JeremyMallin, to Catroventos
@JeremyMallin@autistics.life avatar

Not a very clear or helpful distinction in my opinion. A bit vague. 🤔

"A treatise is a formal written paper about a specific subject. It’s like an essay but longer. A treatise is usually about a serious subject, so you might read a treatise on democracy, but you probably won't read a treatise about chewing gum."

https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/treatise#:~:text=A%20treatise%20is%20a%20formal,a%20treatise%20about%20chewing%20gum.

gutenberg_org, to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

in 1852.

Roget's Thesaurus, created by retired British physician Peter Mark Roget, is first published as Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases Classified and Arranged so as to Facilitate the Expression of Ideas and Assist in Literary Composition in London.

Roget's Thesaurus at PG:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/10681

fabian, to linguistics
@fabian@floss.social avatar

🔖 Tatoeba
https://tatoeba.org/

Tatoeba is a platform whose purpose is to create a collaborative and open dataset of sentences and their translations.

#Tatoeba ist eine Sammlung übersetzter Beispielsätze.
Tatoeba ist kollaborativ, offen, frei und kann sogar süchtig machen.

#language #dictionary #translation #opensource #creativecommons #dict #bookmarked

gutenberg_org, to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

Webster’s Dictionary 1828: Annotated

Noah Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language declared Americans free from the tyranny of British institutions and their vocabularies. via @JSTOR_Daily

By: Liz Tracey

https://daily.jstor.org/websters-dictionary-1828-annotated/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Lit%20Hub%20Daily:%20April%2022%2C%202024&utm_term=lithub_master_list

gutenberg_org, to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

in 1928.

Publication of the Oxford English Dictionary is completed.

The 125th & last fascicle covered words from Wise to the end of W & was published in 1928, and the full dictionary in bound volumes followed immediately. William Shakespeare is the most-quoted writer in the completed dictionary, with Hamlet his most-quoted work. George Eliot is the most-quoted female writer. Collectively, the Bible is the most-quoted work; the most-quoted single work is Cursor Mundi.

thejapantimes, to Life
@thejapantimes@mastodon.social avatar

Thanks to the new entries, pretty soon your grandparents will even know what "onigiri," "omotenashi" and "kintsugi" means. https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2024/04/18/language/new-updates-to-japanese-dictionary-oxford/

Snowshadow, to news
@Snowshadow@mastodon.social avatar

Higher density living is changing the way neighborhoods work in Canada

To contribute to this challenge, our research examines what we do and do not know about neighbors in densifying Canadian cities.

(Note: I sent the editor an email suggesting they invest in a copy of the Oxford English dictionary because "We do not use the US bastardized version of the English language")


https://phys.org/news/2024-04-higher-density-neighborhoods-canada.html

HistoPol,
@HistoPol@mastodon.social avatar

@Snowshadow

(1/2)

In saying that, you are aware that is, in many aspects, more original than British English b/c Noah Webster was so far ahead in his time in preparing his famous dictionary.
Also, have you had the change to place a full printed edition of Webster's next to the Oxford's Dictionary?
Even discounting the many neologisms, Webster has more than 1 million words, many more than Oxford's Dictionary or the German Duden.

gutenberg_org, to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

in 1755. Samuel Johnson's A Dictionary of the English Language is published in London.

Johnson's dictionary was not just a list of words with their meanings; it also included extensive quotations from various literary works to illustrate the usage of each word. It played a significant role in standardizing English spelling and usage, helping to establish a common linguistic framework for communication.

Books by Samuel Johnson at PG:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/297

EdwardPhilips, to Birds
@EdwardPhilips@toot.community avatar

Morning all. As Lord Byron once said, “I awoke one morning to find myself choughing famous.”

With humble thanks to Jonathan Green. xx

Screenshot of citation in Greens online dictionary of slang

gutenberg_org, to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

English schoolmaster, lexicographer and commentator on the usage of the English language H. W. Fowler was born in 1858.

He is notable for both A Dictionary of Modern English Usage and his work on the Concise Oxford Dictionary. In partnership with his brother Francis, beginning in 1906, he began publishing seminal grammar, style and lexicography books. via @wikipedia

Books translated by H. W. Fowler at PG:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/1998

toolbear, to random
@toolbear@union.place avatar

More than anything, please today 🙏

I truly want you to vote today even if you're my ideological opposite. The collective spell of participatory governance is far too powerful for even fascists to corrupt entirely. I imagine wannabe authoritarians wilt a little every time society compells them to cast a ballot instead of them getting to bark an order to imposse their will. Going to the polls for wannabe authoritarians and their fans has to feel like a tiny defeat.

toolbear,
@toolbear@union.place avatar

"imposse" — portmanteau of "emboss" and "impose"

(it's fun)

Delphi, to languagelearning
@Delphi@mastodon.scot avatar

Why is 'uptick' being used instead of 'increase'?
Is there also an urban word for decrease?

thejapantimes, to Life
@thejapantimes@mastodon.social avatar

The taste tests for the new rice dictionary involved trying more than 110 types of rice, such as freshly cooked, rice that had been cooked but left out for some time, convenience store rice balls and rice from packages for long-term storage. https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2024/02/21/language/rice-dictionary-agriculture/

ButterflyOfFire, to random French
@ButterflyOfFire@mstdn.fr avatar

OK, je pense que j’ai réussi à créer un petit dictionnaire de suggestions pour une disposition de clavier en kabyle.

Ceci n'est qu'un brouillon à base d’un clavier français canadien modifié.

Kabyle autocomplete autosuggest. Dictionnaire pour Android.

ButterflyOfFire,
@ButterflyOfFire@mstdn.fr avatar

Here we go ☕🎺

Vous pouvez trouver le dictionnaire d'autosuggestion expérimental en kabyle sur Codeberg sous le nom main_kab.dict.

🔗 https://codeberg.org/butterflyoffire/aosp-dictionaries/src/branch/main/dictionaries_experimental

jessesheidlower, to sciencefiction

New entries! We're famously fond of time travel chez HDSF, so here's "changewar" (from 1958; associated with Fritz Leiber) and its synonym "timewar" (1950; with various specific associations):

https://sfdictionary.com/view/2788/changewar

https://sfdictionary.com/view/2790/time-war

KydiaMusic, to random
@KydiaMusic@mastodon.social avatar

Dictionary.com’s Word of the Day is totally innocuous but GUESS HOW I KEEP READING IT BECAUSE I AM SECRETLY TWELVE

gutenberg_org, to random
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

British physician, natural theologian, lexicographer Peter Mark Roget was born in 1779. He is best known for publishing, in 1852, the Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases, a classified collection of related words. Roget's schema of classes and their subdivisions is based on the philosophical work of Leibniz, itself following a long tradition of epistemological work starting with Aristotle. Some of Aristotle's Categories are included in Roget's first class, "abstract relations".

Title page of Roget's Thesaurus by Peter Mark Roget.

SteveThompson, to ukteachers
@SteveThompson@mastodon.social avatar

Perhaps they want young people to learn "sexual conduct" through actions that speak louder than words...

"Florida School Board Pulls Dictionaries From Shelves in Latest War on Books"

https://www.vice.com/en/article/wxjkv4/florida-book-bans-dictionary

"School district officials say that the dictionary contains terms, references, and description of 'sexual conduct.'”

Almost everything censorship does out of fear and desire to control is self-defeating, if not ludicrous provocation.

br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar

Florida’s Book-Banning Crusade Has Found Its Next Target: Dictionaries

A law signed by Ron DeSantis last year has led one school district to remove three publishers’ dictionaries, while another removed classics like Paradise Lost and East of Eden, for their descriptions of “sexual conduct.”

https://www.vanityfair.com/news/florida-book-banning-crusade-next-target-dictionaries

Rasta, to WordoftheDay
@Rasta@mstdn.ca avatar
jessesheidlower, to sciencefiction

New HDSF entry! The SF cliché "food pill", something that has always been regarded as coming in the future (like jetpacks and flying cars). Examples from the 1880s (they eat them in "Moonland"!) onwards.

https://sfdictionary.com/view/1879/food-pill

#sciencefiction #dictionary

jordinn, to random
@jordinn@zirk.us avatar
jessesheidlower, to sciencefiction

Time-travel fans: really nice HDSF antedating of "time track", once-favored synonym of the (now preferred) timeline, from 1942 to Edmond Hamilton in 1931 (and now earlier than timeline itself (1935)).

https://sfdictionary.com/view/1312/time-track

#sciencefiction #dictionary #timetravel

scy, to ArtificialIntelligence
@scy@chaos.social avatar

I'm looking for a or something.

I have a process that generates a JSON document (> 1 MB, < 1 GB) once per week. These documents will be pretty similar. Some data will be modified, some will be added.

I'd like to keep all of these documents, in a compressed way, benefiting from the similarities between them, as if I'd compressed a concatenation of all of them, but without having to recompress everything each week.

Ideas? If possible, only using 's standard lib.

itamarst,
@itamarst@hachyderm.io avatar

@scy ZSTD compression library/standard has a way to create compression "dictionaries" (mapping from short identifier to repeated phrase) that get stored separately from the file. So this might let you do what you want.

E.g. this binding appears to expose the relevant API (no personal experience): https://pyzstd.readthedocs.io/en/latest/#dictionary

Edit: Reading the docs, it claims it's not necessary on larger files. You could try. Anyway zstd is Very Good Compression so worth using regardless.

bmbufalo, to Mac
@bmbufalo@fosstodon.org avatar

This article from @jsnell at @sixcolors is spot on! If you are getting started on a , especially if you are coming from , don’t install anything! Chances are it’s built in and you don’t need an app at all! The defaults are what I use for the majority of my workflow and they work exceptionally well! And I agree, the Mac needs a clipboard manager!
https://apple.news/APFeqn2R-OfyGIxDw5qWu8A

bmbufalo,
@bmbufalo@fosstodon.org avatar

@jsnell @sixcolors A couple of my favorite best kept secret defaults are:
-Don’t install , just use
-No need to install , just use iWork (, , )
- can do what most conferencing apps do, no need for or , including scheduling meetings and sharing screens
-The built in app is crazy helpful and useful, especially if you can’t connect to the internet for a quick word lookup.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • provamag3
  • rosin
  • normalnudes
  • everett
  • DreamBathrooms
  • ethstaker
  • magazineikmin
  • thenastyranch
  • Youngstown
  • GTA5RPClips
  • slotface
  • khanakhh
  • vwfavf
  • kavyap
  • megavids
  • mdbf
  • Leos
  • Durango
  • tacticalgear
  • InstantRegret
  • cubers
  • osvaldo12
  • ngwrru68w68
  • anitta
  • tester
  • modclub
  • cisconetworking
  • JUstTest
  • All magazines