Jonathan Loesberg
Jonathan Loesberg
Wordsmith for writer and a misuse of begs the question. Now, you are just trolling me.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Pete, I've jeebused with Jonathan and he does, indeed, tell stories about his parents, the president and vice-president.
originally posted by robert ames:
One can also, as a very cursory internet search will show, create sentences that an Oxford comma will make ambiguous."
please embrace our collective laziness and provide an example yourself.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg: Jack left the pub with John (a policeman) and Simon. Jack left the pub with John, a policeman, and Simon.
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg: Jack left the pub with John (a policeman) and Simon. Jack left the pub with John, a policeman, and Simon.
This seems to be more a case of the writer carelessly using commas instead of parentheses in the second sentence. It doesn't seem right to blame the commas in this case.
. . . . . Pete
Under any normal circumstances, setting of an appositive with commas is considered normal use and parentheses would be otiose. They are only used in this example to show off the ambiguity created. In fact, the best solution to clarifying the sentence would be to remove the Oxford comma.originally posted by Peter Creasey:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg: Jack left the pub with John (a policeman) and Simon. Jack left the pub with John, a policeman, and Simon.
This seems to be more a case of the writer carelessly using commas instead of parentheses in the second sentence. It doesn't seem right to blame the commas in this case.
. . . . . Pete
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Is there no advocate for simply adding "who is a" to the appositive? That would obviate any ambiguity about punctuation.
Hieroglyphics are an original form of writing out of which all other forms have evolved. Two of the newer forms were called hieratic and demotic. Hieratic was a simplified form of hieroglyphics used for administrative and business purposes, as well as for literary, scientific and religious texts. Demotic, a Greek word meaning "popular script", was in general use for the daily requirements of the society.
The following list contains adjectives that are noncomparable because of their respective meanings.
Unique: Either something is unique or it is not unique. The meaning implies that something is one of a kind. Something cannot be more unique or most unique.
Absolute: Degrees of absolute do not exist. Something cannot be more absolute or most absolute.
Essential: Something is either essential or not essential. It is not possible for something to be more essential or most essential.
Immortal: Meaning to live forever. Something either lives forever or it does not.
Universal: Meaning present everywhere. Something is either universal, or it is not. Things cannot be more universal or most universal.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
This question is so easy even I know the answer: no. There is no such thing as 2infinity. Twice infinity is infinity.
originally posted by Cole Kendall:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
This question is so easy even I know the answer: no. There is no such thing as 2infinity. Twice infinity is infinity.
But there are different infinities; see here
Loading…
en.wikipedia.org
for Cantor's Aleph-zero and Aleph-one. As I understand it, the number of integers or rational numbers is the same and can be represented by Aleph-zero. Aleph-one (as I learned it in high school calculus) is the set of rational and irrational numbers, also infinite but greater in size than Aleph-zero.
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Cole Kendall:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
This question is so easy even I know the answer: no. There is no such thing as 2infinity. Twice infinity is infinity.
But there are different infinities; see here
Loading…
en.wikipedia.org
for Cantor's Aleph-zero and Aleph-one. As I understand it, the number of integers or rational numbers is the same and can be represented by Aleph-zero. Aleph-one (as I learned it in high school calculus) is the set of rational and irrational numbers, also infinite but greater in size than Aleph-zero.
Yup, pretty much. Aleph-null is the count of integers, an infinite number. Aleph-one is the count of reals, also an infinite number, but demonstrably larger than Aleph-null.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Cole Kendall:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
This question is so easy even I know the answer: no. There is no such thing as 2infinity. Twice infinity is infinity.
But there are different infinities; see here
Loading…
en.wikipedia.org
for Cantor's Aleph-zero and Aleph-one. As I understand it, the number of integers or rational numbers is the same and can be represented by Aleph-zero. Aleph-one (as I learned it in high school calculus) is the set of rational and irrational numbers, also infinite but greater in size than Aleph-zero.
Yup, pretty much. Aleph-null is the count of integers, an infinite number. Aleph-one is the count of reals, also an infinite number, but demonstrably larger than Aleph-null.
Mark Lipton
This may be like dark holes, and I will understand the theory without really comprehending it, but how can one infinity be larger than another, since both are infinite.