elrechazado
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Etymology is about word origins, not "true meanings".The true mean doesn't but that doesn't keep people from developing slang with a particular word. That's why Etymology is a study.
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Etymology is about word origins, not "true meanings".The true mean doesn't but that doesn't keep people from developing slang with a particular word. That's why Etymology is a study.
Connotation and denotation obviously.
It is a thread backfire. One of the best so far this year.
It kind of does when words don't have a set and objective meaning, though. And if we were to make that argument, then you'd be arguing that the entire world should be speaking some (agreed-upon?) protolanguage.The true mean doesn't but that doesn't keep people from developing slang with a particular word. That's why Etymology is a study.
Etymology is about word origins, not "true meanings".
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You're just being pedantic and you know it.No one has addressed my point earlier with logic. So if you're a US citizen, that makes you an American citizen? But who has ever became a citizen of a continent?
No one has addressed my point earlier with logic. So if you're a US citizen, that makes you an American citizen? But who has ever became a citizen of a continent?
. This revelation is going to bring continents to their LITERAL (yes you heard me) knees.No one has addressed my point earlier with logic. So if you're a US citizen, that makes you an American citizen? But who has ever became a citizen of a continent?
omg so true meaning couldn't be used as origin?
The true mean doesn't but that doesn't keep people from developing slang with a particular word. That's why Etymology is a study.
The true mean doesn't but that doesn't keep people from developing slang with a particular word. That's why Etymology is a study.
well America isn't a continent. North America and South America are
Wittgenstein would like a word with you buddy.
No one has addressed my point earlier with logic. So if you're a US citizen, that makes you an American citizen? But who has ever became a citizen of a continent?
What are you even talking about? Seriously.While we're at it, lets make a East America and a West America that' separate./
omg so true meaning couldn't be used as origin?
I see you are as well versed in geography as you are in language.While we're at it, lets make a East America and a West America that' separate./
No one has addressed my point earlier with logic. So if you're a US citizen, that makes you an American citizen? But who has ever became a citizen of a continent?
What are you even talking about? Seriously.
And this is the moment we all except this is a troll thread.While we're at it, lets make a East America and a West America that' separate./
no, but you're choosing to become a US citizen are you not? You can always just stay a permanent resident and then consider yourself dominican.
It's not just us referring to ourselves. People from around the world regularly refer to people from the United States as Americans, even the Brits when they're not calling us Yanks.
That depends on the connotation of "backfire" which differs from the original etymology, which clearly denotes a person's posterior set ablaze.It would need to have a point for this to be a thread backfire.
While we're at it, lets make a East America and a West America that are separate continents as well. America encompasses it all be it north or south and even the Islands.
While we're at it, lets make a East America and a West America that are separate continents as well. America encompasses it all be it north or south and even the Islands.
While we're at it, lets make a East America and a West America that are separate continents as well. America encompasses it all be it north or south and even the Islands.
Little known fact, in the south people don't consider themselves "yanks."lol American is far more common than Yank. I can't remember the last time I actually heard the word Yank.
That depends on the connotation of "backfire" which differs from the original etymology, which clearly denotes a person's posterior set ablaze.
I wish we could vote OP off the island.This should be reason enough to take away your thread creating privileges.
We're all Pangeans after all.nope. Continents, just like words and their meanings, are forever unchanging
The true mean doesn't but that doesn't keep people from developing slang with a particular word. That's why Etymology is a study.
While we're at it, lets make a East America and a West America that are separate continents as well. America encompasses it all be it north or south and even the Islands.
I'm guessing the "home schooled by crazies" system.Which education system is responsible for this.
Little known fact, in the south people don't consider themselves "yanks."
Not an American one because how could a continent teach a child?????Which education system is responsible for this.
Etymology is only one portion of the study of language. Semantic drift is another. And there are sores more.
You seem to be operating under the assumption that language is a science, wqith immutable laws. It's not (especially English). It's an art. An art that relies heavily on consensus. Gay no longer means happy. Awful no longer means full of awe. Even the words literally no longer means without exaggeration.
Language is changing all the time. As any linguist; they'll tell you this in excruciating detail.
I'd say "American" but since I don't know the OP's pedigree, I can't say for certain. Also I would probably need to say "USian" or something.Which education system is responsible for this.
Not an American one because how could a continent teach a child?????
Not an American one because how could a continent teach a child?????
Not an American one because how could a continent teach a child?????
I know plenty who take in personally, they get insulted lol.I always thought that it must be weird and funny for southern people who travel outside the US to be called Yanks.
No, you did not. You posted something from some random website. Would you like to see page H1303 from the Congressional Record for March 17, 1993?
Here is the entirety of Traficant's comments:
I've bolded the portion actually quoted by your link. The rest of your link has nothing to do with the Congressional Record, despite the creative use of quotation marks.
No one has addressed my point earlier with logic. So if you're a US citizen, that makes you an American citizen? But who has ever became a citizen of a continent?
Dude, you quoted congressional record 103rd, get the fuck out of here. What I posted was congressional record H1303.