DigDeep(inactive) Posted March 23, 2014 Posted March 23, 2014 I'm going to start going around calling people loambags & siltbags. I think my skin color is close to 10YR 7/3 or 7/4 - I'm thinking I should get that tattooed somewhere..... mandarin.orange, pears and VioletAyame 3
pears Posted March 23, 2014 Posted March 23, 2014 I think my skin color is close to 10YR 7/3 or 7/4 - I'm thinking I should get that tattooed somewhere..... I love that archies get dig-related tattoos. I know a few folks with trowels, projectile points, glyphs, etc. (usually hidden). I've been slowly planning a full sleeve for my right arm, & I fully intend to have a skull (with modified dentition, of course) & cross-marshalltowns at the top. Coolest kid in town right here, I swear. Other terms I love: Moving dirt: trying to tackle an enormous project area in a short amount of time. Speedy excavation or shovel test pit-digging.. Pounding ground: same as above, but for pedestrian surveys. Related to long or short miles; some days you walk 2 long miles, & some days you walk 12 short ones. Native American sex stone: when a crew member, usually the new kid, pulls something non-cultural out of the ground. "Hey, crew chief, what's this?" "It's a Native American sex stone." "What?" "It's just a f**king rock." DigDeep(inactive) 1
PhDerp Posted March 24, 2014 Author Posted March 24, 2014 Oh, you've come out of your hole. I don't know what you mean? I have a lot of math, CS, and linguistics terminology to post on this once I get to a real keyboard!
deci:belle Posted March 24, 2014 Posted March 24, 2014 IPA = International Phonetic Alphabet, basically its a system of writing that replicates how people sound out words. Used in my field of Audiology but mostly in Linguistics and Speech Language Pathology. It's not a hoppy beer
roguesenna Posted March 24, 2014 Posted March 24, 2014 IPA = International Phonetic Alphabet, basically its a system of writing that replicates how people sound out words. Used in my field of Audiology but mostly in Linguistics and Speech Language Pathology. It's not a hoppy beer we use IPA in theatre too!
aphdapplicant Posted March 26, 2014 Posted March 26, 2014 (edited) Affect (noun) - the outward expression of one's emotions to others Edited March 26, 2014 by aphdapplicant
bgguitarist Posted March 26, 2014 Posted March 26, 2014 Differance--it isn't a typo, it's the foundation of a theoretical perspective on language
EngineerGrad Posted March 27, 2014 Posted March 27, 2014 In Electrical Engineering, a tank is not a place where you put water/liquid. A tank is an RLC ressonant circuit. ahlatsiawa 1
mandarin.orange Posted March 29, 2014 Posted March 29, 2014 Oddly enough, another word is Geography. Oh you're studying Geography? So do you know where *insert city name* is? No, Geography is not the study of where stuff is. lol Rather perplexingly, I was once told by a guy trying to sell me car insurance, "Geography? Cool, cool...I ALWAYS wanted to dig up dinosaurs when I was a kid!" Anyway, Geography jargon: how about "spatiotemporal" and "scale" Or "spatial and temporal scales" Or "varies throughout time and space" DigDeep(inactive) 1
spectastic Posted March 29, 2014 Posted March 29, 2014 (edited) how about my least favorite? off the top of my head safety permits: RATA - relative accuracy test audit TS104 - technical standard 104. (don't ask me what it entails, but apparently it's important) SIL - safety integrity level operating limits: environmental limits (from the EPA) SOC (safety operating limits) KPRP (key production ... shit I forgot what the other two stand for) project related: MOC - management of change LDAR - leak detection and repair PMP - preventative maintenance plan P&ID - piping and instruments diagram PFD - process flow diagram BPF - forgot what it stands for, but it's like a blueprint DMF - decision making frame work positions: OE - operations engineer SOE - senior operations engineer RDL - reliability day leader RSL - reliability shift leader MLO - ??? RCC - resources ? coordinator PL - production leader and about 100 more... *SIGH* industrial standards totally suck. I miss the days where things are simple, and there isn't 100 pages of paperwork that has to go through 100 people every time I do something. and as a side note, we have this chemical - adiponitrile - or ADN, and auto correct always changes that to AND.. So it's like whenever I'm on a different computer, I have to hit backspace allll the way back to the typo, change it, hit spacebar, and it changes again! GOD Edited March 29, 2014 by spectastic
DigDeep(inactive) Posted March 29, 2014 Posted March 29, 2014 Anyway, Geography jargon: how about "spatiotemporal" and "scale" Or "spatial and temporal scales" Or "varies throughout time and space" woot!
DigDeep(inactive) Posted March 29, 2014 Posted March 29, 2014 I love that archies get dig-related tattoos. I know a few folks with trowels, projectile points, glyphs, etc. (usually hidden). I've been slowly planning a full sleeve for my right arm, & I fully intend to have a skull (with modified dentition, of course) & cross-marshalltowns at the top. Coolest kid in town right here, I swear. Other terms I love: Moving dirt: trying to tackle an enormous project area in a short amount of time. Speedy excavation or shovel test pit-digging.. Pounding ground: same as above, but for pedestrian surveys. Related to long or short miles; some days you walk 2 long miles, & some days you walk 12 short ones. Native American sex stone: when a crew member, usually the new kid, pulls something non-cultural out of the ground. "Hey, crew chief, what's this?" "It's a Native American sex stone." "What?" "It's just a f**king rock." That's awesome. Sounds like someone has visited the CRM world! Still doing CRM or working for the government or was it just for experience? I have never enjoyed the projects, my self. Fun trips, but not my idea for a career! (no judgement on those who have chosen that path)
pears Posted March 29, 2014 Posted March 29, 2014 That's awesome. Sounds like someone has visited the CRM world! Still doing CRM or working for the government or was it just for experience? I have never enjoyed the projects, my self. Fun trips, but not my idea for a career! (no judgement on those who have chosen that path) Working for the government, hoping to keep it that way. I'd like to be the Tahoe or Eldorado NF head archie one day. Mostly USFS, but I guess I'm working sort-of-for the NPS this summer. That reminds me!: Pickle Suit: US Forest Service uniform.
mandarin.orange Posted March 29, 2014 Posted March 29, 2014 woot! For real. I once counted # of word occurrences in a review paper (14 pp long) I was reading that seemed repetitive from the get-go: "spatial" = 40 times "temporal" = 36 times ...aaaaand, "scale"? 137 times. pears 1
gr8pumpkin Posted March 30, 2014 Posted March 30, 2014 (edited) Klumpenhouwer Network. I think it's fun to say and impressive sounding; but not everyone can spell Klumpenhouwer off the top of their head like I can, so it is sometimes called a K-net. Not to be confused with K-Tel, a record label that specialized in one-hit wonders of the 70s and disco. Edited March 30, 2014 by gr8pumpkin
maelia8 Posted March 31, 2014 Posted March 31, 2014 Structuralism, which for historians refers to theoretical frameworks that emphasize any broad, powerful, wide-reaching, and hard to change intangible structure (for example Marxism or Capitalism) that can serve as a driving force in human history above and beyond the acts of human individuals. Nope, it's got nothing to do with buildings or how they affected the course of history (face palm). pears 1
PhDerp Posted April 9, 2014 Author Posted April 9, 2014 (edited) I'm just gonna leave this here...http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mathematical_jargon tl;dr: Almost every word in math is a regular english word gone crazy. Edited April 9, 2014 by PhDerp
spellbanisher Posted April 9, 2014 Posted April 9, 2014 History is not a synonym for the "past." The past is what happened. History is an interpretation of the past or an argument about it. Sarah Bee, pears and maelia8 3
kimmibeans Posted April 10, 2014 Posted April 10, 2014 (edited) Sonic Hedgehog Gene. The best part is that it's shorthand is Shh. Geneticists like to have fun naming things Edited April 10, 2014 by kimmibeans lasercats11 and iPsych 2
Sarah Bee Posted April 11, 2014 Posted April 11, 2014 There are plenty of them but here are a few: Air: White space used in a story design Armpit: An awkward-looking page layout where a story's banner headline sits on top of a photo or another headline Bastard measure: Any non-standard width for a column of text Bleed: A page element that extends to the trimmed edge of a printed page Doglegs: L-shaped columns of text that wrap around art, ads or other stories Ear: Text or graphic elements on either side of a newspaper's flag Gutter: narrow margin of white space in the center area in a magazine, newspaper, or book, where two pages meet Hammer head: A headline that uses a big, bold word or phrase for impact and runs a small, wide deck below Morgue: newsroom library Orphan: A short word or phrase that's carried over to a new column or page Pork chop: A half-column mug shot. Teaser: An eye-catching graphic element, on Page One or section fronts, that promotes an item inside; also called a promo. Widow: A word or phrase that makes up the last line of text in a paragraph gk210 1
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