Soccer is just short for as_soc_iation football, so we kind of also call it football.
Star Wars Memes
Hello there. Somehow, Star Wars memes have returned. It's not a trap, this is where the fun begins.
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Oh hey some real SW content for a change (perhaps):
!starwarstelevision@lemmy.world
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IMPORTANT
Please do not post the "good friend" or similar copypasta
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Our galactic citizens have requested more specific rules, so here are a few.
The general idea is, if you're looking here for rules, you're probably someone who doesn't need to have them spelled out. You're fine. But anyway:
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This is a community for Star Wars memes. This means typically screenshots of Star Wars media with some text or context that's meant to be funny and/or thoughtful. All SW media is welcome: movies, games, comic books, fanart... Other kinds of content, like video links or meta memes (about this community, or Lemmy), are fine as well, just keep it on topic.
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Original content is preferred. Reposts are fine, just please limit to a maximum of 3 per day, per citizen. It is recommended, but not required, to mark original memes as (OC) and reposts as (repost).
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Regular rules of the Lemmy.world instance apply.
Football just means you play on your feet (not on horse) that’s why most sports are {name} football
tfw americans call kicky dicky orby runny "soccer"
Looks like it's lupis this time
It’s because soccer is more of a southern English slang for football so it was never in parlance across the country (the UK never “switched” from soccer to football).
There are many games of football: rugby league, rugby union, association football etc.
Association, contracted to assoc / soc.
And around Oxford, people like to add ‘-er’ to things. Rugby = rugger. Association football = soccer. Freshman = fresher.
There’s no denying the UK has a bias in the media and literature, especially in the past, to southerners. Thus soccer became quite common in writing and thus exported widely across the world.
But when many of the best football teams in the UK are northern, it’s understandable that the posh southern slang for the game was never widely regarded and remains ridiculed to this day.
posh southern slang
Worth putting the posh part in the first line too, definitely a very public school thing to call it soccer.
And for any confused non-brits reading, "public" schools are private schools. We named them wrong for a joke.
Public schools may be private schools, but they ate the poshest and ponciest private schools, even if you have the money to afford them you can't get in without the right connections.
“public” schools are private schools
Despite having invented the English language, you Brits are really bad at it
lol that just sounds like capitalism in the US where “freedom to choose internet” bill is actually freedom for a private corporation to choose where they have monopolies and therefore they get to choose where they sell their internet
A public school in England and Wales is a type of fee-charging private school originally for older boys. The schools are "public" from a historical schooling context in the sense of being open to pupils irrespective of locality, denomination or paternal trade or profession or family affiliation with governing or military service, and also not being run for the profit of a private owner.
That’s very interesting, thanks for explaining
Colo(u)r me surprised.
I like the idea of calling American football “handegg”.
Gridiron. There’s also Rugby, Australian rules, and Canadian Rules Football. Most of the world plays association football.
Who’s more foolish, the fool or the fool who follows him?
Imagine if the us switched to calling soccer football. What would the us call American football then? It would be weird to call it American football in America
Helmet ball
Handball
Handball is already a sport, albeit more an "in the park with your friends" kind of thing than "arenas and shit lol."
Rugby for cowards
Gridiron it's a much cooler name anyway
Gridiron football
Pitch football
American gridiron football.
And then we exported "sakkaa" to Japan, but don't worry Japan we won't abandon you like the English and hop on the "football" bandwagon.
Exact same thing with aluminum. Officially named by the Brits, then other Brits didn’t like it.
Well yes and no, but mostly no. The originally-proposed name by the Brit who named it was actually alumium. Scientists in other European countries (not the UK) gave him feedback that it should have the prefix 'ium' and logically be named aluminium as it is refined from an alumina/alumine oxide, following the naming pattern of other elements. He agreed and refined it to aluminium, but also used aluminum in a textbook he wrote around the same time.
This was all within a decade or so more than 200 years ago. The scientific world settled on aluminium long before any products had even hit the market in the US, but Noah Webster for whatever reason decided to use the spelling 'aluminum' in his dictionary in 1828, even though US scientists were already using 'aluminium' and it was more common locally. And once it was in the dictionary (with no mention of the alternate spelling) it stuck.
So this one is mostly on the US.
The revised name is better though:
- Helium
- Lithium
- Beryllium
- Sodium
- Magnesium
And the next should be...? If an element ends in "um" there's normally an "i" before the "um". We should also fix Molybdenum, Lanthanum and Tantalum while we're at it. There are 80 elements with an "ium" ending, but only 3 or 4 (depending on if you say Aluminum or Aluminium) without the "i".
Also, screw it, #79 should be Aurium.
Also, screw it, #79 should be Aurium.
You'd really be fucking Spandau Ballet over with that one.
On the flip side, how would you pronounce the following?
Helum
Magnesum
Tatanum
Sodum
Writing them that way would be Sodum.
Sod 'em.
So dumb, for me.
I'd just say
Helum
Magnesum
Tatanum
Sodum