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12:08 AM
Yesss!!
@flawr A race (as in athletism, horse racing, car racing) is das Rennen, right? Is der Lauf used for that too? Less commonly, hardly ever, or never?
 
 
8 hours later…
8:08 AM
@LuisMendo Rennen is the more general term for all sorts of races including horses, cars etc; Lauf is a race that involves running e.g. a Stadtlauf, Waldlauf, Orientierungslauf, 400m-Lauf and things like that.
 
 
6 hours later…
2:37 PM
“Rennen” in Dutch means to run. “Lopen” (same origin as “Laufen”) means to walk. This always confused me about German!
 
I'm pretty sure it's Dutch doing the confusing :P
 
@CrisLuengo so you've never been to Flanders? There lopen is running and wandelen means walking/hiking
 
3:06 PM
@Adriaan Damn! Why do they always make thing complicated doen there?
 
Better the Spanish way: "people speaking a weird language that we don't know, and making nice guitar music and dancing to it? Lets not make it complicated, they must be from.... Flanders, or something"
and thus, "Flamenco" is born
turns out they were roma people, nothing to do with Flemish people
 
In Swedish “att gå” (pronounced just like English “go”) means to walk. When starting to learn the language it’s so tempting to say “I’ll go home” as “ska gå hemma”, and they’ll stare at you in wonder and ask “are you going to walk all the way?”
 
@AnderBiguri sounds like the root of the word "Welsh". Apparently the Romans simply called anyone they couldn't understand that, so there's Wales, Waloon (French speaking Belgium), Valais/Wallis in Switzerland, Walenstadt (also Switzerland, used to speak Rumantsch) etc
 
yeah XD
 
@AnderBiguri Similar enough, I’m sure? Like calling any foreigner “guiri”, not just the Brits.
 
3:10 PM
guiri is not from the Brits!
 
It used to be.
 
In the basque country, when the Carlist wars, the foreigners tended to support queen "Cristina", ergo "Cristinos"->"Guiristinos"->"guiris"
it comes from the basque calling anyone not basque "guiri"
 
Really? Is that where the word comes from?
 
yeah!
 
Cool! Learned something new today! Thank you!
 
3:13 PM
Then adopted by spanish language, and likely you are correct, used mostly for the brits
 
Where I grew up it was specifically used for brits, but quite a few people didn’t bother making the distinction between other nationals.
For some people any tourist was a guiri. Turns out they were right… :)
 
There is also a theory that "Bizarro"'s meaning in Spanish (Brave, valiant man) comes from basques calling the spaniard soldiers "bearded" or "Bizarra" in basque, and that spaniards inmediately assumed it was something good. But I think this one is contested
 
How bizarre!
 
haha
 
Beards are weird indeed…
 
3:28 PM
0
Q: Derivative of an image with respect to an other image

KanjooI have to take derivative of an image with respect to an other image satisfying equation dy/dx where y and x are two gray scale images of same dimension. This means, I have to take derivative of the image y with respect to the image x. A sample code is given below to proceed. hdr_image = hdrread(...

"your reasonable solution is not OK, but I can't explain further why"
ok. XD
 
 
1 hour later…
4:45 PM
@flawr Thank you!
@CrisLuengo but German laufen means "walk" in addition to "run", doesn't it?
 
@AnderBiguri Wow, that person just keeps going round and round in circles.
 
indeed
 
@LuisMendo Yeah, but when I hear "400m-Lauf" I think "well, that's going to be boring, watching a bunch of dudes walk 400 meters..."
 
4:58 PM
:-) So Dutch lopen is walking but not running. Got it now
 
 
2 hours later…
7:17 PM
@LuisMendo is a little bit complicated, especially when you mix the swiss high german (and also the swiss german) and german german
in german (g) "laufen" definitely means running, however in swiss german (sg) it means walking
 
then there is "rennen" which means running in both
but there is also "springen" (jumping/leaping in g, but running in sg)
so germans are usually confused:)
then there is also "gehen" which means "walking" (but it's also used like the verb "going" in english)
 
@AnderBiguri "ask your boss or your teacher to clarify"
 
indeed
what a mess of OP
 
> I just have this information from the equation in a research paper i.e., c=d/dx (y) where x and y are two images and c is derivative of the these two images to be used in further processing.
both boss and teacher, apparently
 
7:42 PM
I think its almost ovbious that the OP simply does not understand the paper. XY problem, as I tried to suggest.
 
8:37 PM
@AnderBiguri you mean a dX/dY problem
 
9:17 PM
@flawr and spazieren :-D which I know, as usual, from a _usikstück von Kraftwerk
 
@LuisMendo oh that's how you're learnin german:D
 
9:42 PM
@flawr :-) Youtube's channel Learn German with Anja also helps. And yourdailygerman.com Apart from a superb grammar book that I got
 
 
2 hours later…
11:24 PM
@flawr Now I'm even more confused...
 
@flawr lol
 

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