Okay, a scene from Robin Hood: Men in Tights has me wondering now what the real origins of the slang term john (for toilets) is. Anyone? Anyone? Bueller? Anyone?
Okay, a scene from Robin Hood: Men in Tights has me wondering now what the real origins of the slang term john (for toilets) is. Anyone? Anyone? Bueller? Anyone?
Wordsworth dictionary of Obscenity and Taboo says it probably comes from "Jakes", which was a British word for toilet, and which the puritans held as improper. Early version of it is "cuzjohn" = cousin John. (ODE, Harvard dormitory rules 1735).
For the British meaning, penis, it is explained to be just a male name, and those tend to become names of male body parts.
While I was growing up in the 70s/80s (West-)Germany was often used as a prime example of how legality & illegality worked in different countries. While in Finland (and in Sweden, Norway & Denmark as far as I know) everything is legal unless specifically forbidden (broadly speaking) the law in Germany was supposedly acting the other way around ie by default, (most) everything is forbidden unless specifically allowed or made legal.
Most likely it's not nowhere near this B&W but any truth in this or just another urban myth ?
Perhaps more than anything else using WG as an example was about national stereotypes - Germans were seen as the (almost) only ones actually capable of enforcing any adopted system to the letter.
While I was growing up in the 70s/80s (West-)Germany was often used as a prime example of how legality & illegality worked in different countries. While in Finland (and in Sweden, Norway & Denmark as far as I know) everything is legal unless specifically forbidden (broadly speaking) the law in Germany was supposedly acting the other way around ie by default, (most) everything is forbidden unless specifically allowed or made legal.
Most likely it's not nowhere near this B&W but any truth in this or just another urban myth ?
Shouldn't take the part about Germany literally, but it's a good guideline.
Every tiny crap is regulated, means it's likely that you might do something wrong if you don't know about it.
The magnitude and luminosity calculator here does not give me, a thick-headed brain-dead, a good way to compare luminosity units. All the other units available in the luminosity drop down list are useless to me. How am I supposed to know what Apparent Magnitude -16.5811 is supposed to look like from 1 astronomical unit away other than 0.0000862192 Solar luminosities? Are there any other sites/calculators that can give me something I can actually compare it to? Such as the moon, a star, or an Earth-based light source at x distance away?
Spoiler:
For the record, I already tried Wolfram Alpha, but it slapped me in the face with a paywall when I tried to get useful info out of it. Damned capitalist pigs.
Is the solar luminosity a measurement taken from Earth being = 1 ?
If so, you can look up the solar flux and use that to possibly convert whatever units a solar luminosity measures (photons I guess?) to something usable? I don't know....I guess the trick would be to figure out what the solar flux is in photons, (I've only seen it given in watts) and then figure out how to relate photons to brightness as perceived by the eye.
Shouldn't take the part about Germany literally , but it's a good guideline.
Every tiny crap is regulated, means it's likely that you might do something wrong if you don't know about it.
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