onetrack Posted Sunday at 01:11 AM Posted Sunday at 01:11 AM I blame the French for everything, especially anything to do with their odd, mangled-pronunciations language - large amounts of which have found their way into modern English, to confuse all those from non-English-speaking countries, who want to learn English. The strange part to me, is how English has become the primary language of technology, science, engineering, and even aviation. Anthropologists are always seeking to discover the exact point where language was invented (as it's presumed that sign language and grunts, and other animal-like sounds were humans only communication method, prior to that point of "inventing language"). I personally think they're going to keep doing a lot of guessing, as there is practically zero evidence available to determine when language was first developed and used. I suspect it was developed over a very long period of time, with a lot of trial and error and confusion.
red750 Posted Sunday at 01:16 AM Posted Sunday at 01:16 AM And the amazing thing is that all this, every book, song, poem etc., is made up from only 26 letters in the alphabet. 1
pmccarthy Posted Sunday at 01:57 AM Posted Sunday at 01:57 AM Then is queer another name for a choirboy? 1
onetrack Posted Sunday at 02:18 AM Posted Sunday at 02:18 AM No, that's the priests in charge of the choir. How did you expect those boys to reach those high notes, without being grabbed by the nuts?
willedoo Posted yesterday at 10:15 AM Posted yesterday at 10:15 AM (edited) I was listening to a talkback segment on the ABC radio tonight and the publican from Eulo rang in. He was on his way back home from Roma and mentioned that when he bought the car in Roma, the dealers offered a free 1,000 kilometre checkup. That's about 60 k's short of the distance to drive it home from Roma to Eulo and turn around and drive straight back to Roma. Edited yesterday at 10:15 AM by willedoo 3
red750 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Today, Australia's population clicked over 28,000,000 today. 1 1
onetrack Posted 46 minutes ago Posted 46 minutes ago (edited) I was reading an article about "Libyan desert glass" today, and how the scientists are totally perplexed on how it formed. It is primarily silicon, but it contains microscopic zircon crystals - and it has been fused at temperatures unlike anything ever found on Earth - even in molten magma. The general opinion is that it formed in a meteorite burst over Libya in antiquity - but the scientists still say that doesn't fully explain the intricate atomic patterns found inside the glass. More recent scientific studies say the Libyan desert glass was formed via a massive asteroid impact. But the problem with that line of investigation is - there is no impact crater anywhere near the Libyan desert, capable of supporting that story. The experts claim the crater is depply buried under the desert sands and needs more investigative work to find it. In the article, they showed the Winged Scarab Pendant found in King Tut's tomb. It contains Libyan Desert Glass amongst the inlaid gemstones. Now, just looking at the close up of the pendant, I'm blown away by the skills, the complexity and the workmanship in this pendant. The experts say the ancient Egyptians were a race of primitive idol-worshippers who somehow managed some impressive building feats such as the Pyramids, using primitive transport methods. They had no electricity, no high-tech steels, only wood-fired furnaces, no modern grinding equipment, and supposedly just primitive hand tools. I call BS on those suppositions - these people were an advanced race with skills and equipment equalling modern techniques. It takes over 1000°C to melt gold, and intricate, high-tech tools to work it - to cut gemstones - and it takes artisans of exceptional skill to cut and shape those stones and fabricate the precious metals into shape. Take a close look at this pendant, you can expand the photo substantially to see the detail. https://egypt-museum.com/winged-scarab-pendant-of-tutankhamun/ Edited 32 minutes ago by onetrack
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