, but it is strangely cool.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 28 May 2020 02:19
by elemtilas
Salmoneus wrote: 28 May 2020 01:10 You can solve the problem through a practical method, without any equations. All you have to do is, if necessary, go back in time (or have been lucky/clever all along), and, as you put more weight on the pallet, keep flicking the wire with something to make it go 'twang' slightly. Observe how high-pitched the 'twang' is just before the wire snaps.

Now, in the current time, with the new wire, keep flicking it as you add weight, and stop when the 'twang' has risen in pitch to just before the pitch it made just before it snapped last time.
Fascinating indeed! This trick works on fiddle & guitar & bass strings too! Even steel bars. Anything under sufficient and fixed points tension does two things: first it gets shorter -- metal is malleable and stretchy, which is why you can bend notes on a string instrument, but only to a point, and you can feel the tension -- when there's no play, it's probably too tight; and it also rises in pitch, as you well know -- as you tune a bass or guitar, you gently pluck & listen for the pitch rise. Normally, you stop when you get to the right pitch.

You can demonstrate the truth of the lesson without the danger of heavy pallets of goods and steel cables flying all over the place by the simple expedient of doing the experiment with a guitar. Just keep cranking on the tuning peg while listening to the string's pitch. When the string goes *tink!* you'll know it's broken. Get another of the same string gauge and crank on the tuning peg until you're a half step below the pitch where the other string went *tink!* and it shouldn't break.

Just use a light gauge string --- you don't want to break the guitar in the process!

Also, don't try this on a violin or upright bass, as you'll probably crash the bridge before coming close to snapping the string.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 28 May 2020 02:28
by Sequor
I have some replies for Sal's posts in store, but meanwhile:
elemtilas wrote: 28 May 2020 02:19Also, don't try this on a violin or upright bass, as you'll probably crash the bridge before coming close to snapping the string.
Huh... For an anecdotal opposite data point, there was a moment when I was a young teenager when I saw someone, who clearly had no idea what he was doing, cranking a violin's peg so hard that the string snapped, and curiously (to his luck) it did not damage the bridge.

Oh, and that someone was me, but you know, it's a bit embarrassing to admit it even after so many years...

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 28 May 2020 03:03
by Salmoneus
Yes, obviously the law in question is primarily an issue with stringed instruments, but I tried to come up with a more ordinary scenario, rather than having it just be 'a cool fact about acoustics'.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 28 May 2020 03:27
by elemtilas
Ser wrote: 28 May 2020 02:28 I have some replies for Sal's posts in store, but meanwhile:
elemtilas wrote: 28 May 2020 02:19Also, don't try this on a violin or upright bass, as you'll probably crash the bridge before coming close to snapping the string.
Huh... For an anecdotal opposite data point, there was a moment when I was a young teenager when I saw someone, who clearly had no idea what he was doing, cranking a violin's peg so hard that the string snapped, and curiously (to his luck) it did not damage the bridge.

Oh, and that someone was me, but you know, it's a bit embarrassing to admit it even after so many years...
No worries! We've all broken strings. I've broken violin, guitar and piano strings and managed to break a piano hammer as well.

Yeah, bridge crashes happen. Multifactorial, of course! Especially when changing the strings or adjusting the bridge, you have to make sure the bridge is aligned right: if you don't do that right, when you come to tune the instrument, you'll tip the bridge. Eventually, the tension will cause it to collapse.

In this case, just at the wrong time!.

If the bridge is set properly, as I expect it was in your case, the tension of the other strings will keep the bridge in place while you snap the string!

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 19 Aug 2020 00:36
by Khemehekis
TIL that Kay Starr, the twentieth-century jazz and traditional pop singer, was of Iroquois descent.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 20 Aug 2020 05:50
by clawgrip
Salmoneus wrote: 27 May 2020 23:56
Ser wrote: 27 May 2020 19:21
Omzinesý wrote: 29 Feb 2020 23:01A line on a vowel marked what is written with n not even a nasal vowel in some old orthographies. Maybe this is rather what I suppose. I must check again.
Yes, this was the case in various orthographies around the 13th century. You definitely see this in Old Spanish and Old French, e.g. OSp /ˈantes/ could be written <ãtes> (with ~ on the <a>) or <antes>.
Something I was just reminded of today is that there was something this in English once.

I was looking at a map today, drawn/written in the 18th century, and on it, there's a placename ending -stone. But on the map, this was written as -stoe, with a horizontal line above, running from the midpoint of the 'o' to the midpoint of the 'e'. Having seen it, I remembered having seen it before. But I'm afraid I don't know anything about it.
I'm a little late here, but if you check scribal abbreviation on Wikipedia, you can find the abbreviation you're talking about and several others.

You can check scribal abbreviation on Wikipedia for more info.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 23 Mar 2021 10:23
by Omzinesý
I read an article on Greenlandic Anti-Passive.

Some verbs form Anti-Passive just by replacing transitive endings with intransitive (syntactic terms) ones.

neri-vaa 'eats it'
neri-voq 'eats'

But most verbs form Anti-Pasissive with a suffix.
Usually, changing for the intransitive ending makes the verb unaccusative.

So I have been wondering if the plain intransitive suffix can derive both anti-passives and unaccusatives. "Nerivoq" is the verb always cited in grammars. But now I know it's an exception.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 23 Mar 2021 19:21
by eldin raigmore
Today I learned that nobody learned anything between Aug 20 2020 and Mar 22 2021.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 24 Apr 2021 03:47
by Khemehekis
TIL that Italian has a word that looks like the inventor of the Internet.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 25 Apr 2021 20:45
by elemtilas
Khemehekis wrote: 24 Apr 2021 03:47 TIL that Italian has a word that looks like the inventor of the Internet.
Quite right. Algore Mortis, for those who didn't know already.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 19 Jun 2021 08:14
by Khemehekis
TIL the word "synophones". Words with subtle differences in pronunciation, like "ladder" and "latter" (in American English), or "roses" and "Rosa's", or "la" and "law".

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 01 Jul 2021 22:28
by eldin raigmore
Today I found out that Cleopatra lived closer to the beginning of space flight than to the building of the pyramids.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 02 Jul 2021 21:12
by Lambuzhao
elemtilas wrote: 25 Apr 2021 20:45
Khemehekis wrote: 24 Apr 2021 03:47 TIL that Italian has a word that looks like the inventor of the Internet.
Quite right. Algore Mortis, for those who didn't know already.
Algore Mortis … is this the name for the «Black Guardian of Spacetime» doppelgänger of the Inventor in question?
[xP]

Interesting… because I learned during this chilly Frost Solsticetide that algores was a Latin word for 'Winter Chill', especially when it gets to the point where the frost bites the nose & ears, and burns the cheeks (!)

[O.O]

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 03 Jul 2021 03:54
by elemtilas
Lambuzhao wrote: 02 Jul 2021 21:12 Algore Mortis … is this the name for the «Black Guardian of Spacetime» doppelgänger of the Inventor in question?
[xP]
Hmm. What of the White Guardian? Perhaps Tenon?

Interesting… because I learned during this chilly Frost Solsticetide that algores was a Latin word for 'Winter Chill', especially when it gets to the point where the frost bites the nose & ears, and burns the cheeks (!)

[O.O]
Now thát's a word every invented language needs a word for! Different qualantities of Winter Chill, you see. Mind you, it might be bits other than cheeks and noses that get bitten & burnt!

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 10 Aug 2021 23:27
by Dormouse559
I recently realized that French combien "how many" is literally "how" + "many". It's composed of Old French com "how" and bien, which here is a determiner meaning "many". For some reason, none of my etymological sources actually explains this relationship, even though com's modern reflex doesn't mean "how" anymore, and bien is prototypically an adverb meaning "well".

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 12 Aug 2021 01:52
by aliensdrinktea
Today I learned that moon derives from PIE *mḗh₁n̥s*, meaning "moon; month". Latin lūna (from which the Romance translations for "moon" are derived) comes from PIE *lówksneh₂, which is thought to have been a poetic synonym. The latter term could be translated literally as "shiny thing".

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 01 Jan 2022 23:22
by Omzinesý
I found this article https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... _in_Basque and learned that there are / can be two kinds of foci: contrastive foci and mirative foci. Generally the combination of mirativity and focus is an interesting idea for a conlang.

Re: Today I learned ...

Posted: 26 Feb 2022 15:49
by k1234567890y
The word for "frost" in Germanic and Slavic languages are more consistent, in that there are usually cognates with similar concepts in closely related languages; while there's no such consistency in Romance languages.