Editing Talk:1898: October 2017

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:: The -oid suffix means 'having the form of'.  By definition, a fact has the form of a fact, so must be factoid.  However, non-facts could also be factoids if they have the form of a fact (for example, if they are commonly repeated as if true). When [http://www.startrek.com/database_article/odo Odo] complains (as he often does) that he will never understand humanoids, he doesn't mean to exclude humans - they too are humanoid. Of course, it's slightly odd that he uses this term at all - having 'grown up' on Bajor, you might expect him to be more inclined to consider them 'Bajoranoid'. One might argue that he is in fact saying 'Bajoranoid', and the universal translator is translating it as 'humanoid', but that would seem to suggest that it is playing fast and loose with the translation, since the accurate translation into English would be, er, 'Bajoranoid'. I may have spent too much time thinking about this. [[Special:Contributions/162.158.155.32|162.158.155.32]] 12:49, 6 October 2017 (UTC)
 
:: The -oid suffix means 'having the form of'.  By definition, a fact has the form of a fact, so must be factoid.  However, non-facts could also be factoids if they have the form of a fact (for example, if they are commonly repeated as if true). When [http://www.startrek.com/database_article/odo Odo] complains (as he often does) that he will never understand humanoids, he doesn't mean to exclude humans - they too are humanoid. Of course, it's slightly odd that he uses this term at all - having 'grown up' on Bajor, you might expect him to be more inclined to consider them 'Bajoranoid'. One might argue that he is in fact saying 'Bajoranoid', and the universal translator is translating it as 'humanoid', but that would seem to suggest that it is playing fast and loose with the translation, since the accurate translation into English would be, er, 'Bajoranoid'. I may have spent too much time thinking about this. [[Special:Contributions/162.158.155.32|162.158.155.32]] 12:49, 6 October 2017 (UTC)
 
:::I'll say a tomatoid would almost certainly be a vegetable with some striking similarities to a tomato, but whose grandparents  include perhaps a potato, some brussel's sprouts. --[[Special:Contributions/162.158.88.86|162.158.88.86]] 10:47, 8 October 2017 (UTC)
 
:::I'll say a tomatoid would almost certainly be a vegetable with some striking similarities to a tomato, but whose grandparents  include perhaps a potato, some brussel's sprouts. --[[Special:Contributions/162.158.88.86|162.158.88.86]] 10:47, 8 October 2017 (UTC)
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::: Hmmm, your link seems to stop at the underscore, and doesn't show your link text. Way to go wiki! LOL! Until seeing the link in full while typing this, I had assumed you were talking about Data and I was confused about your talking about Bajor. :) (I fixed it, it wants a space between the address and the link text, not a pipe. It might have included the pipe and link text as part of the link and the other site threw it out as invalid?).
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::: Hmmm, your link seems to stop at the underscore, and doesn't show your link text. Way to go wiki! LOL! Until seeing the link in full while typing this, I had assumed you were talking about Data and I was confused about your talking about Bajor. :) (I fixed it, it wants a space between the address and the link text, not a pipe. It might have included the pipe and link text as part of the link and the pther site threw it out as invalid?).
 
::: True, "humanoid" and "planetoid" (the only other words of this form I can think of right now) can include humans and planets respectively, but the way I've heard it they shouldn't, that -oid means "like but isn't". At the very least I've read this in reference to "factoid", that the form of the word SHOULD mean "Seems like a fact but isn't one". Also it seems like the tendency is to include "humans" within the term "humanoid" mostly when the word is used by someone who isn't human, like Odo. It's also quite possible the writers of the show were misusing the word all the time. LOL! And I understand the overanalysis. Welcome home, Overanalyst, we call this mecca of overanalysis "ExplainXKCD". :) [[User:NiceGuy1|NiceGuy1]] ([[User talk:NiceGuy1|talk]]) 04:55, 13 October 2017 (UTC)
 
::: True, "humanoid" and "planetoid" (the only other words of this form I can think of right now) can include humans and planets respectively, but the way I've heard it they shouldn't, that -oid means "like but isn't". At the very least I've read this in reference to "factoid", that the form of the word SHOULD mean "Seems like a fact but isn't one". Also it seems like the tendency is to include "humans" within the term "humanoid" mostly when the word is used by someone who isn't human, like Odo. It's also quite possible the writers of the show were misusing the word all the time. LOL! And I understand the overanalysis. Welcome home, Overanalyst, we call this mecca of overanalysis "ExplainXKCD". :) [[User:NiceGuy1|NiceGuy1]] ([[User talk:NiceGuy1|talk]]) 04:55, 13 October 2017 (UTC)
 
::: [http://www.dictionary.com/browse/-oid Dictionary.com] describes -oid as "a suffix meaning "resembling," "like," used in the formation of adjectives and nouns (and often implying an incomplete or imperfect resemblance to what is indicated by the preceding element)"
 
::: [http://www.dictionary.com/browse/-oid Dictionary.com] describes -oid as "a suffix meaning "resembling," "like," used in the formation of adjectives and nouns (and often implying an incomplete or imperfect resemblance to what is indicated by the preceding element)"

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