Here are 15 potential definitions of GRA. Some come from a dictionary, and one even from a dictionary article about the word gra. Please vote for two, by the deadline, which is Tuesday 15 September at 11h00 CEST, other times for other places here. That is just under 48 hours from time of posting.
A shard or fragment
A sneeze of contempt
The coarse outer hair of llamas, used for rugs, wall-hangings, and lead ropes
A critical bug in a computer program, resulting from a minor and understandable but still really bad mistake, that can take hours to figure out and fix
To burble or make a gurgling noise, said of a stream
Obs. or Scot. A feast
A spice made from lemongrass, turmeric, star anise and black pepper [Thai]
A riding jacket of Eastern Europe
A graduate research assistant
Obsolete. rare. An exclamation ascribed to Irishmen [apparently representing Irish a ghráidh ‘my dear’, in English books commonly rendered agra(h or arrah]
A quickly assembled makeshift shelter
A brain disease suffered by sheep
Obs. Originally the Bearded Vulture, later applied to other vultures, buzzards and kites [prob. Celtic]
A dwarf buffalo native to the Philippines
An ancient musical instrument resembling the lyre
This is an HTML numbered list, which is a virtually inescapable consequence of my composing the message in anything other than Notepad. It is likely that your mail client will renumber individual items of the list if you cut and paste them. To avoid this, consider using the option to paste as plain text, or equivalent.
#5 and #10 for me (not that I am implying that they are the same!
- although they are, annoyingly, a numbered list in my email
client)
5. To burble or make a gurgling noise, said of a stream
10. Obsolete. rare. An exclamation ascribed to Irishmen [apparently representing Irish a ghráidh ‘my dear’, in English books commonly rendered agra(h or arrah]
6. Obs. or Scot. A feast
10. Obsolete. rare. An exclamation ascribed to Irishmen [apparently representing Irish a ghráidh ‘my dear’, in English books commonly rendered agra(h or arrah]
-- Tim L
On Sep 13, 2020, at 5:29 AM, Paul Keating <dixo...@boargules.com> wrote:
Here are 15 potential definitions of GRA. Some come from a dictionary, and one even from a dictionary article about the word gra. Please vote for two, by the deadline, which is Tuesday 15 September at 11h00 CEST, other times for other places here. That is just under 48 hours from time of posting.
6. Obs. or Scot. A feast10. Obsolete. rare. An exclamation ascribed to Irishmen [apparently representing Irish a ghráidh ‘my dear’, in English books commonly rendered agra(h or arrah]
On Sep 13, 2020, at 1:10 PM, Paul Keating <kea...@acm.org> wrote:
Efrem,
The problem with constructing the list with a spreadsheet is that things like italicized labels don't survive the concatenation process. For example, in Excel, this set of cells (with formula showing):
<int_1.png>
yields this result:
<int_2.png>
The problem is that the italics are achieved by hidden markup attached to the cell, not to the data, and disappear when you use the cell value in a formula.
That is Excel, but Google Sheets works the same way (as I discovered today). Despite considerable progress since the last time I tried it (before round 746), I think spreadsheets are still a poor fit for the admin of dealing a round.
I'm in any case far from convinced that defeating the numbered-list functionality is a good thing. List format ensures clean, legible indentation on small screens, by folding back long lines under a hanging indent. Forcing a hard coded number does not. I lost track of the number of deadlines I missed after postponing voting until I could get to a desktop, because the announcement had been explicitly formatted for a 72-character display with spaces and line-breaks, and appeared on a small screen as an unreadable wodge of text with random waterfalls of whitespace.
But I never complained about that, even though I thought my inconvenience was at least as much as having to press 3 extra keys after a cut and paste operation.
P
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Here are 15 potential definitions of GRA. Some come from a dictionary, and one even from a dictionary article about the word gra. Please vote for two, by the deadline, which is Tuesday 15 September at 11h00 CEST, other times for other places here. That is just under 48 hours from time of posting.
A shard or fragment
A sneeze of contempt
The coarse outer hair of llamas, used for rugs, wall-hangings, and lead ropes
A critical bug in a computer program, resulting from a minor and understandable but still really bad mistake, that can take hours to figure out and fix
To burble or make a gurgling noise, said of a stream
Obs. or Scot. A feast
A spice made from lemongrass, turmeric, star anise and black pepper [Thai]
A riding jacket of Eastern Europe
A graduate research assistant
Obsolete. rare. An exclamation ascribed to Irishmen [apparently representing Irish a ghráidh ‘my dear’, in English books commonly rendered agra(h or arrah]
A quickly assembled makeshift shelter
A brain disease suffered by sheep
Obs. Originally the Bearded Vulture, later applied to other vultures, buzzards and kites [prob. Celtic]
A dwarf buffalo native to the Philippines
An ancient musical instrument resembling the lyre
This is an HTML numbered list, which is a virtually inescapable consequence of my composing the message in anything other than Notepad. It is likely that your mail client will renumber individual items of the list if you cut and paste them. To avoid this, consider using the option to paste as plain text, or equivalent.
3 for llamas and 10 for vox pop or whatever the Celtic equivalent is.
3 for llamas and 10 for vox pop or whatever the Celtic equivalent is.
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Through Jesus the forgiveness of sins is proclaimed to you. Through Him everyone who believes is justified from everything you could not be justified from by the Law of Moses (Acts 13:38-39)
Paul – I don’t like any of them particularly, mine included. I’ll follow the crowd with #10, as a tribute to the etymological effort, and add #11 with no particular conviction.
Alan
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