Maybe that's not where the hyphen was supposed to go.Nanohedron wrote:Hyphenation? Maybe it's my Yank sensibilities (stop sniggering, you dirty people), but this pedant would think that "firsthand" is better than "first-hand". Or maybe not. I don't know.
Can't read it wrong
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Re: Can't read it wrong
International Traditional Music Society, Inc.
A non-profit 501c3 charity/educational public benefit corporation
Wooden Flute Obsession CDs (3 volumes, 6 discs, 7 hours, 120 players/tracks)
https://www.worldtrad.org
A non-profit 501c3 charity/educational public benefit corporation
Wooden Flute Obsession CDs (3 volumes, 6 discs, 7 hours, 120 players/tracks)
https://www.worldtrad.org
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Re: Can't read it wrong
It occurred to me.
"If you take music out of this world, you will have nothing but a ball of fire." - Balochi musician
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Re: Can't read it wrong
Is this a bit to close to the line? I hope not, but I read it wrong....
Video of Pope Francis trying to avoid having his ring kissed goes viral
Other papers were more cautious and used the phrase 'papal ring'.
Apologies if this is too strong for C&F, in which case please remove it.
Video of Pope Francis trying to avoid having his ring kissed goes viral
Other papers were more cautious and used the phrase 'papal ring'.
Apologies if this is too strong for C&F, in which case please remove it.
Phill
One does not equal two. Not even for very large values of one.
One does not equal two. Not even for very large values of one.
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Re: Can't read it wrong
Speaking only as a Yank, Right-of-the-Pond slang falls under the jurisdiction of circumlocution. It's like "pants": we don't snicker at that, either, so likewise to us the Pope's ring is merely a jeweled bauble, and nothing else. We do, however, snicker at "knock (someone) up". That's a whole different ballgame in the States.
But this is material better suited to the "Divided by a common language" thread.
But this is material better suited to the "Divided by a common language" thread.
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Re: Can't read it wrong
I think it was the concept of 'kissing his ring' which fooled me. Perhaps it is peculiar to the circles that I have moved in, but the expression is often used as a euphemism for 'currying favour', especially in a strictly hierarchical workplace.Nanohedron wrote:.....to us the Pope's ring is merely a jeweled bauble....
But maybe you are right, perhaps this is a regional language thing. Ah well, we are post-structural here.
Phill
One does not equal two. Not even for very large values of one.
One does not equal two. Not even for very large values of one.
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Re: Can't read it wrong
Correct me if I'm wrong, but during the previous snicker-fests we've had here over the phrase, I was under the distinct impression that in British slang, "ring" means the - ahem - nethermost aperture.DrPhill wrote:...the expression is often used as a euphemism for 'currying favour', especially in a strictly hierarchical workplace.
In that case, "currying favor" still applies, although we Yanks take a much less anatomically precise aim. Squeamishness, perhaps.
In reference to currying favor, a Yank could certainly speak of "kissing someone's ring"; the meaning would be clear, but the metaphor would be understood in terms of jewelry only, and never carry the sphincterological subtext it does in the UK. We just don't use the word that way. Should I say to fellow Yanks that I had to get my ring repaired, and should there happen to be an Anglophile among them, it would be boneheaded of him to make jokes about it, because then of course he would have go to the trouble of explaining his bon mot to those unacquainted with British parlance, which is going to be most of us. Sort of defeats the purpose of trying to be witty when you make people's eyes glaze over.
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Re: Can't read it wrong
That was the meaning of ring as I understood it. Perhaps the center of the general target that many aim for. One hundred and eighty!
Phill
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One does not equal two. Not even for very large values of one.
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Re: Can't read it wrong
Had to look that up. That's "bullseye" to you non-dart-playing Yanks out there.DrPhill wrote:One hundred and eighty!
But what on Middle Earth was Tolkien thinking when he titled his famous trilogy? Surely he must have known that his countrymen would roll on the floor laughing at its mere mention.
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Re: Can't read it wrong
I've never heard of anyone sniggering at The Lord of the Rings. I suspect it's that the plural renders it unambiguous.Nanohedron wrote:Had to look that up. That's "bullseye" to you non-dart-playing Yanks out there.DrPhill wrote:One hundred and eighty!
But what on Middle Earth was Tolkien thinking when he titled his famous trilogy? Surely he must have known that his countrymen would roll on the floor laughing at its mere mention.
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Re: Can't read it wrong
For me the word 'ring' in most contexts is smut-neutral. The only reason I picked up on this headline was its similarity to the phrase 'kissing his ring', which for me is smut-positive.
I never thought of Tolkien's theme as smut-positive, and I will now try to forget that suggestion.
I never thought of Tolkien's theme as smut-positive, and I will now try to forget that suggestion.
Phill
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Re: Can't read it wrong
Or it's like the difference between coriander and coriander.benhall.1 wrote:I've never heard of anyone sniggering at The Lord of the Rings. I suspect it's that the plural renders it unambiguous.
For me, the plural is immaterial; it just indicates that the Lord of the Rings rules them all, if you will. Sorry to be getting gnarly, but you see the possibilities.
Oh, have I created a monster? You're welcome.DrPhill wrote:I never thought of Tolkien's theme as smut-positive, and I will now try to forget that suggestion.
Honestly, though, I would think that of all demographics that ought to have gone there first, it should have been yours, not mine, wherein "ring" conventionally lacks any scatological meaning whatsoever. Frankly, I'm surprised. Call it a fresh perspective if you like, but you have to admit the working material's been there for you all along. Me, I'm just an outsider who happened to walk by.
This might be a perfect illustration of the Japanese adage, "Living at the base of a lighthouse" (tōdai moto kurashi); as the base is the darkest, so it is that it's hard to see what's closest to home.
Here's how I see it: When you give a word multiple meanings, all those meanings are available at once, to greater and lesser degrees of success. IOW, even though context determines conventional meaning, convention does not make meaning 100% ironclad (and my perspective should be proof enough of that). Of course this potential for ambiguity is one of the bases on which we build jokes.
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Re: Can't read it wrong
Yes, I still don't get what possible confusion there could be there.Nanohedron wrote:Or it's like the difference between coriander and coriander.benhall.1 wrote:I've never heard of anyone sniggering at The Lord of the Rings. I suspect it's that the plural renders it unambiguous.
It doesn't work like that for me. I don't think it works like that at all over here. There has to be a real contextual ambiguity - otherwise, it just feels forced, to us. So, the Pope objecting to someone "kissing his ring" has the contextual ambiguity built in, in the whole phrase; whereas "Lord of the Rings" can only have one meaning. It makes no difference that the singular of one of those words, in a completely different context, has a different meaning. It's too much of a stretch.Nanohedron wrote:Here's how I see it: When you give a word multiple meanings, all those meanings are available at once, to greater and lesser degrees of success. IOW, even though context determines conventional meaning, convention does not make meaning 100% ironclad (and my perspective should be proof enough of that). This potential for ambiguity is one of the bases on which we build jokes.
I do have another example, from Oklahoma, no less, that has always amused me, at least. Gertie has just got engaged, and excitedly says to her pals, "Have you seen my ring, girls?"
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Re: Can't read it wrong
But the ambiguity wouldn't be there if you didn't assign such a meaning to the word in the first place, you see. For me, once a meaning is assigned, it is not necessarily bound by convention. Poets understand this.benhall.1 wrote:So, the Pope objecting to someone "kissing his ring" has the contextual ambiguity built in, in the whole phrase; whereas "Lord of the Rings" can only have one meaning. It makes no difference that the singular of one of those words, in a completely different context, has a different meaning. It's too much of a stretch.
But here there was no aforementioned kissing. So how does this differ substantially from from me getting a laugh out of turning The Lord of the Rings on its head? I see the ambiguity built in no matter where you look. Your slang usage is one that begs to be played with, so if we're to speak of forced, it strikes me as far more of a stretch that Gertie would offer a look at her main exit, and less so that the "Lord of the Rings" - whoever that might be - would have a stable of 'em at his disposal, let us characterize it. There are websites and movies in that vein, you know (or so one hears ). In fact, if some British S&M entrepreneur hasn't yet appropriated the book title tongue-in-cheek for one of those, I think it's a missed opportunity!benhall.1 wrote:I do have another example, from Oklahoma, no less, that has always amused me, at least. Gertie has just got engaged, and excitedly says to her pals, "Have you seen my ring, girls?"
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Re: Can't read it wrong
That's how it feels for me as well, or even more so, as a non-native English speaker. It'll just be like Beavis and Butthead otherwise ("hehe he said <insert anything>")benhall.1 wrote:It doesn't work like that for me. I don't think it works like that at all over here. There has to be a real contextual ambiguity - otherwise, it just feels forced, to us. [..]Nanohedron wrote:Here's how I see it: When you give a word multiple meanings, all those meanings are available at once, to greater and lesser degrees of success. IOW, even though context determines conventional meaning, convention does not make meaning 100% ironclad (and my perspective should be proof enough of that). This potential for ambiguity is one of the bases on which we build jokes.
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Re: Can't read it wrong
Sorry, Tor; since you quote both Ben and me, I'm not sure which way you mean, nor does the reference to Beavis and Butthead help, as your tastes in the matter are not really made clear. But I'll go out on a limb and guess you were siding with Ben...Tor wrote:That's how it feels for me as well, or even more so, as a non-native English speaker. It'll just be like Beavis and Butthead otherwise ("hehe he said <insert anything>")benhall.1 wrote:It doesn't work like that for me. I don't think it works like that at all over here. There has to be a real contextual ambiguity - otherwise, it just feels forced, to us. [..]Nanohedron wrote:Here's how I see it: When you give a word multiple meanings, all those meanings are available at once, to greater and lesser degrees of success. IOW, even though context determines conventional meaning, convention does not make meaning 100% ironclad (and my perspective should be proof enough of that). This potential for ambiguity is one of the bases on which we build jokes.
FWIW, I was never a fan of the Beavis and Butthead schtick. For me there's a difference between indulging in low wit and the callow habit of seeking out the smut in anything, as in the case of Messrs. B & B. But Ben is amused by Gertie's ring, whereas the joke falls flat for me; I don't know whether this is cultural or personal. I need other contexts for it to work to my satisfaction, and LotR does it nicely, precisely because violating such a beloved institution is so awful.
"If you take music out of this world, you will have nothing but a ball of fire." - Balochi musician