This is the Message Centre for Gnomon - time to move on

Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 1

Gnomon - time to move on

I'll post to this conversation occasionally with words that are interesting but don't deserve an entire entry.

12 October 2015

Passeggiata

An Italian word for an Italian custom - a stroll around the town in the evening for the purpose of socialising. I'm just back from a weekend in Italy and I participated in this custom. I think it is common in Spain as well, although I've never really been in that country.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 2

Icy North

It's one of the things that's made me jealous of Italians over the years.

That and the food, the climate, the scenery, the historic sites, the art, the laid-back attitude to work, etc, etc.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 3

Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor

In northern Greece, they called it 'volta'. smiley - smiley


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 4

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

It might be known as schmoozing in Germany.

The Italians work hard, and they play hard. Everything is done with balance in mind. Everything except, maybe politics smiley - headhurts. The bureaucracy is mind-boggling.

There are some nice touches, like having schoolchildren go home for lunch. Apparently there are plenty of Italian mothers at home ready with home-cooked food for their children.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 5

Gnomon - time to move on

Most of the teenagers in my daughters' school used to go home for lunch.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 6

Recumbentman

Italy used to be known (possibly still is) as 'a poor country full of rich people' -- high proportion of two-car families and suchlike indicators.

Sounds like a reasonable balance.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 7

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

It's also aging, with a low birth rate. Parents tend, if possible, to make sure that their children have nice places to live when they settle down. If not, Mamma is there to wash her son's laundry, which he may bring to her on the train smiley - laugh.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 8

Gnomon - time to move on

All of Europe is aging with a low birth rate. We need to encourage immigration.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 9

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

Even In Ireland? smiley - winkeye


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 10

Gnomon - time to move on

Todays' word is 'Zoonoses'.

I was feeding my guinea pigs this morning. As I opened the door to their hutch, they looked up at me expectantly and I thought of this word.

No, it is nothing to do with noses, cute and wiggling or otherwise. Zoonoses are diseases that can be transmitted from one animal species to another.

Guinea pigs are good pets because they don't have any of these - you can't catch anything from a guinea pig, no matter how ill they are. But on the other hand, they can catch diseases from humans. In particular, the common cold which makes us feel low can kill a guinea pig. I've a bad cold at the moment, with a sore throat and streaming nose, so I need to be careful not to cough while the gps are around or to breathe too heavily in their direction.

I believe I caught the cold by singing in a performance of Fauré's Requiem last Saturday - good singing requires deep breathing and if one person in the choir of a hundred has a cold, many other people are bound to catch it. That's not to say that singing is bad for you. In many studies it has been shown that being in a choral society is a good way of combating depression and mental illness.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 11

Icy North

That's a nice word - I've seen it before in crosswords.

You have to remember that the singular is 'zoonosis', not 'zoonose'.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 12

Gnomon - time to move on

It's probably pronounced "zoh-oh" rather than "zoo". Originally, zoological gardens were 'zoh-oh-logical".


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 13

Icy North

Yes, and you can optionally stress either the second or third syllable: zo-uh-NO-sis or zo-ON-uh-sis


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 14

Recumbentman

A nice old term for a zoo was 'Intelligence Park' -- or so Vincent Deane tells us. Googling it comes up with nothing but the opera of that name for which he wrote the libretto.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 15

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

smiley - smiley


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 16

Gnomon - time to move on

Today's word is "Boolean". George Boole was born 200 years ago today. He was an English mathematician who moved to Cork, Ireland and lived in a house beside the River Lee. Sadly, his house is now falling down - it needs someone to buy it up and restore it as a museum to mathematics.

Boole invented Boolean logic, the mathematical study of logical statements using symbols. The ancient Greeks were masters of logic, but they always stated everything as sentences of words. Boole devised a way of reducing logic to the status of a mathematical operation using symbols which meant that you can examine the validity of a logical argument without worrying about what the statements being examined actually meant. It effectively is a way of automating deduction.

This of course had huge applications in computers, something Boole himself had never considered.

Here's the plaque on Boole's house:

http://flic.kr/p/aLF77v


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 17

Icy North

Did you know there was a Boole's Rule?

http://mathworld.wolfram.com/BoolesRule.html

And are there any other rhyming identities in mathematics (Emma's Lemma, anyone?)


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 18

You can call me TC

Today's google doodle is dedicated to him, too.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 19

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

I've been hearing about Boolean searches for at least forty years. Library catalogs use that type of search quite a lot.


Gnomon's Word for the Day

Post 20

Gnomon - time to move on

My favourite Boolean result is that NOT(A OR B) = NOT(A) AND NOT(B).


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