Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by vinnyvichy 732 days ago
The epsilon of tail-chasing beats the delta of (phallic) symbol pushing!

Re: uni- Cantabrigian?

Yes, for "better" seduction technik, you should restrict your search to uni culture.

1 comments

No, although I do have a fair amount of shelf space devoted to a CS book series (published by that breakaway technical college somewhere in the fens) all of which are in shades of what I would've called green, but a cantab colleague informed me was in fact blue.

If either of us had had any irish gaelic, maybe we would've agreed upon glas? see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue–green_distinction_in_lang...

No iG but likewise my uni can be said to have Brythonic roots. (As opposed to merely Anglo-Saxon)
Tonnerre de Brest ! Swansea by any chance? https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40013890
No, I was referring to that one female Pilgrim whose descendant founded my uni.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Briggs_(surname)#:~:text=Brigg....

To make it more equitable, my uni was the ancestor of SBF's alma mater (bureaucratically as well as vexillarily).

If that's too much travail, consider that its location is the namesake of an oikos that perpetually draws in a certain Homeric hero.

One hint too many! I have been taught that "it's ${LOCATION}ing" is the english equivalent of « il pleuvine », and https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40244602 ought to have billions and billions of connections. (none of which involve Leontine S)

Lagniappe: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JhdMPkA0YM&t=120s

(as for me, one of my friends is on the faculty, studying among other things quiver varieties, which brings us full circle back to Penelope, who set up the competition with Odysseus' bow. If it were an asian recurve bow, it makes sense that the suitors might've tried to string it backwards, and if it were a horseback bow, the draw weight for its size might easily have been such that only someone who knew the foot trick for stringing would've managed)