|
redleader posted:years after first hearing about them, i'm still in awe of the sheer, genius simplicity of piezoelectric delay lines The original ones were giant lumps of roughened glass (p6 & 8) tuned with a grinding wheel, so I can see why some places said "eh, NTSC's good enough for now" but yeah enough glass to store exactly one line of television to compare to the next one is very cool and extremely 60s engineering.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 08:45 |
|
|
# ? Jun 4, 2024 21:27 |
|
Grape posted:That that dude levied the accusation of American French hate at Tei the Spaniard. The Spanish were known for hating the French back during the Peninsular War, and I can only assume that nothing has changed since then Also many on the nationalist side of the Spanish Civil War thought the French were meddling Judaized mason degenerates, and I can also only assume that is still a popular viewpoint over there e: call a Spaniard afrancesado if you really want to piss them off!!
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 11:35 |
|
Phlegmish posted:e: call a Spaniard afrancesado if you really want to piss them off!! I'm not even Spanish but holy poo poo that's vile
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 13:02 |
|
Phlegmish posted:The Spanish were known for hating the French back during the Peninsular War, and I can only assume that nothing has changed since then yep.. They invaded my country, killed many people, burned my city after a long siege, it was a war fought soldiers against civilians. They made example of many towns with atrocities. (can't link to horrible images, because forum rules, so I will link the wikipedia page) https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_desastres_de_la_guerra For a long time, being influenced by the french was a dirty word, even in the parts of story where spain was allied to france. Probably in part because being "afrancesado" was also a synonim of progressist, so a easy target for conservatives. For a long time the spanish had a burnng hate against the french. They destroyed our agricultural products on the frontier and made us destroy our trees before entering the european union. https://www.rtve.es/fotogalerias/camiones-espanoles-bloqueados-agricultores-franceses/140915/ But ashes turn to dust. And time cures all. And I think young spanish don't give a rat rear end about france. We don't have any recent dispute to stir nationalist or the old ashes. The average spanish have a low level hate and disdain for anything non-spanish, as if the iberian peninsula where a entire continent, and beyond the peninsula there where only barbarians. France is just some of these barbarians. Tei fucked around with this message at 13:25 on Sep 17, 2021 |
# ? Sep 17, 2021 13:22 |
|
As far as things go, the Peninsular War followed less than two decades later by the Hundred Thousand Sons of St. Louis are pretty decent reasons to hate France.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 14:04 |
|
Speaking of the Peninsular War Wikipedia today led me down the rabbit hole of the French Revolutionary wars, which led me back to our previous topic of the integration pre-conquest Mexican nobility into Spanish power structures. Did you know that to this day there is still a Spanish Duke of Moctezuma who is a descendant of the last Aztec emperor Moctezuma II via his daughter? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duke_of_Moctezuma_de_Tultengo
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 14:36 |
|
a pipe smoking dog posted:Speaking of the Peninsular War Wikipedia today led me down the rabbit hole of the French Revolutionary wars, which led me back to our previous topic of the integration pre-conquest Mexican nobility into Spanish power structures. In true r/relationships fashion, I'm doing the ages math and the ages on the 3rd countess' family is ridiculous.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 15:36 |
|
Re: France, yeah, it'd kind of weird when people hate it for the wrong reasons. Like, France is actually a militarily very accomplished country, the reason their defeats loom so large is because they are historically the exception, not the norm. I think the French are alright, but their francocentrism is sometimes utterly baffling. People sometimes laugh at how ignorant of the wider world the average American is, but the French are just as bad and they don't have the excuse of living in a nation that spans half a continent. I've lost count of how many French people I have encountered who think Belgium is monolingually French-speaking, while we live right next door. An example: back in 2012 the company I worked for was acquired by a French company, and with it came new HR software. When entering our profiles, one of the fields was 'language proficiency'. For starters, you could only pick two languages, as if people who speak more than two languages didn't exist. Second, they had listed French, English, Spanish and... Flemish? Flemish isn't a language (it's like saying 'American' is a language) so HQ was inundated by calls from both Belgian and Dutch employees who were mad at this nomenclature, as well as people who spoke other languages (like Arabic, Russian or German). HQ was surprised by the outcry and then added 'Hollandic' and 'Afrikaans' (?!) to the list. Still no German though. And through all this, people at HQ in Paris were genuinely confused that somehow their worldview was incorrect, like a slow version of whiteguyblinking.gif. ThisIsJohnWayne posted:How dare you. At least Swedish ships can sink all on their own without even an enemy in sight!
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 16:38 |
|
The Flemish, Hollandic, Afrikaans, Prussian, Bavarian, Anglican, and Scots dialects of Dutch.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 16:44 |
|
I believe theres a small opposition against France because France refuse to be only another USA colony. They try more than other countries to have their own culture, and not just buy the latest USA movies and weapons. Countries that do this.... there are few, Afganistan under Taliban mandate, North Korea, Cuba. France is not against USA, is allied with USA on all conflict I know of, but by being their own thing may appear as uppity compared to all other countries that act as USA squire, follow USA orders, buy USA weapons and consume USA propaganda.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 16:51 |
|
Pope Hilarius II posted:I think the French are alright, but their francocentrism is sometimes utterly baffling. Hit the nail on the head right here.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 16:57 |
|
Pope Hilarius II posted:At least Swedish ships can sink all on their own without even an enemy in sight! A Buttery Pastry posted:Sweden is literally the least trustworthy ally/neighbor any country could have while still pretending to be a friend. Never before have I been so offended by something I completely agree with /
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 17:21 |
|
Look, there are three languages: proper French, wrong French and Foreign. Whatever dialect of Foreign you speak is less interesting. French language policy post revolution is a pretty fascinating topic though. France went from being a huge mess of dialects and languages to extremely standardized across pretty much all of France through very aggressive language policy, which incidentally lives on in the way French (and Canadian) people perceive dialects today. Like, we know that Breton is something a few people speak today, but 300 years ago, most of France was pretty much like that, or at least had strong enough dialects that you couldn't necessarily speak with someone a couple of regions away. Sweden was also going strong at some point. When they took the Scandinavian glans (Skåne, Halland and Blekinge) from Denmark, both the English and the French "recommended" them not to take Sjælland as well, because if Sweden controlled Øresund, that would make them too powerful, and that in turn would have consequences.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 18:29 |
|
BonHair posted:Sjælland
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 18:38 |
|
wait what did france/eu do to spain's trees
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 18:44 |
|
Tei posted:I believe theres a small opposition against France because France refuse to be only another USA colony. These are sentences written by an insane person.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 18:49 |
|
Doesn’t France refuse to say Jumbo Jet? And various other American words are ‘transliterated’ into something more French? I dunno. Cultures are odd. I always thought the American coy hatred of French stuff was so funny when I was in the Air Force because so much military jargon literally comes from French words.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 19:41 |
|
To be fair to Sweden they've been in like 50 different wars with Denmark over the years. It rivals the whole France/England beef in terms of different wars over several centuries.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 19:55 |
|
SlothfulCobra posted:These are sentences written by an insane person. I don't know about that, it's a pretty faithful representation of old style US-hate among europeans. You used to hear it from crusty old communists et al when I was a kid.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 19:57 |
|
Pope Hilarius II posted:I think the French are alright, but their francocentrism is sometimes utterly baffling. People sometimes laugh at how ignorant of the wider world the average American is, but the French are just as bad and they don't have the excuse of living in a nation that spans half a continent. I've lost count of how many French people I have encountered who think Belgium is monolingually French-speaking, while we live right next door. I have heard this before (from non-French people), and interestingly it's usually not from Anglos - most often the latter will either know literally nothing about Belgium, or have the basics down well enough. I have actually spoken to, or heard of, German people who thought that surely I must speak French since I said I was 'Belgian'. I try not to be offended, since I've long ceased to be surprised at people's ignorance. Probably the main causes for this are 1) Belgium's very real history of French supremacism, especially in the 19th century, and 2) the fact that French is the lingua franca in Brussels, with token official bilingualism in place at the best of times. Brussels is probably the least representative capital city in Europe, but I wouldn't necessarily expect a foreigner to know that. It's one of the reasons I usually describe myself as 'Flemish' in international contexts these days. Either (often) they'll have no idea what you're talking about, and that can be an opening to explain more about yourself, or they do and then they immediately have a pretty good idea of what your background is. Pope Hilarius II posted:An example: back in 2012 the company I worked for was acquired by a French company, and with it came new HR software. When entering our profiles, one of the fields was 'language proficiency'. For starters, you could only pick two languages, as if people who speak more than two languages didn't exist. Second, they had listed French, English, Spanish and... Flemish? Flemish isn't a language This is quite common, and once again not just a French thing. It's surprising as well, since you will never find that word used to refer to our language in any (official) Belgian context, but I have read or heard it so many times from foreigners completely unprompted. Again, two potential causes come to mind: 1) the nomenclature has historically often been filtered through French, and as you say they have their own Machiavellian reasons to divide all non-French languages endlessly, especially here where it also served to maintain the ascendancy of French in Belgium, and 2) ironically, the fact that 'Flemish' as a term has some residual historical prestige in certain languages and cultures. In some languages, the word for 'Dutch' is actually derived from 'Flemish'. For example, I'm not 100% on the etymology of the Turkish word Felemenkçe (Dutch), but it would be an extreme coincidence if that weren't the case there. In Flanders itself this is not a thing at all, it doesn't matter where you are on the left-right or unitarian-separatist spectra, we all think of our language as Dutch, although occasionally you will hear 'Flemish' in colloquial contexts (which is why it has a pronounced low-class connotation when it does get used).
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 19:58 |
|
FreudianSlippers posted:To be fair to Sweden they've been in like 50 different wars with Denmark over the years. It rivals the whole France/England beef in terms of different wars over several centuries. What you mean "rival"? We killed each other longer, more, consistently, thoroughly and self-destructively than anyone. It's one of histories largest blessings we could stop. Britain could only fantasise about getting to our level.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 20:07 |
|
According to some random website Sweden and Denmark hold the record for most wars between countries:quote:Sweden and Denmark have fought each other for centuries and hold the record for most wars fought between them. It all adds up to around 30 wars since the 15th century. We even beat the biggest enemies of Europe, England and France, who have fought 16 wars. It's not quite 50 wars, but almost.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 20:09 |
|
Cracker King posted:Doesn’t France refuse to say Jumbo Jet? And various other American words are ‘transliterated’ into something more French? Iceland literally has a government agency (or something like that) for making up words. A fellow linguistics student when I was in university did her bachelor's degree in her native Iceland and had a student job as a word creator. It sounded good on paper, but it turns out that most of the words were technical terms, so a lot less fun in practice. They didn't catch "app" in time though, so that's an Icelandic word now. It's an old tradition, but not incredibly so. I like that they call the colour orange "appelsínugulur", using the Danish word for the fruit orange and yellow. Anyway, France and England should get some points for their wars being long. I don't think Denmark-Sweden ever lasted 30 years, let alone 100.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 20:23 |
|
Also worth mentioning is that Denmark historically held the upper hand in naval power compared to Sweden. The Danish navy is perhaps the foremost foiler of Swedish plans that exists. Imagine being a Swedish commander and actively stopping it from being sunk. It's not going to happen.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 20:24 |
|
Fox Cunning posted:Also worth mentioning is that Denmark historically held the upper hand in naval power compared to Sweden. The Danish navy is perhaps the foremost foiler of Swedish plans that exists. Imagine being a Swedish commander and actively stopping it from being sunk. It's not going to happen. Before the aforementioned preemptive strike against our navy, the Danish navy was not just better than the Swedish*, but an actual major player rivalled pretty much only by the English and possibly Spanish fleets. And I'm pretty sure a lot of that can be traced to having both sides of Øresund being fantastic source of income. *Both in terms of numbers and in terms of our boats but sinking when they left the dock
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 20:31 |
|
Also when they play each other at football sometimes it spells 'Sweden'. Other times it spells 'Denswe' but that's not a country.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 20:36 |
|
Fox Cunning posted:Also worth mentioning is that Denmark historically held the upper hand in naval power compared to Sweden. The Danish navy is perhaps the foremost foiler of Swedish plans that exists. Imagine being a Swedish commander and actively stopping it from being sunk. It's not going to happen. As previously stated, most of the time they probably deserve to be sunk. E. And the hundred years war is an invention. They had a couple of skirmishes and campaigns during a period of roughly a hundred years and they call that a war, complete amateurs. ThisIsJohnWayne fucked around with this message at 20:44 on Sep 17, 2021 |
# ? Sep 17, 2021 20:38 |
|
Guavanaut posted:Other times it spells 'Denswe' but that's not a country. The Glorious People's Cleromantic Autocracy of Denswe formally rebukes the esteemed Guavanauts' insulting pronouncements, and furthermore we invite all and sundry to enjoy our therapeutic hot tar beaches and randomly-selected laws
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 20:42 |
|
Phlegmish posted:Probably the main causes for this are 1) Belgium's very real history of French supremacism, especially in the 19th century, and 2) the fact that French is the lingua franca in Brussels, with token official bilingualism in place at the best of times. Brussels is probably the least representative capital city in Europe, but I wouldn't necessarily expect a foreigner to know that. 3. Hercule Poirot the only Belgian in fiction
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 21:18 |
|
:cryinghergé:
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 21:20 |
|
The two main groups in Belgium are the Phlegms and the Balloons, right?
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 21:37 |
|
And a bit of Germs in the east.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 21:41 |
|
flemish i assume are stereotyped to be kind of hicks in the netherlands? a friend in noord-brabant gets made fun of because they say he's got a southern accent
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 21:52 |
|
Tei posted:yep.. Typical American...
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 22:01 |
|
Tei posted:I believe theres a small opposition against France because France refuse to be only another USA colony. Some of it is baked in inheritance from Britain (stuff about France as effete elitist continentals), amplified by local conservative trends and the general stereotype of all Western Europe (including the Brits) as those same things. The recent rash of it is from the French not going into Iraq like morons and that getting played up to hell by the Bush era conservatism thumping its idiot chest. This led I think to a kind of knee jerk defensiveness from the progressive half of America to think of talking poo poo about France as a lovely American Thing, which is why you got accused of such. What has been apparent to me is that while the "surrendering continental homo" thing is a very Anglo obsession, the stereotype of France as "vainglorious douchebags" is pretty common in Europe more generally, even if just as a casual joke thing. Ultimately maybe what the US can't stand is having to deal with a fellow vainglorious douchebag (also what the UK can't stand I'd say).
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 22:10 |
|
Phlegmish posted:I have heard this before (from non-French people), and interestingly it's usually not from Anglos - most often the latter will either know literally nothing about Belgium, or have the basics down well enough. I have actually spoken to, or heard of, German people who thought that surely I must speak French since I said I was 'Belgian'. I try not to be offended, since I've long ceased to be surprised at people's ignorance. Probably the main causes for this are 1) Belgium's very real history of French supremacism, especially in the 19th century, and 2) the fact that French is the lingua franca in Brussels, with token official bilingualism in place at the best of times. Brussels is probably the least representative capital city in Europe, but I wouldn't necessarily expect a foreigner to know that. Yes, Germans not from border states are just as ignorant of Belgium, but they have the excuse that our shared border is very small and Germany borders 9 countries, at least 4 of which they have very long and complicated historical ties with. Phlegmish posted:This is quite common, and once again not just a French thing. It's surprising as well, since you will never find that word used to refer to our language in any (official) Belgian context, but I have read or heard it so many times from foreigners completely unprompted. Again, two potential causes come to mind: 1) the nomenclature has historically often been filtered through French, and as you say they have their own Machiavellian reasons to divide all non-French languages endlessly, especially here where it also served to maintain the ascendancy of French in Belgium, and 2) ironically, the fact that 'Flemish' as a term has some residual historical prestige in certain languages and cultures. In some languages, the word for 'Dutch' is actually derived from 'Flemish'. For example, I'm not 100% on the etymology of the Turkish word Felemenkçe (Dutch), but it would be an extreme coincidence if that weren't the case there. Cool. Another interesting quirk is that Norwegian is the only language except Dutch I know to differentiate between 'Nederland' (the modern-day Netherlands) and 'de Nederlanden' (the historical entirety of the Low Countries). I suspect that is because the bokmål standard was officialized when Norway became fully independent, at which point Belgium had already existed for close to a century. Another anecdote I remember is from a Slovak student who claimed the Slovak word for 'party' is derived from the word for 'Fleming'. He told me that in the Middle Ages, Flemish labourers helped drain local swamps (as they did in modern-day Poland and Germany) and apparently had a reputation for partying hard. Hence, the word stuck. i say swears online posted:flemish i assume are stereotyped to be kind of hicks in the netherlands? a friend in noord-brabant gets made fun of because they say he's got a southern accent Dutch (and French) stereotypes uniformly cast Belgians as dim-witted idiots, yes. Noord-Brabant lies south of the Rhine and borders Belgium, so Dutch people in that area get painted with more or less the same brush as the Flemings do. The accent of North Brabantians is not the same as the Flemish Brabantian accent though, but both dialects belong to the same family.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 22:43 |
|
SlothfulCobra posted:These are sentences written by an insane person. The map thread is a lot more comprehensible if you have Tei on ignore, they never make much sense.
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 23:05 |
|
SimonSays posted:The map thread is a lot more comprehensible if you have Tei on ignore, they never make much sense. they've never made a post anywhere close to as bad as this one though
|
# ? Sep 17, 2021 23:58 |
|
i say swears online posted:flemish i assume are stereotyped to be kind of hicks in the netherlands? a friend in noord-brabant gets made fun of because they say he's got a southern accent
|
# ? Sep 18, 2021 00:04 |
|
|
# ? Jun 4, 2024 21:27 |
|
Probably about half as important. Belief in God(s) Belief in some sort of non-deity spirit/life force None of the above
|
# ? Sep 18, 2021 00:30 |