lvxferre

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[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 1 points 35 minutes ago

Fallacies aren't exclusive to debates. They're more like brainfarts; when something goes wrong with your reasoning, there's a fallacy. It doesn't matter if you're debating or even doing shit on your own.

And, although not in this case*, fallacies are a big deal. One of the big ways we (human beings) cause each other harm is by not thinking things properly.

*as you said OP is joking. A lot of jokes rely on fallacies, and that's fine — it's like you relax your reasoning for amusement. OP is also taunting bigots in 4chan, it's kind of fun to see them screeching.

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 3 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

Most likely, but it isn't the most common full name in the world. Because typically people with one don't have the other.

(Plus family names aren't even obligatory in Indonesia, and Muhammad is so common among Muslims around the world that they typically have also a second personal name — like "Muhammad Osman".)

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 2 points 10 hours ago

That explains the "service dog // do not pet" on his harness, I was wondering about it.

The first time I had to give her the med, he thought it was a treat and jumped on her to try to get some.

Birds of a feather with Lana then. Who took human meds not once, but twice. The first one was simply calcium supplements, no biggie, but the second one got us really worried because it was pressure meds. It was, like: my mum put my father's meds on a handkerchief, went to the kitchen to grab some water, and when she was back to their room... where are the meds? Thankfully they only made Lana sleep through the whole day, but still, it got us worried.

However, Leo took her by the hand and pulled her into the kitchen where we keep her meds while she could still get them herself.

Smart dog being the hero of the day \o/

That's the charm of poodles: they're quick to learn things, and they care a lot about the ones around them. I bet he'll realise the roomba is no threat (or noteworthy) in no time.

Also, I have no idea if the attacks are a temporary or permanent issue, but I hope your wife gets better!

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 5 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago) (1 children)

This, too. And there's a third way to read it:

  • transgender porn relies on porn actresses taking breast mints
  • people refuse to give trans people rights, that includes letting trans women take breast mints if they so desire

Two more layers to the shit lasagna, I guess...

[Note: I'm not trans. So, please, if anyone who's trans find something I said is wrong, or bullshit, please do point it out.]

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 2 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago) (4 children)

It's all implied, but:

A: fetishising trans women +> treating trans women as women
B: refusing trans women rights +> not treating trans women as women

Or something like this. She's implying a lot of stuff into the post.

Note the "core" of the text is simply taunting that shithole full of bigots, and boils down to "your claims that nobody treats me like a woman are wrong, because chasers exist".

[EDIT: to be clear, I'm trying to interpret what she said; not condoning or condemning her, I'm in no position to do either. And what comes below is more of a comment on society being fucked up.]

It's like a fucking lasagna made of shit, you remove a layer of shit, then there's another layer of shit below, recursively. 4chan's "hurr durr you never be a woman", society refusing human rights (such as, you know... trans rights?), fetishisation (a type of objectivisation)...

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 22 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago) (9 children)

Here's the goomba fallacy in a nutshell:

It's basically two fallacies of composition together. I think Kairos is saying it applies in this case because of the greentext.

(Another name for the same fallacy is the "Muhammad Chang" fallacy. Basically: if the most common name is Muhammad, and the most common surname is Chang, then the most common full name should be Muhammad Chang.)

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 5 points 15 hours ago

I know this topic is popping up a lot, but: I managed to get gifts for my whole family! Gifts that I expect them to like, not just "meh... thanks for remembering me". (Including my cats, but they got their gifts earlier.)

Another thing that made me smile was thinking about the past. I had to sacrifice a lot of my dreams, but not what motivated them. And I feel like I'm considerably closer to be the person I want to be.

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 1 points 21 hours ago

I currently use Mint (with Cinnamon; formerly MATE, considering to go back), but I used LMDE a lot before. This was LMDE 1 times, though, the distro fancied itself as a rolling distro. Might be interesting to see if Debusine makes it more popular, even without it LMDE was already damn great.

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 1 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago)

Cat hair. Cat hair everywhere. Including my sheets. Kika, I love you dearly, but let me brush you you grumpy fool!

Siegfrieda in the meantime is having the time of her life with the Christmas decoration. Including the lights on her Panzer and the bell and festoon on Kika's Chat-eau.

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 2 points 21 hours ago (2 children)

Leo made me miss Lana, my childhood poodle. She was roughly the same size and colour as him. Extremely smart, loyal and kind to the point she nursed a kitten.

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 2 points 1 day ago

Sorry, I can't hear what you said, because of all that *CLANK CLANK CLANK* noise you're making. Clanker~

[–] lvxferre@mander.xyz 6 points 1 day ago

This makes me want to play Primal Rage. BRB.

 

The spiders in question are Stegodyphus dumicola aka African social spiders.

I couldn't find a link to the video in the article itself so here it is. Discretion is advised - it is fascinating and horrifying at the same time.

 

Interesting short text about the history of Finnish, focusing mostly on its interaction with nearby Germanic languages.

 

Archive link: https://archive.is/20240503184140/https://www.science.org/content/article/human-speech-may-have-universal-transmission-rate-39-bits-second

Interesting excerpt:

De Boer agrees that our brains are the bottleneck. But, he says, instead of being limited by how quickly we can process information by listening, we're likely limited by how quickly we can gather our thoughts. That's because, he says, the average person can listen to audio recordings sped up to about 120%—and still have no problems with comprehension. "It really seems that the bottleneck is in putting the ideas together."

Ah, here's a link to the paper!

 

I regret not posting it before Canvas 2025, but hopefully it'll be useful for people playing it in 2026. All letters are 5 pixels tall, and most 3 pixels wide (some 4, a few 5). I've also included a few Cyrillic letters and the digits.

I tried to make it even smaller, but it gets really funky.

 

Interesting video on the stone that allowed researchers to decipher Ancient Egyptian. Check comments for a few notes.

 

Additional links with press coverage: ArcheologyMag, Oxford.

For context:

The Huns were nomadic people from Central Eurasia; known for displacing a bunch of Iranian (e.g. Alans) and and Germanic (e.g. Goths, Suebians etc.) speakers, that ultimately invaded the Roman Empire. They reached the Volga around 370 CE, and one of their leaders (Attila) is specially famous. Often believed to be a Turkic people, but if the study is correct they're from a completely different language family instead.

The Xiōng-Nú are mentioned by Chinese sources as one of the "Five Barbarians" (i.e. non-Han people). They would've lived in Central Eurasia between 300 BCE and 100 CE or so, and eventually became Han tributaries.

The Paleo-Siberian language in question would be an older form of Arin, a Yeniseian language. Yup, that same family believed by some to have relatives in the Americas.

 
 

For further info, if anyone is interested, Stephen Bax claimed a decade ago to partially decode the manuscript; here's a video with his reasoning, as well as the paper he released. Sadly Bax passed away in 2017 (may he rest in peace), so the work was left incomplete.

 

The main idea behind this language is to become evolutionary food for other languages of my conworld. As such I'll probably never flesh it out completely, only the necessary to make its descendants feel a bit more natural.

Constructive criticism is welcome.

Context and basic info

The conworld I'm building has three classical languages, spoken 2~3 millenniums before the conworld present: Old Sirtki, Classical Tarune, and Mäkşna. And scholars in the conworld present are reconstructing their common ancestor, that they call "Proto-Sitama".

What I'm sharing here, however is none of their fancy reconstructions. It's the phonology of the language as it was spoken 7 millenniums before the conworld present. Its native name was /kʲær.mi.'zɑst/, or roughly "what we speak"; the language itself had no written version but it'll be romanised here as ⟨Cjermizást⟩.

Its native speakers were a semi-nomadic people, who lived mostly of livestock herding. They'd stay in a region with their herds, collect local fruits and vegetables, and then migrate for more suitable pasture as their animals required.

It was quite a departure from the lifestyle of their star travelling ancestors, who were born in a highly industrialised society in another planet.

Grammar tidbits

Grammar-wise, Cjermizást was heavily agglutinative, with an absolutive-ergative alignment and Suffixaufnahme. So typically you'd see few long polymorphemic words per sentence. Those morphemes don't always "stack" nicely together, so you often see phonemes being elided, mutated, or added to the word.

Consonants

Manner \ Set Hard Soft
Nasals /m n/ /mʲ ɲ/
Voiceless stop /p t k/ /pʲ tʲ kʲ/
Voiced stop /b d g/ /bʲ dʲ gʲ/
Voiceless fric. /ɸ s x/ /fʲ ʃ ç/
Voiced fric. /w z ɣ/ /vʲ ʒ j/
Liquids /l r/ /ʎ rʲ/

Cjermizást features a contrast between "soft" and "hard" consonants. "Soft" consonants are palatalised, palatal, or post-alveolar; "hard" consonants cannot have any of those features. Both sets are phonemic, and all those consonants can surface outside clusters.

Palatalised consonants spawn a really short [j], that can be distinguished from true /j/ by length.

Although /j/ and /w/ are phonetically approximants, the language's phonology handles them as fricatives, being paired with /ɣ/ and /vʲ/ respectively.

/r rʲ/ surface as trills or taps, in free variation. The trills are more typical in simple onsets, while the taps in complex onsets and coda.

The contrast between /m n/ is neutralised when preceding another consonant in the same word, since both can surface as [m n ŋ]; ditto for /mʲ nʲ/ surfacing as [mʲ ɱʲ ɲ].

Coda /g/ can also surface as [ŋ], but only in word final position; as such, it doesn't merge with the above.

Liquids clustered with voiceless fricatives and/or stops have voiceless allophones.

Vowels

Proto-Sitama's vowel system is a simple square: /æ i ɒ u/. They have a wide range of allophones, with three situations being noteworthy:

  • /ɒ u/ are typically fronted to [Œ ʉ] after a soft consonant
  • /æ i/ are backed to [ɐ ɪ] after a hard velar
  • unstressed vowels are slightly centralised

Accent

Accent surfaces as stress, and it's dictated by the following rules:

  1. Some suffixes have an intrinsic stress. If the word has 1+ of those, then assign the primary stress to the last one. Else, assign it to the last syllable of the root.
  2. If the primary stress fell on the 5th/7th/9th/etc.-to-last syllable, move it to the 3rd-to-last
  3. If the primary stress fell on the 4th/6th/8th/etc.-to-last syllable, move it to the 2nd-to-last.
  4. Every two syllables, counting from the one with the primary stress, add a secondary stress.

Phonotactics

Max syllable is CCVCC, with the following restrictions:

  • complex onset: [stop] + [liquid]; e.g. /pl/ is a valid onset, */pw/ isn't
  • complex coda: [liquid or nasal] + [stop or fricative]; e.g. /nz/ is a valid coda, */dz/ isn't

If morphology would create a syllable violating such structure, an epenthetic /i/ dissolves the cluster.

Consonant clusters cannot mix hard and soft consonants. When such a mix would be required by the morphology, the last consonant dictates if the whole cluster should be soft or hard, and other consonants are mutated into their counterparts from the other set. For example, */lpʲ/ and */ʃp/ would be mutated to /ʎpʲ/ and /sp/.

Stops and fricatives clustered together cannot mix voice. Similar to the above, the last consonant of the cluster dictates the voicing of the rest; e.g. */dk/ and */pz/ would be converted into /tk/ and /bz/ respectively.

Gemination is not allowed, and two identical consonants next to each other are simplified into a singleton. Nasal consonants are also forbidden from appearing next to each other, although a cluster like /nt.m/ would be still valid.

Word-internal hiatuses are dissolved with an epenthetic /z/. Between words most speakers use a non-phonemic [ʔ], but some use [z] even in word boundaries.

Romanisation

As mentioned at the start, the people who spoke Cjermizást didn't write their own language. As such the romanisation here is solely a convenience.

  • /m n p t b d g s x w z l r/ are romanised as in IPA
  • /k ɸ ɣ/ are romanised ⟨c f y⟩
  • "soft" consonants are romanised as their "hard" counterparts, plus ⟨j⟩
  • ⟨j⟩ is omitted inside clusters; e.g. /pʲʎ/ is romanised as ⟨plj⟩, not as *⟨pjlj⟩
  • /æ i ɒ u/ are ⟨e i a u⟩
 
 

Use this thread to ask questions or share trivia, if you don't want to create a new thread for that.

[Note: the purpose of this thread is to promote activity, not to concentrate it. So if you'd still rather post a new thread, by all means - go for it!]

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