whyvswhynot12089
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja92jjy wrote
Reply to comment by AxialGem in Humen is a more logical plural to human than humans. It’s men and women, not mans and womans. by frenglish_man
I got your point the first time. I just think history is a lot more variable than heat in a pan. Loan words don't always stop evolving at their point of origin circumstances.
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja8x1ra wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Calling yourself humble makes you automatically unhumble. by Sczrp
As an English speaker, that just seems weird as hell to me lol. Why talk to other people as if they aren't there?
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja76rzu wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Calling yourself humble makes you automatically unhumble. by Sczrp
When people are saying that in Finnish....arent they giving an unspoken opinion about those things? Like "this sucks" or "this is wonderful", dont you think so too? Because there's no point in just telling people something you know they already know. The end goal has to be something else.
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja75hd0 wrote
Reply to comment by AxialGem in Humen is a more logical plural to human than humans. It’s men and women, not mans and womans. by frenglish_man
Well of course the languages a word is based on are going to affect the spelling. I understand etymology is a thing lol. That just seems like a really obvious answer for anyone posting about English in this subreddit.
If Normandy hadn't invaded England, we would have likely taken "human" from the older latin word "humanis".
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja74ixi wrote
Reply to comment by CrashBandioof420 in Humen is a more logical plural to human than humans. It’s men and women, not mans and womans. by frenglish_man
I know most plural french words include an S on the end and Normandy invaded England, which contributed to middle English taking up some Middle French words...but are you sure other loan languages use an "s" for plural?
(I'm really don't know/am genuinely asking. )
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja70xz3 wrote
Reply to comment by CrashBandioof420 in Humen is a more logical plural to human than humans. It’s men and women, not mans and womans. by frenglish_man
I wasn't claiming the etymology of the word lol. Just why human/humen wouldn't work practically. That being said, human didn't start with the french word "humain". It started with the latin "homo" and then the latin "humanis"....That french word "humain" showed up around 300 years later.
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja6x8tr wrote
Reply to comment by AxialGem in Humen is a more logical plural to human than humans. It’s men and women, not mans and womans. by frenglish_man
Those words aren't exactly a beacon of clarity either...but I see more problems happening with the word "human"....because it's not just a noun. Words like "Sheep" and "barman" are just nouns, so it's easy enough to just add an article to clarify the difference, between plural and singular.
Example sentence: "If it was human/humen."
If you're just listening and the person has an accent or lacks perfect diction....It's impossible to tell if they're talking about the quality of being human or "humans" plural.
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja6tgy8 wrote
Reply to Humen is a more logical plural to human than humans. It’s men and women, not mans and womans. by frenglish_man
Humen and human sound almost identical. Not good for auditory speech. Especially considering different accents....
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja6t4df wrote
Calling yourself anything, casts doubt on you being that thing. The things we know to be true about ourselves, don't need to be said anymore than, "The sky is blue."
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja4v0qh wrote
Reply to comment by Tucker_the_Nerd in Unsolved Mysteries is Redundant by Tucker_the_Nerd
Yeah. It's obvious what you were thinking along the lines of...real life situations. But those don't apply here. It doesn't matter if it's a book or TV. Genres still apply whenever a story is being told. People who search for "mystery" books or films, are specifically searching for a "who done it" scenario where the crime is always solved by the end. And part of the fun is trying to figure out the answer...because you know there is one.
"Unsolved Mysteries" is telling crime stories that can't be solved and have no answer....which breaks away from everything "Mystery" as a genre, is defined by. Therefore "Unsolved Mysteries" is not redundant.
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja1yykt wrote
Reply to comment by Tucker_the_Nerd in Unsolved Mysteries is Redundant by Tucker_the_Nerd
In the context of a story told to you for entertainment purposes...yeah, it's still a mystery. (Just like a Romance novel is still a romance novel even if a lover dies at the end. ) We're talking about the context of stories and genre.
whyvswhynot12089 t1_ja944ho wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Calling yourself humble makes you automatically unhumble. by Sczrp
I honestly hate some of what gets defined as small talk...like I don't think, "How are you?" Is really an appropriate question for people you don't know...(if you actually want an honest exchange that isn't just filling the air with empty words/automatic responses. )
But books, movies, what someone is wearing, someone's pets, something their kid is doing, unusual or irritating weather...I think those can be decent conversation starters.