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Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
The Tokyo and Paris ones are pretty much the same as the Florida one, but smaller and with fewer rides. The Tokyo one is kind of interesting because all the shows are still in English with American actors, but after the actor or character speaks, it's then repeated in Japanese. I can't remember if that's the case with Paris too. It's pretty bizarre though- there was a cowboy show at the place we went for lunch. Two Americans stepped up to start the show, and when they'd finished their bit of dialogue, two Japanese people who'd been hanging around at the back of the stage stepped forward- dressed in the same cowboy outfits as their counterparts, and did exactly the same routine in Japanese.2dimes wrote:I love me some France but prefer the rural south west part of it. I want to scope the park and can't think of a single good reason, must be morbid curiosity.Symmetry wrote:I've done Florida, France twice, and Tokyo. The last two times I swore "never again". I am bad at keeping my promises. As a kid it can be fun, with a girlfriend it can be cutely romantic. If you're not a kid, and you're not with a girlfriend then I would just say maybe check out Europe minus the hour lining up for space mountain. Whilst despacing you'll regret not taking my advice.2dimes wrote:I'm strange by North American standards. I want to check out the one in Europe.
I have only ever been to Land. We took the kids this year. My wife had a book that explained the best way to avoid lines and we went on the third slowest week or something like that. We walked on to most things and being Canucks only ever needed a light jacket after dark. Our daughter loved space mountain but our 4 year old son said it hurt his neck. I reluctantly took her on it as the last ride and the line was only 15 minutes or something even though the sign said an hour or more.
Tokyo must have been fairly cool.
It's a perfectly cromulent word.natty_dread wrote:Is "embiggens" a real word?

pancakemix wrote:Quirk, you are a bastard. That is all.
everywhere116 wrote:You da man! Well, not really, because we're colorful ponies, but you get the idea.
Sodium and Potassium annoy me. Why can't they just call them Natrium and Kalium like we do...at least they'd be consistent with their symbols!Symmetry wrote:Aluminum for aluminium kind of annoys me too. I mean, can we at least have some consistency on element names? Calcum, helum, magnesum, potassum...
Ok- I'll admit to platinum though. Also molybdenum, but really? Aluminum?

speaking of the table of elements... it annoys me that the last ones on the list that are all artificial all begin with "un" and something else with a lot of Us.natty_dread wrote:Sodium and Potassium annoy me. Why can't they just call them Natrium and Kalium like we do...at least they'd be consistent with their symbols!Symmetry wrote:Aluminum for aluminium kind of annoys me too. I mean, can we at least have some consistency on element names? Calcum, helum, magnesum, potassum...
Ok- I'll admit to platinum though. Also molybdenum, but really? Aluminum?
everywhere116 wrote:You da man! Well, not really, because we're colorful ponies, but you get the idea.
"Normalcy" is not really a proper word on either side of the ocean. As you mentioned, the proper word is "normality."Symmetry wrote:Normalcy comes close to be annoying, but I've learned to live with it. Normality is the equivalent in English.
Thanks, now I have another word to be ridiculously pedantic about. I'm genuinely not sure if my previous sentence was sarcastic or not.daddy1gringo wrote:"Normalcy" is not really a proper word on either side of the ocean. As you mentioned, the proper word is "normality."Symmetry wrote:Normalcy comes close to be annoying, but I've learned to live with it. Normality is the equivalent in English.
"Normalcy" was invented by Warren G. Harding (or his handlers) for the slogan for his 1920 presidential campaign: "Return to normalcy". I guess they thought it had a better "ring" than "normality". Either that or they were all just ignorami. Although some dictionaries or other authorities may have surrendered to the common usage of this sophomoric neologism, "normalcy" is just plain incorrect.
Winningest - Biggest Winner, champion, #1, the gold, most victorious, undisputed, the Humunga Kowabunga from down Unda...Symmetry wrote:Now this will be blatant trolling to some, whilst others will take it with a sense of irony.
But two words really stand out:
Deplaning
Winningest
Deplaning bothers me because it just means disembarking, but from a plane.
Winningest annoys me because it's really ugly, and I can't find an easy replacement. "Most successful" almost, but doesn't quite fit.
Normalcy comes close to be annoying, but I've learned to live with it. Normality is the equivalent in English.
See post directly above yours, also wiki entry for "normalcy" citing references back to 1857.Phatscotty wrote:
I thought normalcy was something Churchill coined during WW2?
probably meant a native speaker of american english.Symmetry wrote:I do kind of consider myself a native speaker of English, what with being born and raised in England, but thanks...VioIet wrote:LOL!!!! I actually love this topic.
Your post actually enlightened me, as I had no idea those were actually words. I sure have never heard of them before. I suppose that means I need to read more.
And I've always thought it was normalacy. But I just looked in the dictionary to see that I was wrong; it really is normalcy. But I've heard plenty of Americans use the word normality.
Interesting, that non-native speakers, always seem to have a better vocabulary than mine
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
That makes more sense, yes. Sorry Violet!john9blue wrote:probably meant a native speaker of american english.Symmetry wrote:I do kind of consider myself a native speaker of English, what with being born and raised in England, but thanks...VioIet wrote:LOL!!!! I actually love this topic.
Your post actually enlightened me, as I had no idea those were actually words. I sure have never heard of them before. I suppose that means I need to read more.
And I've always thought it was normalacy. But I just looked in the dictionary to see that I was wrong; it really is normalcy. But I've heard plenty of Americans use the word normality.
Interesting, that non-native speakers, always seem to have a better vocabulary than mine
It pissed me off that they didn't keep them all in Latin to begin with.Symmetry wrote:Aluminum for aluminium kind of annoys me too. I mean, can we at least have some consistency on element names? Calcum, helum, magnesum, potassum...
Ok- I'll admit to platinum though. Also molybdenum, but really? Aluminum?
Just as a heads up, we haven't discovered all the elements.Army of GOD wrote:It pissed me off that they didn't keep them all in Latin to begin with.Symmetry wrote:Aluminum for aluminium kind of annoys me too. I mean, can we at least have some consistency on element names? Calcum, helum, magnesum, potassum...
Ok- I'll admit to platinum though. Also molybdenum, but really? Aluminum?
Earth, Fire, Wind, Water and Xenon...I think we have them all.Symmetry wrote:Just as a heads up, we haven't discovered all the elements.Army of GOD wrote:It pissed me off that they didn't keep them all in Latin to begin with.Symmetry wrote:Aluminum for aluminium kind of annoys me too. I mean, can we at least have some consistency on element names? Calcum, helum, magnesum, potassum...
Ok- I'll admit to platinum though. Also molybdenum, but really? Aluminum?
Xenion, dude- learn how to spel.Army of GOD wrote:Earth, Fire, Wind, Water and Xenon...I think we have them all.Symmetry wrote:Just as a heads up, we haven't discovered all the elements.Army of GOD wrote:It pissed me off that they didn't keep them all in Latin to begin with.Symmetry wrote:Aluminum for aluminium kind of annoys me too. I mean, can we at least have some consistency on element names? Calcum, helum, magnesum, potassum...
Ok- I'll admit to platinum though. Also molybdenum, but really? Aluminum?
You're welcome to say "plumbum" instead of "lead" if you wish.Army of GOD wrote:It pissed me off that they didn't keep them all in Latin to begin with.Symmetry wrote:Aluminum for aluminium kind of annoys me too. I mean, can we at least have some consistency on element names? Calcum, helum, magnesum, potassum...
Ok- I'll admit to platinum though. Also molybdenum, but really? Aluminum?
Occasionally I hear somebody say "faw-YAY" or even "FWA-YAY" (both syllables accented), but usually it's "FAW-yur". But then look at what the French did to "sweater": "le pulover", or to "bathroom": "le dubleucie".Timminz wrote:While the Americans may have bastardized a few English words, they've totally destroyed the French words they've taken for themselves. For example: foyer.
It's "foe-yay".daddy1gringo wrote:Occasionally I hear somebody say "faw-YAY" or even "FWA-YAY" (both syllables accented), but usually it's "FAW-yur". But then look at what the French did to "sweater": "le pulover", or to "bathroom": "le dubleucie".Timminz wrote:While the Americans may have bastardized a few English words, they've totally destroyed the French words they've taken for themselves. For example: foyer.