engskills | Education

Telegram-канал engskills - Advanced English Skills

28487

#ielts #toefl #gre #english_vocabulary #english

Subscribe to a channel

Advanced English Skills

Idiom of the Day
go Galt

To reduce, restrict, or cease one's work or productivity as a means of social protest against increased marginal tax rates, limits on tax deductions, or the use of tax income for purposes one finds morally objectionable. Taken from the name John Galt, a character in Ayn Rand's novel Atlas Shrugged. Primarily heard in US, South Africa. Watch the video

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Are you free now?  I'll invite you to coffee.

I don't drink coffee, I only drink tea.

I have Chinese green tea, and I also have English black tea.  Which would you like?

Green tea, black tea; I'll drink either.

Students cannot recognise any characters in this lesson when asked about them the next week. For homework, the students write characters on a word doc and send it to me so I feel like they would input using pinyin.

5/ Students are mostly young office workers so their goals are for job prospects and travel in China. In recent years, a lot of Chinese companies have entered Southeast Asia (e.g., Tiktok and Temu) and the management are mostly Chinese instead of locals. So office workers are motivated to learn Chinese. But because of the time constraint, they prioritise speaking and listening as it sees a quicker return (probably because they do not have to spend much effort in learning pinyin). Since  grades do not matter, I cannot require much from them, and it mostly depends on how much effort (and time) they're willing to expend.

Next year I am planning to try teaching Chinese in offline centers (after I have graduated from Tsinghua) to see if it is a better alternative. But besides the "online restrictions", I feel like the student segment is also a big factor because office workers have too much on their plate (Also looking forward to approaching other student segments to test this hypothesis).

As I have repeatedly pointed out, students in Singapore (even those who are ethnic Chinese) are permitted to"write" their characters with computers and other digital devices.  There's a world of difference between writing hanzi by hand and using electronic tools.  The former is much, much harder — excruciatingly more difficult — than the latter.

If someone told you that you could become fully fluent in Mandarin without having to endure the agony of memorizing a single sinograph, much less to expend the months and years of toil required to master the Chinese writing system, would you do it?

P.S.:  For typical human beings, there's no "quick tip" for learning to write Chinese characters.  It's brute memorization the whole way.  You have to spend time, lots and lots of it.
Selected readings

* "'They're not learning how to write characters!'" (11/5/21) — with a long bibliography learning how to read and write hanzi
* "Fluent bilingualism in Singapore" (5/28/19)
* "Characterless Sinitic" (9/1/21) — directly pertinent to this post; with a lengthy, helpful bibliography

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Slang of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
egosurf

to search for one's own name on the Internet

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Idiom of the Day
glimmer of hope

A minute indication that something may improve, succeed, or turn out for the best in the end. Watch the video

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Funny Or Die (Youtube)
Drunk History vol. 6 (part 2) - Featuring John C. Reilly.


Subscribe now: https://www.youtube.com/c/funnyordie?sub_confirmation=1

Get more Funny Or Die
-------------------------------
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/funnyordie
Twitter: https://twitter.com/funnyordie
Instagram: http://instagram.com/funnyordie
TikTok: funnyordie" rel="nofollow">https://www.tiktok.com/@funnyordie

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Language Log
AI Hyperauthorship

This paper's content is interesting — Mirzadeh, Iman, Keivan Alizadeh, Hooman Shahrokhi, Oncel Tuzel, Samy Bengio, and Mehrdad Farajtabar. "GSM-Symbolic: Understanding the Limitations of Mathematical Reasoning in Large Language Models." arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.05229 (2024). In short, the authors found that small changes in Grade-School Mathematics benchmark questions, like substituting different numerical values or adding irrelevant clauses, caused all the tested LLMs to do worse. You should read the whole thing for the details, to which I'll return another time.
But what inspired this post is a feature of that paper's bibliography, in which many items have a large number of authors. For example, this reference lists 65 authors before "and et al." [sic]:

Abhimanyu Dubey, Abhinav Jauhri, Abhinav Pandey, Abhishek Kadian, Ahmad Al-Dahle, Aiesha Letman, Akhil Mathur, Alan Schelten, Amy Yang, Angela Fan, Anirudh Goyal, Anthony Hartshorn, Aobo Yang, Archi Mitra, Archie Sravankumar, Artem Korenev, Arthur Hinsvark, Arun Rao, Aston Zhang, Aurélien Rodriguez, Austen Gregerson, Ava Spataru, Baptiste Rozière, Bethany Biron, Binh Tang, Bobbie Chern, Charlotte Caucheteux, Chaya Nayak, Chloe Bi, Chris Marra, Chris McConnell, Christian Keller, Christophe Touret, Chunyang Wu, Corinne Wong, Cristian Canton Ferrer, Cyrus Nikolaidis, Damien Allonsius, Daniel Song, Danielle Pintz, Danny Livshits, David Esiobu, Dhruv Choudhary, Dhruv Mahajan, Diego Garcia-Olano, Diego Perino, Dieuwke Hupkes, Egor Lakomkin, Ehab AlBadawy, Elina Lobanova, Emily Dinan, Eric Michael Smith, Filip Radenovic, Frank Zhang, Gabriel Synnaeve, Gabrielle Lee, Georgia Lewis Anderson, Graeme Nail, Grégoire Mialon, Guan Pang, Guillem Cucurell, Hailey Nguyen, Hannah Korevaar, Hu Xu, Hugo Touvron, and et al. The llama 3 herd of models. CoRR, abs/2407.21783, 2024. doi: 10.48550/ARXIV.2407.21783. URL https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2407.21783.

Drilling down, that reference itself (The llama 3 herd of models") supplies its "contributor list" as an appendix:

http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/Llama3HerdTop.png

And the appendix splits the contributor list into two parts:

Llama 3 is the result of the work of a large number of people at Meta. Below, we list all core contributors (people who worked on Llama 3 for at least 2/3rd of the runtime of the project) and contributors (people who worked on Llama 3 for at least 1/5th of the runtime of the project). We list all contributors in alphabetical order of first name.

They then list 222 “Core Contributors” and 311 “Contributors”, for a total of 533 authors.

That's an order of magnitude smaller than (what I think is) the hyperauthorship record,  the 5,154 authors for "Combined Measurement of the Higgs Boson Mass in pp Collisions at s= 7 and 8 TeV with the ATLAS and CMS Experiments", Physical review letters 2015.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Phrasal Verb of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
take after

If you take after an older member of your family, you look like them or you have a similar personality to them.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Word of the Day
whimsy

Definition: (noun) The trait of acting unpredictably and more from whim or caprice than from reason or judgment.
Synonyms: arbitrariness, flightiness, whimsicality, capriciousness.
Usage: She was an odd girl, prone to sudden flights of whimsy, and she floated through life cocooned in her own fantastic world.
Discuss

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

.



In "Digging History" (3/22/14), a genealogical research website, there is an elaborate treatment of the surname Starbuck,

The surname  Starbuck is believed to have Scandinavian origins.  Norsemen (Vikings) came down to Scotland and Iceland between 800 and 1100 A.D. to plunder and terrorize.  After a time these Vikings intermarried with women of the villages and later plundered along the coast of England.

According to Alexander Starbuck's History of Nantucket, “the name Starbuck is Scandinavian and signifies a person of imposing appearance, great or grand bearing.” In the Patronomyca Britannica there is a Norse name which is pronounced “Stor bokki”.  "Stor" means great (body, soul and spirit) and "bokki" means great ;man (one with higher status and ranking).  The spelling variations for this surname include "Starbocki", "Starbock", "Stirbock," "Stalbrook", "Sturbock", Styrbuck", just to name a few.  One family historian suggested that "Starbuck" was finally settle[d] upon because it was easier to pronounce "Stahbuck".

I don't quite understand that last sentence.

In the end, it all boils down to Nantucket, whaling, clipper ships for the tea trade, and the sirens beguiling the sailors who traversed the seas to bring back the coffee, tea, and spices so much desired by Europeans and Americans.  Plus, you see how important it is when choosing a brand name to take into account the greater power of initial st- over c-, even though the following two letters of both names (Starbucks and Cargo House) are -ar.  As for the final -s, well…. Selected readings

* "Sitting in a Starbucks" (2/13/23)
* "Impromptu biscriptalism on a Starbucks cup" (9/8/17)
* "Biscriptalism on Starbucks cups, part 2" (9/16/17) — all the names on the cups, even the ones written in Chinese characters, end in
* "Star what?" (7/24/11)
* "Sorrbucks" (7/7/18)
* "All the lonely Starbucks lovers" (12/4/14)
* "Taylor Swift fanilect" (2/7/23)
* "Latte lingo: Raising a pint at Starbucks" (11/30/04)
* "Hoisting a couple of pints at Starbucks" (1/25/11)
* "Starbucks and Haidabucks" (3/20/04)

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Language Log
AI Overview: bits and pieces (German "ich" and Starbuck WA)

Things are happening very fast with this "experimental" internet search tool.  I realize that it is a new technology, so naturally there are bugs and kinks that have to be worked out, and I don't want to be too harsh with it.  Moreover, at a certain level, it is already serving a yeomanly purpose.

For instance, I asked Google, "should ich be capitalized in the middle of a sentence".  AI Overview (henceforth AIO) promptly stepped in and provided the following straightforward response:

No, ich should not be capitalized in the middle of a sentence in German. In German, the first-person singular pronoun ich (I) is only capitalized when it is the first word in a sentence.

In English, the singular “I” is always capitalized when used as a first-person personal pronoun. This includes all contractions of “I”, such as “I'm” and “I'll”.

Other things to capitalize in the middle of a sentence include…. [details omitted here]
I checked AIO's reply against the following conventional resource:

Here's another way that German differs from English: You don't capitalize the personal pronoun ich (I), unless it is the first word in the sentence.

From:

"German Capitalization Rules" | FluentU Language Learning (Dec 14, 2023)

Fair enough.  AIO quickly and serviceably answered my somewhat arcane question about German punctuation.

Nonetheless, AIO sometimes gets in the way.  For example, it is now firmly fixed at the top of a large proportion of the searches that I do.  Sometimes I specifically want to ask Wiktionary a question (e.g., part of speech; definition; etymology; etc.), but AIO will cannibalize Wiktionary and explicitly quote / summarize / paraphrase the latter, usually giving only the gist of Wiktionary's co-opted reply.  Some recent searches that yielded such AIO results:  "cathartic", "agonistes", and "inalienable".

Here's how Google, i.e., AIO, swiftly responded to the latter query:

According to Wiktionary, you can look up inalienable, inaliénable, or inalienability in the free dictionary.

Inalienable means something is impossible to take away or transfer, or that it is incapable of being surrendered. For example, you might describe someone's right to something as inalienable if it cannot be changed or taken away.

Here are some synonyms for inalienable: inviolable, absolute, unassailable, and inherent.

The word inalienable comes from the prefix "in-" and the word "alienable". The word "alienable" comes from the Latin verb aliēnāre, which means "to transfer by sale". The earliest known use of the word "inalienable" was in 1647 by historian and political writer James Howell.

The Declaration of Independence used the word "unalienable" to describe life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

Not bad, randomly informative, but — in light of my specific query directed to Wiktionary — the first paragraph is tantamount to obtuseness.

Incidentally, as AIO was preparing its response, instead of the frantic whirling and twirling of previous days, now it just informs me politely that it is "generating", which I thought was neat, especially considering the fact that it is all done in a fraction of a second.

Now I really wanted to put AIO's quality and trustworthiness to the test.  I decided to give it something hard and substantial to gnaw on.

In my romp through the northwest, I stumbled upon the tiny town of Starbuck, Washington (46°31′7″N 118°7′36W).  Wouldn't you know it, the snaky, sneaky Snake River runs nearby!
"Ah hah!", I thought, "perhaps I know something that AIO doesn't!"

I was in Seattle around the time when Starbucks was founded (March 30, 1971 at Pike Place Market.  Consequently, I knew quite a bit about the legend and lore of this little company that would one day become a global c[...]

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Language Log
Ben Zimmer on Keywords

Christine Oh, "Wolf Humanities Center hosts linguist, columnist Ben Zimmer for lecture on 'keywords'", The Daily Pennsylvanian 10/11/2024:

The Wolf Humanities Center hosted Wall Street Journal language columnist Ben Zimmer at the ARCH building for a talk titled “Lexical Sleuthing in the Digital Age: On the Trail of Keywords and their Cultural Worlds” on Oct. 9.

Zimmer — who was a research associate at Penn’s former Institute for Research in Cognitive Science from 2005 to 2006 — gave a presentation on lexicology and linguistics followed by a question and answer session with roughly 40 attendees. The event drew a crowd of linguists and language enthusiasts from Penn's campus and the Philadelphia area.
Zimmer’s talk examined the origins of keywords, which he defined as “broad categorical terms with contested meanings.” He emphasized that keywords often become politically charged, and he takes cues to write about ones that are repeated in the news.

“Words in our language are constantly open to reinterpretation and re-signification,” Zimmer said.

Zimmer described his approach to writing language columns as “a form of narrative lexicography, telling stories about words from their origins to how they moved through various cultural, social, and political worlds.”

Throughout the event, Zimmer referenced the novel “Keywords” by Welsh writer Raymond Williams, which he cited as being particularly influential in his career with its synthesis of lexicology, linguistics, and culture. […]

Zimmer’s lecture was an installment in the Wolf Humanities Center’s “Forum on Keywords” program. Led by South Asia Studies professor Lisa Mitchell, the forum aims to explore the interdisciplinary study of mobile concepts and their evolving meanings across time, languages, and contexts. The center combines public events and seminars to investigate how keywords reflect historical forces, such as migration, colonization, and resistance, and consider the development of new lexicons in response to changing identities and fields of knowledge.

The Zoom version of Ben's talk was recorded, and I'll post a link to the recording if I can. The talk's abstract:

When Raymond Williams published Keywords in 1976, his reflections on culturally significant words were largely informed by entries in the Oxford English Dictionary. Indeed, an early inspiration for Williams came from looking up the OED entry for culture and seeing how the word's usage shifted over time. Nowadays, lexical sleuths who seek to understand a word's historical trajectory can take advantage of vast digital databases of books and newspapers, as well as other online troves of language use. We can now more fully appreciate the social, cultural, and political pathways of a keyword by following the trail of "text-artifacts" that it leaves behind.

The Keyword Forum's focus resonates with some keyword-adjacent aspects of Ben's academic background in anthropological linguistics. He spent a couple of years doing fieldwork in Java, with a special focus on "the methods by which Sundanese Muslims read, recite, translate, and interpret Qur'ânic Arabic", as reported in his 2000 paper "Al-'Arābīyah and Basa Sunda: Ideologies of Translation and Interpretation among the Muslim of West Java":

[T]he doctrine of Qur'ânic untranslatability raises new questions for scholars of Islamic discourse in non-Arab lands. First, to what extent does the localization and interpretation of Arabic allow the language of the Qur'ân to become "domesticated," and to what extent does it remain distant? Second, how have local interpretive methods of metalinguistic "glossing" been employed to explicate Qur'ânic Arabic word-by-word, phrase-by-phrase, or ayat-by-ayat? And lastly, how has this exegetic power been socially distributed in local hierarchies at different historical junctures and in different cultural milieux?

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Slang of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
babe

a good-looking young woman

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Idiom of the Day
breach of etiquette

A violation of established social norms or expectations, especially as relates to polite society or specific professions. Watch the video

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Funny Or Die (Youtube)
Thomas Edison was an asshole (Inside The FOD Vault Episode 2)


Subscribe now: https://www.youtube.com/c/funnyordie?sub_confirmation=1

Get more Funny Or Die
-------------------------------
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/funnyordie
Twitter: https://twitter.com/funnyordie
Instagram: http://instagram.com/funnyordie
TikTok: funnyordie" rel="nofollow">https://www.tiktok.com/@funnyordie

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

l Prize in Physics.  That tells you something about where we're headed. Selected readings

* "The unreasonable hilarity of recurrent neural networks" (5/21/17)
* "Generative linguistics and neural networks at 60" (11/13/17)
* "AI encroachments" (7/21/23) Appendix

Here, on "Sahaptin language (Name)", is a good example of Wikipedia showing its stuff (with plenty of footnotes [omitted from this post]).

Sahaptin is typically known as Ichiskiin in its various dialects. In the Yakama dialect, it is called Ichishkíin Sɨ́nwit, spelled variously Ichishkíin, Íchishkin, Íchishkink, or Chishkíin. In the Umatilla dialect, it is called Čiškíin or Ičiškíin.

The words Sahaptin, Shahaptin, and Sahaptian are derived from the Columbia-Moses name for the Nez Perce, sħáptənəxʷ. Cognates appear in other Interior Salishan languages, such as Okanagan sʕaptnx 'Nez Perce' or Spokane saʕáptni 'Nez Perce', indictating the ancient age of the ethnonym. The name Sahaptin has also been spelled "Shahaptin", "Sahapten", "Shahaptian", and "Shawpatin".

The first usage of the word "Sahaptin" dates to 1811, in the journal of fur trader David Thompson, who wrote of the "Chief of all the Shawpatin Tribes", referring to the Nez Perce. At the time, "Sahaptin" (and variants) was used to refer to the Nez Perce, while "Walla Walla" was used to refer to the Sahaptin-speaking peoples. Alexander Ross visited a large camp on the Walla Walla River later that year, identifying "the Walla-Wallas, the Shaw Haptens, and the Cajouses". In 1844, Horatio Hale wrote of the "Sahaptin or Nez-Perces" language and the "Walawala" language. At the same time, the Snake River was also sometimes called the Sahaptin River, because it led from the Columbia River to the country of the Nez Perce.

In the 1960s, the name "Sahaptin" was used by linguists, but it was rare for Sahaptin speakers to even be aware of the term. Most speakers used the terms Ichishkínk (Yakama) or Chishkín (Walla Walla and Umatilla), which mean literally "in this way/manner"

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Word of the Day
cogitation

Definition: (noun) Thoughtful consideration; meditation.
Synonyms: study.
Usage: After much cogitation he rejected the offer, deciding instead to pursue his dream of becoming an artist.
Discuss

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Language Log
Southeast Asians learning Mandarin

Anh Yeo is a Chinese from Vietnam.  Currently she is studying in a graduate program of Chinese language and literature at Tsinghua University.  To earn pocket money, she has taken up a job teaching Southeast Asia office workers Mandarin online.  In response to this post "Aborted character simplification in the mid-1930s" (10/5/24), which had much to do with character simplification (or not) in Singapore, she wrote to me as follows:

I had two lessons tonight teaching Pinyin. Southeast Asians learn Pinyin fast (similar alphabet + existence of tones in Thai and Vietnamese), but because of that students are reliant on Pinyin and cannot remember characters! I have students learning for 3-4 months and still have to read off Pinyin (recognizing fewer than 50 characters). I always thought the coexistence of characters and Latin alphabet in Mandarin interesting!
What Anh said struck my fancy, and I wanted to learn more about her teaching experience, so I asked her these questions:

1. Are your students supposed to learn characters?
2. Do they try to learn characters?  Just slow and difficult for them to do so?
3. Is their oral proficiency in Mandarin pretty good?
4. Do they do any reading and writing in Pinyin?
5. What is their ultimate goal in learning Mandarin?  To use it in their office work?

Anh replied:

1/ The students are supposed to learn characters. The textbook I use to teach them is from the Princeton Language Program (which I also learned from 10 years ago), so the curriculum does stress learning characters (for all skillsets — reading, writing, listening, speaking). I do teach them characters, but given that the classes are online, it is hard to handwrite the characters for them to see, so I mostly type the characters using Pinyin. I feel like the biggest bottleneck is the way I input the characters so the students can see what they look like. Because all my classes are online, I cannot handwrite, so the students cannot remember the order of the strokes and prefer using pinyin to input characters for homework.

2/ My beginner students are mostly office workers (21 yo – 40 yo): busy and hardly have the time to handwrite the characters after class to practice/memorise. All of them asked for "quick tips" but most of them cannot commit the time and effort. Progress is very slow since it takes ~30 minutes every lesson for students to get familiar with the characters from the previous lesson again. Because the textbook has pinyin, they would read the pinyin instead of characters, so after 3 months, most of them are familiar with the "sound" but not the character.

3/ Their oral proficiency in Mandarin is very good. Because they are familiar with the concept of tones in their mother tongue, they can differentiate tones very well (and the pinyin alphabet is also very similar with the Vietnamese alphabet, most students only need 2-3 lessons to be able to pronounce Pinyin and tones).

4/ I feel like they do all of their reading and writing in Pinyin. Because the slides used in class have pinyin, they will mostly read the pinyin instead of the characters. I have tried to not include pinyin, but got complaints that without pinyin, group classes waste too much time in reading because students cannot recognise characters just yet.  The slides I teach from have pinyin above all the characters (rearranged by WordPress to be in parentheses following each character),  thus:

A:我(wǒ)今天(jīntiān)没有(méiyǒu)课(kè),不(bù)忙(máng)。你(nǐ)现在(xiànzài)有(yǒu)空(kōng)吗(ma)?我(wǒ)请(qǐng)你(nǐ)喝(hē)咖啡(kāfēi)。

B:我(wǒ)不(bù)喝(hē)咖啡(kāfēi),只(zhī)喝(hē)茶(chá)。

A:我(wǒ)有(yǒu)中国(zhōngguó)绿(lǜ)茶(chá),也(yě)有(yǒu)英国(yīngguó)红(hóng)茶(chá),你(nǐ)喝(hē)什么(shénme)茶(chá)?

B:红(hóng)茶(chá)、绿(lǜ)茶(chá),我(wǒ)都(dōu)喝(hē)。

English translation added by VHM:

I don't have any classes today.  I'm not busy.  [...]

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Phrasal Verb of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
hold down

to stop something from rising by pressing down on it or putting a heavy object on it

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Word of the Day
ostensible

Definition: (adjective) Appearing as such but not necessarily so.
Synonyms: seeming, apparent.
Usage: The ostensible reason of his appearance was the discovery, the very night before, of a "perfect little house."
Discuss

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Language Log
"Deppenapostrophe": Is English guilty after all?

Andreas Stolcke responds to "English is innocent" (10/10/2024):

The historical facts cited are correct, but they don't explain why the frequency of 's rose in the post-WW2 period, and again after about 2005 (= the internet), as indicated by the Google Ngram plot below.

The bump in the post-war era (after 1957) could be an effect of the Allied occupation (delayed by the book publishing process), which was reversed by the mid-1990s, and then encouraged again by the internet half a century later.

So my bet is still on an English (language) influence.

http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/GoogleDeppen1.png
However, it is true that use of genitive apostrophes was once much more pervasive, and dropped precipitously after around 1890, which is when Duden published his dictionary, which attained prescriptive (official) status in 1902. The mid-20th-century recovery was small in comparison to the earlier levels. All of this is nicely illustrated by Google Ngrams over the full time period:

http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/GoogleDeppen2.png

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Slang of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
intro

introduction

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Idiom of the Day
hit a brick wall

To come up against an immovable or insurmountable difficulty or obstacle. Watch the video

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Learn English Through Football Podcast: 2024-25: Spursy

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

ommercial giant.  For example, I was familiar with the original logo, which some squeamish folks were scandalized by: https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSi5DTaydtXhHlUAVgUpMHTpsmKTYZI6dmCBQ&s Miriam Robbins Dexter and I did a deep dive into the history and prehistory of this figure in Sacred Display: Divine and Magical Female Figures of Eurasia (Cambria, 2010).
One thing I did not know about Starbucks was the origin of its name.  Maybe, just maybe, the young Washington entrepreneurs picked up their tantalizing, quaint name from that remote, little town in the southeastern corner of their state.  Let's see what Google (and its doppelganger AIO) have to say on this matter.
The name Starbucks comes from a man's fondness for watching deer and the way the larger males moved around, which he called his "star bucks". His wife suggested the name for the coffee chain when he opened his first store, and he thought it was a good fit for a place where people could relax.
The name Starbuck may also refer to:
*
* An Old English name that means "from the river where stakes were got"
* A variant of the name Tarbuck with a prosthetic "S-"
* A founding family of Nantucket who became a whaling dynasty
The first Starbucks store opened in 1971 near Pike Place Market in Seattle, and was founded by Jerry Baldwin, Gordon Bowker, and Zev Siegl.
The Washington town, by the way, was named after railroad official W. H. Starbuck.

Here's what is claimed about the firm's name in Starbucks Archive:

In 1971, our founders got together with artist Terry Heckler to define their new brand. They wanted the company’s name to suggest a sense of adventure, a connection to the Northwest and a link to the seafaring tradition of the early coffee traders. Co-founder Gordon Bowker, a writer, initially proposed calling the company “Pequod,” after the ship in Herman Melville‘s classic novel “Moby-Dick.” But Terry objected – would a cup of “Pee-kwod” appeal to anyone?

The brainstorming continued. While researching names of mining camps on Mt. Rainier, one of the best known landmarks near Seattle, Terry came across “Starbo,” which eventually led the team back to where they’d started. In “Moby-Dick,” the name of the first mate on the Pequod was, you guessed it, Starbuck. A brand was born.

Under "Starbo", here's what The Etymology Nerd has to say about the origin of the name:

On the Starbucks website, it says that the name of their company was inspired by Starbuck, the First Mate of the Pequod in Moby Dick. This was meant to evoke "the romance of the high seas and the seafaring tradition of the early coffee traders", but apparently there's more to the story. According to Starbucks co-founder Gordon Bowker, the idea came to him when he and some others were brainstorming potential brand names starting with st- (because an advertising executive thought those were more powerful) and somebody pulled out a mining map of the Cascade range. They pointed out a town named Starbo, and that reminded Bowker of the literary reference. The name worked perfectly for another reason, too: Starbuck Island is a coral atoll in the Pacific known for its shipwrecks, and the company's logo is a siren, which lures sailors toward shipwrecks.

For more information on the Starbucks name, see this Independent article (they almost called it Cargo House, which would have been a horrible mistake).

Wanting to go one step further, I asked Google > AIO what the origin of the Starbuck surname was, and the following response popped up instantaneously:

The surname Starbuck is of Old English origin and means "from the river where stakes were got". The name originated in the Middle Ages when people were often named after their place of residence or occupation.

The Starbuck family was prominent in the history of whaling in the United States from the 17th to the 19th centuries. The family was based in Nantucket, Massachusetts and some members became well-known for discovering islands in the Pacific Ocean[...]

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Language Log
Aurora (Colorado and Borealis)

Jonathan Weisman, "As Trump Arrives, Aurora Insists It’s Not the ‘War Zone’ He Sees", NYT 10/11/2024.

And today's xkcd:

http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/solar_protons_2x.png
Mouseover title: "If any of you want to meet some cool local oxygen atoms, I can introduce you!"

Google News thinks "Aurora" this afternoon is mostly about the effect of the solar wind on the magnetosphere:

http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/GoogleNewsAurora.png

Trump's Aurora rally shows up as numbers 11-14 in the list:

http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/TrumpAurora11.png

[h/t John Berenberg]

And there's some interesting discussion of solar protons in a book (partly) by another web-comic author, namely Kelly and Zach Weinersmith's A City on Mars: Can we settle space, should we settle space, and have we really thought this through?:

The Sun Wants You Dead

As a radiant ball of plasma, the Sun already spends most of its time blasting out hot ions in every direction. Earth’s magnetosphere and atmosphere protect you from most of these. If you’re in space, all things being equal, you’d rather avoid solar radiation, but it doesn’t cause instant death. However, now and then, the Sun undergoes a “solar flare,” when it suddenly increases in brightness. And then there’s something worse: sometimes a solar flare is accompanied by a “solar particle event,” which is a particle event in the same sense that a tsunami is a water event. Visualize a relatively small region of the Sun suddenly ejecting a huge stream of protons that move in one direction like a flashlight beam of death. The good news about these things is that, as science fiction deity Douglas Adams put it, “Space is big.” Randomly aimed death beams will likely miss a teeny tiny human ship. But if you happen to be caught in the headlights, the result will be acute radiation sickness, whose symptoms include vomiting, skin burns, heart issues, lung damage, compromised immune system, and—if the dose is large enough—a painful death.

You may wonder what the plan is if you happen to be aboard a spaceship for this sort of thing. For near-term efforts to go back to the Moon, the procedure in the words of NASA scientist Dr. Kerry Lee is to “make use of whatever mass is available.” That is, redistribute whatever stuff in the spacecraft or station that you can find because it is now your radiation shield. Why not a dedicated radiation blocker? Because that’s a huge amount of mass that costs a lot to send to the Moon and then just sits there. Space settlements will need to do better, and as we’ll see the likely solution involves living underground. […]

Current estimates say that once you leave Earth’s protective atmosphere and magnetosphere, every single cell nucleus in your body will be struck by a proton every few days, and by a larger charged particle every few months.

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Word of the Day
Word of the Day: robust

This word has appeared in 1,321 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Phrasal Verb of the Day | Vocabulary | EnglishClub
have on (2)

If you have something on at a certain time, you've arranged to do something at that time.
➖ Sent by @TheFeedReaderBot

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

Word of the Day
auxiliary

Definition: (adjective) Functioning in a supporting capacity.
Synonyms: subsidiary, supplemental, supplementary.
Usage: The main library and its auxiliary branches serviced the needs of the large community.
Discuss

➖ @EngSkills

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

⚠️ Best of English Learning Channels
👉 @EnglishLearn
---------
🟩𝙁𝙍𝙀𝙀 𝙐𝘿𝙀𝙈𝙔 𝘾𝙊𝙐𝙋𝙊𝙉𝙎🟩
👉 @Paid_Courses_For_Free_Daily
English Proficiency 🧾
👉 @EngSkills
🟥𝘿𝘼𝙄𝙇𝙔 𝙁𝙍𝙀𝙀 𝘾𝙊𝙐𝙍𝙎𝙀𝙎🟥
👉 @Udacity_Skillshare_Coursera_Edx
~
Black Hacker 👹
👉 @black_hat_hacker_master
WordPress hacks 📬
👉 @wordpresshacks
English Speakers 🗣
👉 @English_Speakers
~
𝗧𝗢𝗘𝗙𝗟 𝗧𝗜𝗣𝗦 & 𝗧𝗥𝗜𝗖𝗞𝗦✅
👉 @TOEFL_EXERCISES
Learn English
👉 @english_vocabulary_grammar
✅Amazing Quotes✅
👉 @supremeguide
~
Motivation, Inspiration
👉 @Motivation_Inspiration_Quote
Love Quotes 💓
👉 @lovequotesvideo
Electrifying Thoughts 💜
👉 @MostInspiring
~
Truely Inspiring 💚
👉 @HighImpact
Bestselling eBooks 📚
👉 @eBooksThief
WhatsApp Status 😍
👉 @sabseachestatus
~
Feelings 💞
👉 @confess_your_feelings
🌷Only4girls
👉 @masterinstructor63
Bts official channel 🥵
👉 @foreverbulletproof7
~
Arts & Core 🖍
👉 @everless_Beauty
learn English idioms
👉 @EnglishbyNoorAamir
📚Interesting Facts 🤯
👉 @guinnessworldsrecord
~
Entertaining Facts 💢
👉 @diplyfacts
FREE YOUTUBE VIDEO ✅
👉 @funwithsam7
English is Everywhere 🌍
👉 @EnglishIsEverywhere
~
💯Be Inspired✅
👉 @corporatebytes
𝐈𝐀𝐒 𝐈𝐏𝐒 𝐒𝐒𝐂 𝐔𝐏𝐒𝐂 𝐓𝐑𝐈𝐂𝐊 👌
👉 @GK_Tricks_HandwrittenNotes_Hindi
TAX TIPS
👉 @taxtantri
~
learn English 🗒
👉 @Englishphilia
💰Financial Freedom 💰
👉 @FinancialFreedomMagazine
Adult Movie 🔞
👉 @official_gidsglobal
~
Joyous Life 🍀
👉 @JoyousLifeOfficial
super hacking😝
👉 @superbhacker
Movies & More 📽
👉 @trapped_minds
~
Handouts Teachers ⏳
👉 @LanguageStuff
🖌𝕱𝒊𝒄𝒕𝒊𝒐𝓝 𝕼𝒖𝒐𝒕𝒆𝒮🖍
👉 @fiction_Quote
✅Total English Language✅
👉 @TotalEng
~
♻️ Your channel updated
👉 @espvocab
🟥FREE SHOPPING 🟥
👉 @flipkart_looter_deals
Sell&Buy Products 💸
👉 @SizelessMarket
~
Earn with Crypto 🚀
👉 @cryptosupdatess
🟩🟥🇵 🇭 🇴 🇹 🇴 🇸🟥🟩
👉 @PHOTOS_PX
ROMANTIC NOVELS 📚📚
👉 @bettytv
~
ROMANTIC MOVIE 🔞🍿
👉 @avatar_the_last_airbenda
😂 𝑲𝑯𝑨𝑵𝑫𝑬𝑯 𝑩𝑨𝒁𝑨𝑹 😂
👉 @khandeh_video_comedi_tanz_kanal
  Tricks & loots
👉 @theultimatelootfactory
~
Love Nature 🥀
👉 @LovelyNature
BEST LIFE HACKS✅
👉 @Life_hacks_11
Udemy coupons code ⁉️
👉 @udemy_coupons1
~
❤️ Bing AI Prompts 😍
👉 @FileFlixAI
Motivational Thoughts 🖊
👉 @Motivational_Zone
Relationship goals ⚖
👉 @relationgoal
~
ßêst Çhâññêl Før 🅲🅰 Quiz
👉 @Current_Affairs_Quizzess
General Knowledge 💡
👉 @GKCURRENTGK
🆓 Certification Course
👉 @free_certification_courses
~
Business & Tech News 🔴
👉 @wealthtg
Best relationship tips
👉 @loveandrelationshiptips
Funny Memes 😹
👉 @dejavumemes
~
Why 🔮
👉 @whysoserioushmmm
Thoughts and quotes
👉 @psycho_thought_s
Memes
👉 @esl_sam
~
Did you know facts 😱
👉 @learnforyou2020
Silence Speaks 🍃
👉 @QuietWorld
😍 Spiritual Books 😍
👉 @SelfHelpbooks11
~
𝙇𝙚𝙖𝙧𝙣𝙞𝙣𝙜𝙡𝙖𝙣𝙙
👉 @EnglishLearningland1
Life Talks
👉 @life_talks
Game Play ☣
👉 @allgamer10
~
Telegram Theme ❤
👉 @themetelegramhd
Latest News Update 💙
👉 @NewsExclusive
Business Inspiration 💼
👉 @Entrepreneursquotes
~
❤️Girls Quotes❤️
👉 @gentlewomensayings
English vocabulary
👉 @learnvocabularyenglish_2022
Naughty Relationship 😍
👉 @relation_ship_goal
~
Paid books 📔
👉 @bookskiki
🔴𝐑𝐄🅰𝐋𝐈𝐓𝐘𝚕𝚎𝚊𝚔𝚜¹⁸⁺🔪🫣🟥
👉 @Realityleaks_LeakLive
HD Wallpapers ❤
👉 @newwallp
~
Book Stores 🔥
👉 @bookstoretelegram
🟣𝑳𝑨𝑻𝑬𝑺𝑻 𝑭𝑹𝑬𝑬 𝑪𝑶𝑼𝑹𝑺𝑬𝑺🟣
👉 @freshercooker_official
Wonderful Thoughts ❤️‍🔥
👉 @InspiringThoughts
~
English natives 🪧
👉 @sirjimmy
🟪50000+ 𝙁𝙍𝙀𝙀 𝘾𝙊𝙐𝙍𝙎𝙀𝙎🟪
👉 @CourseVania1
🟧𝙁𝙍𝙀𝙀 𝙐𝘿𝙀𝙈𝙔 𝘾𝙊𝙐𝙍𝙎𝙀𝙎🟧
👉 @discudemy
~

Free Paid Apps 📲
👉 @moded2apps
~~~
⚠️ Add your Channels

~

Читать полностью…

Advanced English Skills

ough for the Snake River (for now; I may find additional information as I continue to follow its serpentine path through the mountains).

My brother and his partner were blessed to have lived for years not far from the Tri-Cities area in Walla Walla.  Let's see what AI Overview has to say about the origin of its unusual-sounding name:

The name "Walla Walla" comes from a Nez Perce word that means "place of many waters" or "running waters":
*
* Place of many waters: The original settlement was located at the junction of the Snake and Columbia rivers.

* Running waters: The name may refer to the place where a small stream flows into a larger one, such as the convergence of Mill and Dry creeks in the Walla Walla Valley.
*
* Walatsa: A Nez Perce and Cayuse word that means "running".
The name was given to the settlement by the county commissioners on November 17, 1859. The settlement was originally named Steptoeville after Lieutenant Colonel Edward J. Steptoe.
The Walla Walla people, also known as Walawalałáma, are a Sahaptin* Indigenous people of the Northwest Plateau.  [*There's that David Thompson early 1800s "Shawpatin" word again.]
[variant several minutes later] The Walla Walla people are an Indigenous group of the Northwest Plateau. Their name, Walawalałáma, translates to "People of Walula region along Walla Walla River".
Every time I look up "Walla Walla" on Google –> AI Overview, I get slightly different answers, so I cannot vouch for the accuracy of the one given above. History Link.org:

On November 17, 1859, Walla Walla County commissioners name the town that has grown up around the U.S. military Fort Walla Walla.  They elect to name the town Walla Walla. The town begins with a rich history, which includes Native North Americans, fur traders, missionaries, soldiers, and pioneers.  Walla Walla's earliest businesses are raising cattle and supplying the fort.  The town will be incorporated and become the county seat in 1862.  A gold rush followed by a growing agricultural industry will help Walla Walla become the largest city in Washington Territory by 1880.  During the twentieth century, Walla Walla will continue to develop as an agricultural center for various crops, including wheat, onions, apples, peas, and wine grapes. The Time before the Town “Walla Walla” was a Nez Perce name given to one of the indigenous groups who lived in what is now the Walla Walla Valley.  The name means “running waters” or, more specifically, the place where a small stream runs into a larger one.  A number of rivers flow across the valley into the Walla Walla River and join the Columbia River.  In addition to the Walla Wallas, native North American groups who lived in this area included the Nez Perce, the Cayuses, and Umatillas.  In 1806, the Lewis and Clark expedition camped near the mouth of the “Wallahwollah river” on the Columbia and encountered the “honest and friendly … Wallah wallahs.”

I do scores, maybe hundreds, of Google searches every day.  It is increasingly evident that AI Overview is doing more and more of the heavy lifting in replying to such routine searches, but also daring to take on esoteric topics as well.  When responding to my queries, AI Overview does something cute before spewing out its responses — a flashing nanosecond whirl akin to cogitation, while formulating (putting / pulling together) what it is going to tell me.  A cosmic dance.  Utterly fascinating. Closing note

The 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics (mind you!) went to two scientists, John J Hopfield (a physicist most widely known for his study of associative neural networks in 1982) and Geoffrey E Hinton (computer scientist, cognitive scientist, cognitive psychologist, known for his work on artificial neural networks which earned him the title as the "Godfather of AI"), for foundational discoveries and inventions that enable machine learning with artificial neural networks.  The laureates themselves were astonished to hear the news that they were the recipients of the Nobe[...]

Читать полностью…
Subscribe to a channel