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I suppose it's just me, but. . .
Message
From
30/04/2002 23:35:14
 
 
To
30/04/2002 15:57:48
Dragan Nedeljkovich (Online)
Now officially retired
Zrenjanin, Serbia
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00649987
Message ID:
00651187
Views:
17
Dragan,

>>Actually, I dislike the general degrading of the english language I've seen over the last 40-50 years. Gay used to mean happy. Now it means anything homosexual and most, if not all folks I know who are homosexual are anything but happy. The original useage of the word "champaign" meant "high, grassy plain"
>
>I really don't know what connects champaign with champagne, except pronunciation.

My bad spelling?? <g>

>Champagne is the province in France where this sort of wine was invented, and the name is a trademark. If you drank something called "champaigne", that's probably not the original stuff, and if it was carbonated (and not naturally fermented into that state), then it's surely not it.

My Oxford English Dictionary is packed away right now but if you will check you will see that the earliest use of the word meant 'high grassy plain'.

>
>>I'm not sure what one can do about this lack of intellectual discipline as society has all but abandoned any kind of desire for 'exactness' in using the language.
>
>But that's why OOP thrives in English speaking areas - overloading the words with multiple meanings is so common, that the idea that different classes may have a method with the same name, which would do different things depending on implementation, comes as a natural idea.
>
>"I used to mine ore in this mine of mine, but I took a mine to mine it." See what I mean?

LOL!

I'm sure it is entirely bewildering to someone as yourself who has learned the language as a second language.


>
>>I suppose at the end of the day a lot of this stems from the general lack of structure in the English language.
>
>Not just the end of day - it happens all day long.

*chuckle*

"At the end of the day" is yet another euphemism. IOW, when we conclude a matter.

>
>BTW, why do people say "so long" when they part, and nobody's really going fishing?

Well, I don't understand the fishing part but you have a good question. I honestly do not know the origin of this phrase.

>
>So, I think using the term "evangelist" is actually a sign of high spirits. Self-mockery is a rare art.

Depends on the Spirit. <g>
Best,


DD

A man is no fool who gives up that which he cannot keep for that which he cannot lose.
Everything I don't understand must be easy!
The difficulty of any task is measured by the capacity of the agent performing the work.
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