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4 votes
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Discrimination based on English (and accent)
I posted an article yesterday about name-blind hiring processes, and it got me thinking of discrimination slightly differently. I actually don't feel that we run into outright racial...
I posted an article yesterday about name-blind hiring processes, and it got me thinking of discrimination slightly differently.
I actually don't feel that we run into outright racial discrimination as much nowadays. Instead it's more subtle. It's not about technical merit, but about cultural fit. Often times, distilling down to one skill - English (both spoken and written).
It brings up questions such as:
- Can a candidate communicate verbally for the job? (Technical, though sometimes this may be judge harder than for a native English speaker that isn't always clear)
- Do they "get" jokes and other subtleties? (Cultural fit)
- Do they have an accent? How heavy is it?
I believe this is for a couple reasons:
- Candidate just can't display enough charm or charisma during the hiring process
- Raise doubts about a candidate's education/upbringing. This in itself is discriminatory (though location is not a protected class), but some regions are though to train their students in more blunt force manners than skills in problem solving
What do you all think?
11 votes -
Investigating the potential for miscommunication using emoji
5 votes -
What is the most interesting feature you've seen in a language?
For me, it's definitely the topic particles in Japanese. It just seems like a really interesting thing that is a reason enough to want to learn Japanese, even excluding other great features it...
For me, it's definitely the topic particles in Japanese. It just seems like a really interesting thing that is a reason enough to want to learn Japanese, even excluding other great features it has. Here some info on them.
30 votes -
How computers parse the ambiguity of everyday language
8 votes -
Let's speak in foreign (non-English) languages!
Let's have conversations in other languages! Top-level comments can be in any language, and replies should be in the same language as the parent.
22 votes -
1904 Marks for Criticism of High-School English Papers
9 votes -
Koko, the beloved gorilla that learned to communicate using sign language, has died
15 votes -
Where the ‘no ending a sentence with a preposition’ rule comes from
12 votes -
Tags and regional spelling?
In ~comp, there's a post about optimizing a string parser, and one of the tags is "optimisation" instead of "optimization". This makes me curious, what's the official policy for regional spelling...
In ~comp, there's a post about optimizing a string parser, and one of the tags is "optimisation" instead of "optimization". This makes me curious, what's the official policy for regional spelling differences in tags? Will people be encouraged to use exclusively American or British spellings, or will the search feature (when it arrives) automatically link results for both if you search for either?
7 votes -
If someone wants to be called 'they' and not 'he' or 'she', why say no?
10 votes -
Common problems when translating games into Japanese
9 votes -
What language are you currently learning and why? And how do you do it?
I've been learning la langue française, as the language of renaissance. Also it has a lot of great authors and movie directors, and I think it's just beautiful (not as beautiful as German, but...
I've been learning la langue française, as the language of renaissance. Also it has a lot of great authors and movie directors, and I think it's just beautiful (not as beautiful as German, but it's another kind of beautiful). So I use the method that works best for me, just take Notre Dame de Paris and translate the shit out of it. Or some other text if I'm feeling lazy to look up the names of clothes from middle ages.
17 votes -
Open Source & Languages
Hello, everyone! Any updates regarding Tildes going open source? I saw it on the blog and still waiting. In case Tildes goes Open Source would it be possible to run your own Tildes on VPS? Will...
Hello, everyone!
Any updates regarding Tildes going open source? I saw it on the blog and still waiting.
In case Tildes goes Open Source would it be possible to run your own Tildes on VPS? Will there be guides for newbies?I would like to create a small community in future with different language based on Tildes. It looks already awesome!
Are we going to see different languages in profile for Tildes? I am ready to contribute and help to translate Tildes into the Russian language.
10 votes -
Should languages keep historical artifacts?
Three examples : American English have lost the u in word like "color", because it is closer to its phonetics (the u is silent and there's no particular sound associated with "ou"). The letter u...
Three examples :
American English have lost the u in word like "color", because it is closer to its phonetics (the u is silent and there's no particular sound associated with "ou"). The letter u has an anglo-norman root.
Swiss French (and for this particular example Belgian French) differs little from standard French, apart from the numbering system. It is ironically more metric than standard French since it streamlines what's left of the base 20 (vigisimasomething) system, i. e. it's "seventy and eighty" ("septante et huitante*") instead of "sixty-ten and four-twenties" ("soixante-dix et quatre-vingts". Historically people all over the world used some sort of base 20 system, probably because we have twenty toes and fingers.
*no one ever use "octante". Belgian people think the Swiss uses it, while Swiss people thinks the Belgian it. I don't know why its that.
Swiss standard German (not dialect) have ditched the Eszett ligature (ß) in favor of a more simple "ss ". That ligature was more common in the middle age.
With those example in mind, do you find value in the "old" vs the "new" way of writing?
(in other words: spelling reformer partisan and opponent : what goes through your mind?)
6 votes -
I for one...
A long time ago I had noticed a trend developing on reddit where people were starting to preface their comments with: "I for one". It's pretty insignificant, which is why I never made a post about...
A long time ago I had noticed a trend developing on reddit where people were starting to preface their comments with: "I for one". It's pretty insignificant, which is why I never made a post about it at the time. Since then, its use seems to have spread significantly on the site and I've seen it a bit here as well.
It makes sense to use the phrase when talking about or quoting another person to help separate their opinions from your own. The weird thing is many people now seem to use it when its not ambiguous that the comment is their own opinion. I was under the assumption that the default position should be that the comment is the opinion of the person that posted it.
For example:
"I for one, prefer dark chocolate over milk chocolate."
Is the same as:
"I prefer dark chocolate over milk chocolate."
There's nothing wrong with using the phrase, it just reads like someone trying to pad out an essay for school.
Have you noticed people using the phrase on other sites? Is it a phenomenon more specific to reddit?
Do you use the phrase yourself? If you do, what is your thought process when typing it out?14 votes -
Dance of the Honeybees: By pairing the sun’s direction with the flow of gravity, honeybees explain the distant locations of food by dancing, essentially using 2D representations of 6D shapes as guides
7 votes -
"Guy" should be a neutered term. Change my mind.
In light of @Deimos mentioning that we have a lot of "favorite" topics going around, how about something a little meatier? I've seen it a few times already around threads that someone uses the...
In light of @Deimos mentioning that we have a lot of "favorite" topics going around, how about something a little meatier?
I've seen it a few times already around threads that someone uses the word "guy" to refer to a poster and the response is "I'm not a guy". I'm not trying to invalidate this stance, but rather make this argument in the same way I argued for a singular "they". Consider the following:
- the plural form, "you guys" is already neutered. I can walk up to a group of women and ask "How're you guys doing?" and it doesn't draw any ire
- we've similarly neutered "dude" in both the singular and plural, but it's especially casual and almost familiar
- "gal" sounds like something out of the forties, "girl" is diminutive, and "person" is clinical / formal
- we don't have another common, non-gendered, non-specific term that fits the "sounds right" criteria and fits in the environment like the one we have (wherein users are getting to know each other and don't know exactly how to address one another).
I realize that this is probably masculine-normative and therefore problematic, but my main goal here is to stimulate discussion on a meatier topic (gender) without having it be an incredibly serious topic.
[EDIT]
I want to clarify a few things, as this reads a lot more trolly than it did 6 hours ago.
generalizing "guy" is a sexist idea because it attempts to make the masculine the generic (what I called "masculine-normativity" above). However, there isn't a term that adequately replaces "guy" but is neutered (@Algernon_Asimov brought up that "dude" fits, but is as more casual than "guy" than "person" is more formal). [Edit edit: I'm an idiot. They pointed out that "dude" as I had defined it earlier in my post would work just as well, but they did not agree that it has been neutered]
Instead of bringing this up as purely a matter of diction, I set myself up as an antagonist to see what would happen. And for this I apologize.
That said, I feel like there is some good discussion here and do not want to call making the thread a mistake. More that mistakes were made in the manner of its posting.
42 votes -
Jacques - Faîtes quelque chose (2015)
3 votes -
Groups for language learners
One of the things I like about Reddit is that it has subreddits for language learners like r/spanish, r/chineselanguage, r/learnjapanese, r/latin, r/ancientgreek, etc. Do you think Tilde's...
One of the things I like about Reddit is that it has subreddits for language learners like r/spanish, r/chineselanguage, r/learnjapanese, r/latin, r/ancientgreek, etc.
Do you think Tilde's mechanics would work well with such groups? Maybe having a hierarchy like ~language.spanish.learn?
3 votes -
How can non-native speakers improve their english writing skills?
I'm not a native speaker, but from browsing reddit, understand 95% of what I read / hear. I also watch TV Shows exclusively in english. However, when i write a comment or something in english, it...
I'm not a native speaker, but from browsing reddit, understand 95% of what I read / hear. I also watch TV Shows exclusively in english. However, when i write a comment or something in english, it always feels like it doesn't really "flow".
How can i, or other non-native speakers improve our writing skills?
15 votes -
Any language learners/enthusiasts around here?
Now that a community is starting to build here, I'm curious if anyone else is interested in languages. Personally, I realized that I enjoy learning languages when I took a Spanish class in high...
Now that a community is starting to build here, I'm curious if anyone else is interested in languages.
Personally, I realized that I enjoy learning languages when I took a Spanish class in high school. The only languages I've studied seriously are Spanish and Russian, and unfortunately these days my Spanish is pretty rusty, but I still enjoy the process of learning about different languages, how they relate to each other, and learning how to communicate at least a little.
Anyone here share my interest? What language(s) are you learning/have you studied, and what do you like or dislike about it? What has struck you as the most interesting or weirdest thing about it?
28 votes -
Jerzy Milian - Wśród pampasów (1975)
3 votes -
Stromae - Racine Carrée Live (2015)
3 votes -
Charles Aznavour - La Bohème (1968)
4 votes -
Márcia - Deixa-me ir (2013)
4 votes