we just don’t name video game characters after their primary verb anymore
users don't want to [verb] they want the [result]
How do we move beyond our myopic focus on CO2 as the index of our harms to the world? What can we do to heal the whole biosphere? And what role is played by water-as-verb, forest-as-verb, ocean-as-verb? accidentalgods.life/of-reindeer-#AccidentalGods#Podcast#ClimateEmergency#NatureWriting
How do we move beyond our myopic focus on carbon/CO2 as the index of our harms to the world? What can we do to heal the whole biosphere? And what role is played by water-as-verb, forest-as-verb, ocean...
Gibt es das Wort überhaupt? "Kulmulierend"? Muss ja, oder? Das Verb "kulmulieren" gibt es ja auch. 🤔 Offiziell genutzt wird "kulmulativ", nicht? Mein Sprachgefühl ist jedesmal verunsichert und ich weiß nicht mal, warum. Es ist echt nur ein Befindlichkeitsding. 😬
As someone in whose work the verb 'to harvest' used to mean bringing in potatoes from ten acres or the barley by combine from 23 acres, the TV gardeners' use of it to mean picking the chillies from a single pot plant has a certain "playing dolls' house" quality.
Abgeleitet davon kennen wir das Verb "echauffieren", was so viel heißt wie "sich aufregen", "in Wallung geraten". Im eigentlichen Sinne aber "sich erhitzen". Wer sich echauffiert, wirft also Kohle auf das eigene, innere Feuer. (2/3)Abgeleitet davon kennen wir das Verb "echauffieren", was so viel heißt wie "sich aufregen", "in Wallung geraten". Im eigentlichen Sinne aber "sich erhitzen". Wer sich echauffiert, wirft also Kohle auf das eigene, innere Feuer. (2/3)
German "ausführen" "aus" - prefix "out of" "führen" - transitive verb "to lead sth." Can both mean to execute sth. (e.g. an order, a plan, a computer program) to lead sth. (e.g. take s.o. to a date, or goods out of the country) The Icelandic sense would fit in the latter category.