But that's mainly just an idiosyncrasy of the English language. Honestly, "cause" could really be used in those cases with the same meaning and be less cause of confusion.
In those cases, effect means "to bring about". Cause has that meaning, and doesn't carry with it a common meaning so different from this situational use of "effect"
I was just commenting that "effect" as a verb is really a fallacy. "Cause" works just as well and doesn't complicate the language.
I would really like a crack at simplifying the English language into a standardized rule set. I feel the language does itself a disservice. Also, if the language were standardized, it would be far easier to learn and would dominate the global "marketshare".
The best way to make a language popular is really to convince people that it's what they're already speaking. Look at C++. It caught on because it was able to convince a horde of C programmers that "look, you practically already know C++!". English is popular because a huge number of people consider themselves able to speak english. Even if it is sometimes with a small vocabulary and a broken grammar.
all natural language is prone to the same miscommunication... the sentence: I saw the boy in the mountain with a telescope, is exactly as confusing in Spanish as it is in English (who has the telescope?)
Ok, well if you don't see the benefit in removing the excess and limiting the confusion, then I don't really see how you define more confusion as better.
This seems like a nice place to drop in when [Mal de mer](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seasickness) sets in. (First time here!)
Anyway to through my tupence worth in I read this the other day about [entropy](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy_%28information_theory%29) in comunication.
I learnt Italian to speak to the Pope, Spanish to speak to my mother, English to speak to my aunt, German to speak to my friends, and French to speak to myself
Then again, according to the Spanish version of wikiquote, there are quite a few different quotes from Carlos I (Spanish name for Charles V) regarding the languages
@Xaade but to put it simply, assume I decided to learn a new language tomorrow. Which language do you think I would pick? The one that takes one year to master, and allows me to communicate with one other person? Or the one that takes a couple of years, but allows me to communicate with hundreds of millions of people?
You just blame a certain faction, just like everyone else is doing, resulting in the ever lengthening circle of finger pointing that everyone else is doing.
Someone who knows "real" english should be able to understand your "simple" english, sure. But someone who only knows your "simple english" won't be able to understand a "real" english speaker. In other words, it'd be useless
No, I don't "blame a single faction". I made a point, that "the business world" doing something doesn't necessarily make it a wise action
@Xaade yes and you already proved that you're willing to bend the truth and lie in order to make your point, so I don't really care what you say you did to my brain
keep your maggots to yourself, and go accuse someone else of lying, why don't you?
I know you think you understand what you thought I said, but I am not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant. -- Alan Greenspan, on a conference as an out-of-jail answer to a question
But just to round off the other argument, only one group of people came out of the economic crisis as winners: the big business people, who'd already made billions of dollars running companies into the ground. Whoever was to blame, I think it's safe to assume that the people who actually profited from it were involved
Yes, and my mind control powers just flagged your comment as offensive
You really don't get that it's all a show do you. Republicans win, Democrats win.... doesn't matter. The point is to get the public to care about something other than what actually happened.... then to turn that outrage into votes.
Look what I said just a little bit up: it doesn't matter who else may or may not have profited. I made the point that one group of people certainly did profit
anyway, trying to debate anything with you is clearly a waste of time. Good night
And I'm trying to make the point that you've been distracted
Some money market guru making money off of losses in the market by hedging against market failure did not cause the housing market collapse.... the two are as related as monkey shit and apple pie.
I mean.... ever notice why arab problems resulting in gas prices increases always occur during spring break and summer.
@Xaade not always, I recall a couple of times that gas prices were a problem during wintertime, worsened by Russia blocking gas to some of the eastern europe countries
@DavidRodríguezdribeas The gas price does respond to world events. However I was noting more along the lines of noticing that world events seem to always occur during spring break (disregarding outlying events).
Gas prices follow a particularly rhythmic pattern of going up during times of high travel. The oil companies can always find some excuse because there's always a world event to blame.
It's a distraction.
The same thing occurred during the economic crisis. The government had the whole population turned against Wall-Street, when Wall-Street was just exposing the symptoms of a bigger problem.
Facing reality, Wall-Street is aimed at making a buck. It never fails to keep this high priority. So IF in fact Wall-Street and Big banks and Big Business was mostly to blame for this problem, why did we do so well for so long?
For jalf a big pet peeve is people telling him what he's thinking, for me it's people always adding to the class wars.... blaming the rich for a crappy world. The short of it, is even though jalf didn't necessarily place all the blame on business, the thing is that he's apparently satisfied that it's good enough to just point the finger at big business.
Even though I can't know what he's thinking. What a man holds in his hearts plays on his lips.
I can't be for sure this is what he thinks, but the majority of the people think this way and the way his snark remark jumped out is the same id…
@DavidRodríguezdribeas fuel yes, hence the increase in heating costs, etc.
@DavidRodríguezdribeas However, the price of gas goes up because gas is more expensive to produce in the summer, and there's more demand.
It's just that they always have some world problem to blame instead of just being truthful about the supply/demand curve.
Well, they were discussing the complication of the English language. (The later part never happened.) From your writing it seems that doesn't concern you, though...
@DeadMG I think you're wrong. I remember that even the old Greeks lamented about their youth being debauched. If what you said was true, the several thousand years since then ought to have taken down all rules by now.
I think it's just that the old ones prefer their rules. And while they insist on the peculiarities of the language they grew up with, they abhorrently violate the youth's dress code.
@DeadMG That's blatantly wrong. If anything, we have several orders of magnitude more rules than the old Greeks had. Well, make that several orders of magnitudes of orders of magnitudes. At the very least.
If the old Greeks bemoaning the youth breaking all the rules was true, and if the countless generations in between them and us bemoaning the same was true, there shouldn't have been any rules left since then. (Heck, Hammurabi managed to hew all of his laws into a single piece of stone. Nowadays this would take a piece of rock the size of Mount Everest.)
@DeadMG Of course we do. Just compare your country's trade laws to those of the most complexest societies 4,000 years ago.
@DeadMG Yeah. And since it is, we have vastly vastly more rules. I know the cause. However, the result of this is that we are following more rules than any of our ancestors did. Which makes the old ones bemoaning the youth breaking down all rules a fallacy. As much as I feel the opposite myself, logic dictates that.
but nobody is going to trade, and employ people, and develop nuclear power plant software, and build airplanes, and maintain roads, and care for the elderly, and etc
Did either of you to think about the way new rules come in? about 100 years ago, it was perfectly acceptable for some one about 20 to have a 'wife' in here early teens
@DeadMG Of course you do. The moment you go to a supermarket's cashier to pay what you bought, you have to follow trade laws, and so has the cashier. And they are very much more complex than they used to be 4,000 years ago.
@DeadMG I don't know about your country's trade laws, but here you enter an oral contract the moment you buy a toothbrush, and there's laws associated with that which both sides have to follow, none of which the old Greeks dreamed about in their worst nightmares.
You English as well ain't you @Dead we do also have these 'technical' trade laws. Items are meant to be fit for purpose, and you are entitled to refund as long as the item is defunct in some way. It is very complex yes, but then we have the ability to tack all this stuff now. Keeping tax records for 7 years is dam hard when you can't read or write I am sure
well, lets say you have three arrays of floats, each 100 long. you would make a new array, 300 long, copy over the elements in a for loop. then memcpy from the new array. If you want interlace your arrays you would do it with one loop, other wise you could memcpy each array one at a time into the big array
@DeadMG dude, it's not that bad. Besides, either write or get alibrary to do it for you. Not point doing your head in over it
Mostly because of lifespan and the need for large families.
Needs prevail social ideologies.
Mostly because the English language has a lot of nuances that complicate communication. You can be plural, they can be singular. Helping verbs not really helping anything at all. He is jumping..... is = be which is assigning a state of being. Jumping is not a state of being.... etc.
"He jumping" would be enough to convey the thought.
He jumped. He jumping. He jumps. He jumping is the only one that really needs a helping verb according to our language.... but the information is still redundant.
Words that have meaning that don't really need to have that meaning. Like the verb form of the word EFFECT. He effects a change in policy. That only adds confusion. It doesn't add anything to the English language that it didn't already have. He enacts a change in policy.
I don't mind have synonyms, I mind having effect suddenly change its meaning for no apparent benefit, but a huge detriment to readability and translation.