|  | 
 |  |  | Re: Geek Speak? 
 | 
 |  | (...) I live in Northern California and those words mean exactly the same thing they mean to you. BTW I spent most of my teenage years in Western Washington and never owned an umbrella until I went off to college-- in Baltimore! Maggie C.    (23 years ago, 12-Nov-02, to lugnet.off-topic.fun, lugnet.off-topic.geek) 
 |  |  |  |  |  | Re: Geek Speak? 
 | 
 |  | (...) I guess I just inherently know what is meant by each of those words including rain and rainshower activity when used by a Western Washington forcaster after having lived here my whole life. Rain means that the area in question is going to have (...)   (23 years ago, 12-Nov-02, to lugnet.off-topic.fun, lugnet.off-topic.geek) 
 |  |  |  |  |  | Re: Geek Speak? 
 | 
 |  | (...) Perhaps it originates from irc chats where typing "/me like!" would display "<name> like!"? That would be my guess. Either that or they just don't want to grow up, and use so-called "baby-talk." ;) Jeff "Jeff slaps Dave! around a bit with a (...)   (23 years ago, 12-Nov-02, to lugnet.off-topic.fun) 
 |  |  |  |  |  | Re: Geek Speak? 
 | 
 |  | (...) Well, that's the whole point, isn't it? It's like the apocryphal saying that Inuits have 47 (or so) words for snow. In fact, they don't; they have a word for fluffy snow, a word for wet snow, a word for dry snow, a word for drifted snow, a (...)   (23 years ago, 12-Nov-02, to lugnet.off-topic.fun, lugnet.off-topic.geek) 
 |  |  |  |  |  | Re: Geek Speak? 
 | 
 |  | (...) I'm going to have to stick up for Methodology. A good methodology is way more than just method.    (23 years ago, 12-Nov-02, to lugnet.off-topic.fun, lugnet.off-topic.geek) 
 |  |  |  |  |  | Re: Geek Speak? 
 | 
 |  | (...) You don't live in Washington do you? There's a big difference between rain and rainshower activity here. Not to mention drizzle, mist, showers, thundershowers, downpours... Jason    (23 years ago, 12-Nov-02, to lugnet.off-topic.fun, lugnet.off-topic.geek) 
 |  |  |  |  |  | Re: Geek Speak? 
 | 
 |  | (...) As far as I'm aware, the first on-screen use of that "verb" was in Star Wars, when someone observed that proton torpedos "didn't go in, just impacted on the surface." (...) "Proactive" is a particular bugaboo re: workplace pretensions, but it (...)   (23 years ago, 12-Nov-02, to lugnet.off-topic.fun, lugnet.off-topic.geek) 
 |  |  |  |  |  | Re: Geek Speak? 
 | 
 |  | (...) No comment on the origin of "me like," but here's a misuse that really cheeses me off: overuse of the word 'impact,' especially as a verb. It used to be a noun meaning a physical collision, but is often used when the speaker should be using (...)   (23 years ago, 12-Nov-02, to lugnet.off-topic.fun, lugnet.off-topic.geek) 
 |  |  |  |  |  | Geek Speak? 
 | 
 |  | I tend to be very aware of linguistic quirks, such the overuse of the word "literally" (ie, it's literally raining cats and dogs out there) or the whole implied/inferred conflation. In my more uptight past I used to get annoyed by some of these, but (...)   (23 years ago, 12-Nov-02, to lugnet.off-topic.geek, lugnet.off-topic.fun) 
 |  |  |  |  |  | From Yahoo News - Oddly Enough 
 | 
 |  | BUCHAREST (Reuters) - Workers at a Romanian car factory have decided to donate sperm to get the debt-ridden plant out of the red, private television ProTv reported on Tuesday. "Our feasibility study shows that if 1,000 workers donate their sperm for (...)   (23 years ago, 8-Nov-02, to lugnet.off-topic.fun) 
 |  
 |