Editing Talk:2260: Reaction Maps

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::::That is such a peculiarly British form of humor: "I'm going to say something rude, offensive, bizarre, and preferably all of the above. When you are annoyed and call my attention to it I'm going to say that it was a trap and you fell for it." The biggest problem for an American (and probably a Canadian, as well) is that the British think in ways that are so similar to us that we often forget that they really are quite a bit different. When I'm talking to someone from Puerto Rico or Japan or Germany I know that, even though they speak perfectly comprehensible American English, they have a rather different culture and different standards of what is appropriate and what is amusing. With a British person it's very easy to forget how weird you really are. (See what I did there? See how I'm calling your attention to it before the 'trap' is sprung?)[[Special:Contributions/172.69.63.175|172.69.63.175]] 18:29, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
 
::::That is such a peculiarly British form of humor: "I'm going to say something rude, offensive, bizarre, and preferably all of the above. When you are annoyed and call my attention to it I'm going to say that it was a trap and you fell for it." The biggest problem for an American (and probably a Canadian, as well) is that the British think in ways that are so similar to us that we often forget that they really are quite a bit different. When I'm talking to someone from Puerto Rico or Japan or Germany I know that, even though they speak perfectly comprehensible American English, they have a rather different culture and different standards of what is appropriate and what is amusing. With a British person it's very easy to forget how weird you really are. (See what I did there? See how I'm calling your attention to it before the 'trap' is sprung?)[[Special:Contributions/172.69.63.175|172.69.63.175]] 18:29, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
 
::My penny wasn't dropping, and neither was my yod, so I added some explanation about that to the main text. --[[User:IByte|IByte]] ([[User talk:IByte|talk]]) 13:15, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
 
::My penny wasn't dropping, and neither was my yod, so I added some explanation about that to the main text. --[[User:IByte|IByte]] ([[User talk:IByte|talk]]) 13:15, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:Poe's Law.  [[Special:Contributions/172.70.126.211|172.70.126.211]] 16:45, 2 September 2021 (UTC)
 
  
 
Given that the Tudors descend from the ''Welsh'' "Sir Tudur" (his sons being "ap Tudur", 'ap' in P-Celtic being equivalent to 'Mac'/'Mc' in Q-Celtic, and from thence trailled the dynasty that eventually became Henry (VII) Tudor and the rest of them), the South-Walian accent renders both vowels as /i/ (or maybe /i:/ for the first), or in North Wales /y/ (like the Germanic ü?), not likw the Welsh 'w' ("bws" is the public transport vehicle). The Tudurs of Penmynydd are Northern (Anglesean) but with Ceredigion lands too (mid-Southern, and nobody can really agree whether Aberystwyth is North or South, equally difficult to get to from everywhere else!) so you can take your choice on that one! [[Special:Contributions/141.101.107.144|141.101.107.144]] 17:43, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
 
Given that the Tudors descend from the ''Welsh'' "Sir Tudur" (his sons being "ap Tudur", 'ap' in P-Celtic being equivalent to 'Mac'/'Mc' in Q-Celtic, and from thence trailled the dynasty that eventually became Henry (VII) Tudor and the rest of them), the South-Walian accent renders both vowels as /i/ (or maybe /i:/ for the first), or in North Wales /y/ (like the Germanic ü?), not likw the Welsh 'w' ("bws" is the public transport vehicle). The Tudurs of Penmynydd are Northern (Anglesean) but with Ceredigion lands too (mid-Southern, and nobody can really agree whether Aberystwyth is North or South, equally difficult to get to from everywhere else!) so you can take your choice on that one! [[Special:Contributions/141.101.107.144|141.101.107.144]] 17:43, 28 January 2020 (UTC)

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