cdeb wrote: » If you've gone and spoiled my book...!!
Esel wrote: » Why do we 'orientate' instead of just 'orient', and why 'commentator' instead of 'commenter'?
Anders Shy Aircraft wrote: » A commentator commentates, he doesn't comment. Two very different verbs.
Anders Shy Aircraft wrote: » Esel wrote: » Why do we 'orientate' instead of just 'orient', and why 'commentator' instead of 'commenter'? A commentator commentates, he doesn't comment. Two very different verbs.
Anders Shy Aircraft wrote: » Egyptian and Chinese maps had South at the top. North gained prominence with the development of the compass for navigation use and ,it's thought, a desire for Europeans to be at the top of the map.
Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » Fair point on commentate, but I by my understanding it's not really equivalent to orient and orientate, because while commentate is a verb, orientate isn't. Orient is the "correct" verb and orientate came later as a kind of redundancy. I stand to be corrected on that though!
cdeb wrote: » Orientate is a verb. I orientated the map. I will go for a walk to orientate myself when I arrive. I can't see how "orient" can be correct at all. "Orient" is a noun meaning "east". The adjective is oriental, not orient. It stands to reason the verb form must also change and so can't be "orient"
KevRossi wrote: » The difference in Bell Peppers...
Electric Nitwit wrote: » https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/gender-pepper/ :-(
Carry wrote: » Ah, now, as much as I like to believe that "females" are sweeter than "males" and that "males" are only palatable when properly cooked, but this is simply a rumour. The taste of bell peppers depends on their colour. The green ones are not yet fully ripe, still full of chlorophyll (green), and are a tad more bitter and crunchier than the red ones. They eventually turn red, then orange and finally yellow and become sweeter and slightly softer than the green ones. Hence the green ones are better for cooking, the red/orange/yellow ones good for salads or such like. Since the red ones have more seeds (as they ripen) they are labeled as "female". The number of lobes has no meaning whatsoever.
mzungu wrote: » Reindeers can see UV light. .
mzungu wrote: » Reindeers can see UV light. Scientists shone LED lights of different wavelengths, including UV, into the eyes of 18 anaesthetised reindeers while recording with an electrode whether nerves in the eye fired, indicating that the light had been seen. The UV light triggered a response in the eyes of all the reindeer. Hence, reindeer are the only mammals that can see ultraviolet light. This means that they can easily tell the difference between white fur and snow because white fur has much higher contrast. It helps them discover predators early in snowy landscapes.
Ipso wrote: » What about Rudolph the infra red nosed reindeer?
Fourier wrote: » And if you ever saw it you couldn't even say it glows as infrared lies outside the human visual spectrum.