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I actually like it like this! The word "bug" literally origins from an incident where an insect shorted something in a computer, so it's funny. The server is actually giving you content you've requested, it's a pretty good analogy. Etc. etc.
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English is fucked up dude.
Our noses run but our feet smell.
We drive on parkways and park in driveways.
Then there's:
-too, to and two
-they're, their and there
-red and read are pronunced the same
-read and read have different pronunciation -
@gronostaj No, this is a common misconception. The word bug was already used by Edison with the same meaning before the first computer existed.
It comes from a much older word that means something like kobold. -
pk7611646yActually no. Since English is so context sensitive in meaning, it feels normal. It's the same reason why "I ate the orange orange" isn't that weird to native speakers.
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@pk76 I guess you're right. It still feels weird when we try to "Frenchise" it (some people made that a quest for themselves apparently).
And I'm not ready for translating "apple". It just doesn't feel right to use a fruit name for one of the biggest company in the world.
I always wondered how it would be to have English as mother tongue.
Because :
- Insects are causing problems in computers,
- you're using a glass door or a fruit for OS (well, some of us),
- the internet is made of people bringing your glass in the restaurant,
- you navigate on the spider's fiber,
- ...
That must feel weird considering it's the same words that you use for other parts of your life
joke/meme