Ridiculous Words Lacking from the Google Chrome Dictionary
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Unrefrigerated
Seriously? Oh well, I guess everything at Google must refrigerated regardless of requirements. -
Virtualization and hypervisor
Of course I've added these to my local dictionary, but still...
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"Hypervisor" is one of those somewhat ridiculous tech words that I'm happy to be able to say in serious, real life situations.
It sounds like something out of a 90's sci-fi movie.
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habanero on FF
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@scottalanmiller It doesn't try to pick up the n with the ~ on it (How do you even type that on an English Windows machine?)... habañero ? (the ñ is alt, 164).
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I looked for that, it didn't.
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@scottalanmiller said:
habanero on FF
Chrome doesn't have it either... it tries correcting it to haberdasher, which I don't think is really used much anymore.
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Same word that FF tried to make it. Which do you think is more common?
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@scottalanmiller said:
Same word that FF tried to make it. Which do you think is more common?
I've never heard haberdasher used in modern English, mostly literature from the late 1800's early 1900's. I don't know if Men's fashion stores really still exist in that form anymore?
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@coliver said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Same word that FF tried to make it. Which do you think is more common?
I've never heard haberdasher used in modern English, mostly literature from the late 1800's early 1900's. I don't know if Men's fashion stores really still exist in that form anymore?
"Haberdasher" is only used in comedy anymore... pretty sure Family Guy put it in somewhere, and I remember a sketch from the 90s that used it (probably Mr Show).
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Are You Being Served?
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Opera: brie and camembert (maybe it's looking for capitalization, but wth?) I know how to spell those soft, ripened cheeses I love.
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Brie? That's nuts.
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Well it is cheese, but you get the idea.
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Opera: surveil
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@RojoLoco said:
Opera: surveil
http://grammarist.com/words/surveil/
The verb surveil, originally a backformation of surveillance, was long considered nonstandard, and even now is still so new to the language (the earliest instances date from the early 1960s)1 that some dictionaries don’t include it, and your spell check might disapprove of it. But even though survey is closely related, etymologically, to surveillance, survey does not carry the sense to keep under surveillance (where surveillance means close observation, especially of one under suspicion).2 For this purpose surveil works better, so the word is a useful addition to the language.
Surveil‘s participles are surveilling and surveilled. Again, your spell check might not like these words, but they’re fine.
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FF: amygdala
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WTF
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i'amygdala you tonight.