What is the newest installment of 'Random Thoughts' on Physics Forums?

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SUMMARY

The forum discussion revolves around the latest installment of the "Random Thoughts" thread on Physics Forums, highlighting various topics including critiques of documentary programming on the History Channel and National Geographic's recent ownership change. Participants express concerns about the quality of content in documentaries and share personal anecdotes, such as a humorous incident involving a clogged kitchen extractor fan. The conversation also touches on mathematical discussions regarding prime numbers and cultural observations about societal norms and language use.

PREREQUISITES
  • Familiarity with documentary programming and its impact on public knowledge.
  • Basic understanding of prime numbers and mathematical proofs.
  • Awareness of cultural commentary and societal norms.
  • Knowledge of language variations and their implications in communication.
NEXT STEPS
  • Explore the impact of media ownership on documentary content quality.
  • Research advanced mathematical concepts related to prime numbers.
  • Investigate cultural differences in language use and societal expectations.
  • Learn about the effects of solar irradiation in different geographical locations.
USEFUL FOR

This discussion is beneficial for media analysts, educators in mathematics, cultural commentators, and anyone interested in the intersection of media, society, and education.

  • #2,251
jim hardy said:
It was a dreadful pun. Sorry.

My bread and butter...
 
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  • #2,252
jim hardy said:
Got me wondering "What's a Nether?" as in Low Lying Lands , perhaps ?
Yes, neder (Dutch) = nieder (German) = nidar (comparative, old high German) as in Niederlande (Netherlands) and Niedersachsen (Lower Saxony) and many common names of settlements. At those places has been more water which made them attractive for agriculture. It is still present in English as in be-neath and under-neath.

Lands doesn't need an explanantion.
 
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  • #2,253
Roman Witold Ingarden (/ˈroʊmən inˈɡɑːrdən/; February 5, 1893 – June 14, 1970) was a Polish philosopher who worked in phenomenology, ontology and aesthetics.

19441762_10212325478405446_1082217004299303501_o.jpg


(Roman is quite a common first name in Poland, Ingarden is not)
 
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  • #2,254
fresh_42 said:
... = nidar (comparative, old high German) as in Niederlande (Netherlands) and Niedersachsen (Lower Saxony) and many common names of settlements.
...
I think it's kind of weird, that "nadir" and "nidar" mean almost the same thing, and have supposedly independent origins.

nieder
from Old High German nidar "down"
from Proto-Germanic niþer
From Proto-Indo-European niter.
Compare Sanskrit nitarām, “down, downwards”​

nadir, "lowest point, opposite of zenith"
From Medieval Latin nadir
from Arabic (naẓīr as-samt), composed of (naẓīr, “counterpart, corresponding to”) and (as-samt, “the zenith”)​

ref[wiktionary]​

It's almost as if some travelers learned a new word while traveling through a foreign land, and then couldn't remember the exact pronunciation.

Traveler #1; "What did that guy say the word for 'down' was?"
Traveler #2; "Nadir, nidar. I can't remember. Pick one."
Traveler #1; "Ok. hmmmm... Should we tell anyone where we learned it?"
Traveler #2; "Of course not!"​

ps. My mom was born in Niederschlesien.

ref[mom]
 
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  • #2,255
OmCheeto said:
It's almost as if some travelers learned a new word while traveling through a foreign land, and then couldn't remember the exact pronunciation.
Yes, but if you know how nidar is pronounced (with "ee" and not "i"), then the coupling to beneath will answer the ambiguity. Almost identical. (O.k. you also would have to have learned that the "th" was often a former "d","t"or "s": that = das, thanks = danke, think = denken, and so on.)
 
  • #2,256
OmCheeto said:
I think it's kind of weird, that "nadir" and "nidar" mean almost the same thing, and have supposedly independent origins.

Why independent? It can be of an Indo-European origin and as such be common to most European languages. Many such words.
 
  • #2,257
fresh_42 said:
Yes, but if you know how nidar is pronounced (with "ee" and not "i"), then the coupling to beneath will answer the ambiguity. Almost identical. (O.k. you also would have to have learned that the "th" was often a former "d","t"or "s": that = das, thanks = danke, think = denken, and so on.)
Perhaps my confusion is based on the fact that I've been pronouncing "nadir" incorrectly for about 40 years.
I thought it was "Naw-dear", but according to my googlings it's "Knee-der".

This is what you get by learning things from books.
 
  • #2,258
OmCheeto said:
Perhaps my confusion is based on the fact that I've been pronouncing "nadir" incorrectly for about 40 years.
I thought it was "Naw-dear", but according to my googlings it's "Knee-der".

This is what you get by learning things from books.
Nieder = nidar is "knee-der", not nadir (from arabic nazir) which is (incorrectly) pronounced "neighdeer" and would correctly be pronounced with the "a" as the "u" in nut, "n-u-dir" so to say, but not as in "nuke"!
 
  • #2,259
fresh_42 said:
Nieder = nidar is "knee-der", not nadir (from arabic nazir) which is (incorrectly) pronounced "neighdeer" and would correctly be pronounced with the "a" as the "u" in nut, "n-u-dir" so to say, but not as in "nuke"!

Oh dear. I hope we don't go "zer" again.

Und der vas ein great schpitzen und fightens um fiziks phorums one tag... :biggrin:
 
  • #2,260
OmCheeto said:
This is what you get by learning things from books.

This is what you get by using a language with an inconsistent spelling.
 
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  • #2,261
Borek said:
This is what you get by using a language with an inconsistent spelling.
My favorite example is from George Bernard Shaw:
ghot=fish: "gh" as in laugh, "o" as in women and "t" as in nation: fish.
 
  • #2,262
Borek said:
This is what you get by using a language with an inconsistent spelling.
I blame it on all these stinkin' immigrants.
Where on Earth did we all come from?
 
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  • #2,263
Finnish women give the best Lapp dances...
 
  • #2,264
WWGD said:
Finnish women give the best Lapp dances...
Reminds me of a "Hägar the Horrible" strip:

Hägar: Bulgarian women are the best. And they can cook <sigh>
Lucky Eddie: Yes, but you don't understand them.
Hägar: Yes, that adds up to it.

<run, duck and cover ...>
 
  • #2,265
It's kind of rude to cut through someone else's work area. It's extra rude to do that while wearing tons of perfume. :oldruck:
 
  • #2,266
OmCheeto said:
Where on Earth

::bleep bloop gzzrd plkkkk::

That means "speak for yourself, buddy!"
 
  • #2,267
This security guy sees me every day and acknowledges me with a 'hi' , yet every single day asks me for my ID, the same ID he has seen almost daily for years. Covering his ..tracks? I mean, he may ask me for my ID twice the same day when I go out and come back.
 
  • #2,268
WWGD said:
This security guy sees me every day and acknowledges me with a 'hi' , yet every single day asks me for my ID, the same ID he has seen almost daily for years. Covering his ..tracks? I mean, he may ask me for my ID twice the same day when I go out and come back.
I've once been told, that this typical American behavior is a direct consequence of suing everybody on everything all the time and if something un- or even foreseeable happened, in order to be able to claim to have strictly followed the rules and protocols just in case one has to in front of a court. The US is the only country in the world, in which I had to think it through before I would help someone hurt in an accident or by a crime. I probably won't because I can't be sure of the consequences. Strange, but this is the image you produce in the rest of the world (IMO).
 
  • #2,269
dkotschessaa said:
::bleep bloop gzzrd plkkkk::

That means "speak for yourself, buddy!"

Well, actually, according to my genealogical research, I'm 1/32 Dutch, 7/32 English, 5/8 German, and 1/8 Ukrainian*

--------------
*The Ukrainian part is based on a recent Russian acquaintances observation to her husband one day, that I looked Ukrainian, even though my ancestors claimed to be of "German" blood, and only living in Ukraine.

Yah right, great grandmama. The only thing you got from that cute Ukrainian milkman, was a bottle of milk. :oldeyes: :oldbiggrin:
 
  • #2,270
fresh_42 said:
I've once been told, that this typical American behavior is a direct consequence of suing everybody on everything all the time and if something un- or even foreseeable happened, in order to be able to claim to have strictly followed the rules and protocols just in case one has to in front of a court. The US is the only country in the world, in which I had to think it through before I would help someone hurt in an accident or by a crime. I probably won't because I can't be sure of the consequences. Strange, but this is the image you produce in the rest of the world (IMO).
Could be that, could also be fear of losing a job at the blue-collar level and lose health insurance when there is no national healthcare.
 
  • #2,271
fresh_42 said:
I've once been told, that this typical American behavior is a direct consequence of suing everybody on everything all the time and if something un- or even foreseeable happened, in order to be able to claim to have strictly followed the rules and protocols just in case one has to in front of a court. The US is the only country in the world, in which I had to think it through before I would help someone hurt in an accident or by a crime. I probably won't because I can't be sure of the consequences. Strange, but this is the image you produce in the rest of the world (IMO).

That is a hilarious observation, as I was just telling my siblings a story 3 days ago, about something very similar.
 
  • #2,272
WWGD said:
Could be that, could also be fear of losing a job at the blue-collar level and lose health insurance when there is no national healthcare.
After your reply, I thought about it and remembered that other security guards do not do the same as this guy, i.e., they do let me in. So I don't know what to conclude.
 
  • #2,273
There is this weird dude that begs in the street wearing a suit. He asks for $3-5 , upsacale from the standard $.25 to $1. He is sure better dressed than I am. Before he asked for money I though he would ask me for Grey Pupon.
 
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  • #2,274
What I find weird is the usage of the word connection. We, of course, use the same word, but in its translated form. The correct word would probably be connessione. Many English words have found their way into common language here. It's a plague. At some point in the second half of last century it became stylish to say stylish, possibly enhanced by advertisement agencies. Now the weird part is, that the English word connection is used for dubious relations among certain groups of people, not necessarily legal ones. So each time I use this word, it's a bit strange. Maybe I should try to establish connessione instead. But Mafia structures on the other hand ...
 
  • #2,275
fresh_42 said:
What I find weird is the usage of the word connection. We, of course, use the same word, but in its translated form. The correct word would probably be connessione. Many English words have found their way into common language here. It's a plague. At some point in the second half of last century it became stylish to say stylish, possibly enhanced by advertisement agencies.

So now on the language tree we have to draw a line back from English into German. It's going to get messy.

germaniclanguages.gif
 
  • #2,276
There is this site that is set up so that it attaches a 're' to the original title for every response/followup to it i.e., a thread with many replies will look like : title, re title,... ,re re re... title,..

There was this question originally titled Representation of Boolean algebra . After a few replies, the title looked like Re Re Re Re Re ..Re Representation ( Re- presentation) of Boolean algebra. At first I thought it was someone who stuttered in writing only..
 
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  • #2,277
Weird , I heard the word 'love' used to address people some 5 times in the last 2hrs. I had barely ever heard it ( or at least noticed it) used in this way. Ta-ta love.
 
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  • #2,278
WWGD said:
Weird , I had the word 'love' used to address people some 5 times within around 2hrs. I had barely ever heard it ( or at least noticed) used in this way. Ta-ta love.
Take care - your locale might have been infiltrated by MI8 spies intent on turning y'all into Cockneys. Make note of tell-tale signs around you: increased general dampness, instances of deadpan humour, people adding milk to their tea, life quality turning towards quiet desperation.
 
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  • #2,279
Bandersnatch said:
Take care - your locale might have been infiltrated by MI8 spies intent on turning y'all into Cockneys. Make note of tell-tale signs around you: increased general dampness, instances of deadpan humour, people adding milk to their tea, life quality turning towards quiet desperation.
Thanks for the heads-up. I will turn them away next I hear the term by offering them Lipton iced-tea, with a straw and plenty of Splenda, all in a Big Gulp plastic cup.
 
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  • #2,280
WWGD said:
Thanks for the heads-up. I will turn them away next I hear the term by offering them Lipton iced-tea, with a straw and plenty of Splenda, all in a Big Gulp plastic cup.
You should have recognized it long before this critical moment. Why in the world didn't make you wonder how they came in ...
 
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