• Suit

    From Alexander Koryagin@2:221/6 to All on Mon Dec 26 08:44:00 2022

    Hi, All!

    From the mentioned children book:

    "He thinks we need a miracle," Sticky said in a bleak voice."
    "Well, optimism has never been his strong suit," said Kate.


    "Suit" -- is it pertain to playing cards?

    Bye, All!
    Alexander Koryagin

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    * Origin: nntp://news.fidonet.fi (2:221/6.0)
  • From Anton Shepelev@2:221/6 to Alexander Koryagin on Mon Dec 26 09:31:40 2022
    Alexander Koryagin:

    "He thinks we need a miracle," Sticky said in a bleak
    voice." "Well, optimism has never been his strong
    suit," said Kate.

    I think you have an extra quote there!

    "Suit" -- is it pertain to playing cards?

    You ask whether the term pertains, or is pertinent, to card
    games. I think `suit' there denotes general perseverence in
    an effort, but the dict.org begs to differ:

    long suit
    (a) (Card Playing) the suit[8] of which a player has the
    largest number of cards in his hand; as, his long
    suit was clubs, but his partner insisted on making
    hearts trumps.. Hence: [fig.] that quality or
    capability which is a person's best asset; as, we
    could see from the mess in his room that neatness was
    not his long suit.

    strong suit same as long suit,
    (b) . "I think our strong suit is that we can score from
    both the perimeter and the post." --Bill Disbrow
    (basketball coach) 1998. "Rigid ideological
    consistency has never been a strong suit of the Whole
    Earth Catalogue." --Bruce Sterling (The Hacker
    Crackdown, 1994)
    [1913 Webster +PJC]

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    * Origin: nntp://news.fidonet.fi (2:221/6.0)
  • From Alexander Koryagin@2:221/6 to Anton Shepelev on Mon Dec 26 10:08:42 2022

    Hi, Anton Shepelev - Alexander Koryagin!
    I read your message from 26.12.2022 10:31

    "He thinks we need a miracle," Sticky said in a bleak
    voice." "Well, optimism has never been his strong
    suit," said Kate.
    I think you have an extra quote there!

    I retyped it manually.

    Bye, Anton!
    Alexander Koryagin
    english_tutor 2022

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    * Origin: nntp://news.fidonet.fi (2:221/6.0)
  • From Ardith Hinton@1:153/716 to Anton Shepelev on Wed Dec 28 23:36:21 2022
    Hi, Anton! Recently you wrote in a message to Alexander Koryagin:

    "Well, optimism has never been his strong suit," said Kate.

    [...]

    You ask whether the term pertains, or is pertinent, to card
    games. I think `suit' there denotes general perseverence
    in an effort, but the dict.org begs to differ:


    According to THE FREE DICTIONARY, this term may refer either to card games or to a highly developed characteristic/talent/skill. Dict.org says it may refer to a person's best asset & uses neatness as an example.

    The second alternative is more figurative... but I think you were on the right track when you mentioned perseverance WRT Alexander's citation. No matter what talents an individual was born with, they may be improved by hard work & perseverance. I find the study of English a lot more interesting than e.g. certain games & tend to put more effort into what comes naturally to me.

    We could also say neatness isn't a person's forte, using the term as it's used in music to refer to strength (but not necessarily to volume). :-)




    --- timEd/386 1.10.y2k+
    * Origin: Wits' End, Vancouver CANADA (1:153/716)
  • From Anton Shepelev@2:221/6 to Alexander Koryagin on Tue Jan 3 13:07:24 2023
    Alexander Koryagin to Anton Shepelev:

    I think you have an extra quote there!
    I retyped it manually.

    I do the same, and -- as you will have noticed -- with much
    more retypos! I noticed the extra quote because they are
    like keywords or literal marks in a programming language in
    defining the structure of the text.

    To boot -- the punctuation of direct speech being hard to
    me, I prefer the older artless method employed, for
    instance, in "The Water of the Wondrous Isles":

    At last she spake, and her voice was not so harsh as
    might have been looked for from her face: Dame, she said,
    thou seemest to be less busy than most folk here; might I
    crave of thee to tell an alien who has but some hour to
    dwell in this good town where she may find her a chamber
    wherein to rest and eat a morsel, and be untroubled of
    ribalds and ill company? Said the poor-wife: Short shall
    be my tale; I am over poor to know of hostelries and ale-
    houses that I may tell thee aught thereof. Said the
    other: Maybe some neighbour of thine would take me in for
    thy sake? Said the mother: What neighbours have I since
    my man died; and I dying of hunger, and in this town of
    thrift and abundance?

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    * Origin: nntp://news.fidonet.fi (2:221/6.0)
  • From Anton Shepelev@2:221/6 to Ardith Hinton on Tue Jan 3 13:50:54 2023
    Ardith Hinton to Anton Shepelev:

    I think `suit' there denotes general perseverence in an
    effort, but the dict.org begs to differ:
    According to THE FREE DICTIONARY, this term may refer
    either to card games or to a highly developed
    characteristic/talent/skill. Dict.org says it may refer
    to a person's best asset & uses neatness as an example.

    Indeed: I saw that boring, if not ill, example while writing
    the my previous post. It says: "Neatness is not his strong
    suit". But neatness is a passive quality, not requiring
    creativity, courage, fortitude, or vigour. Characterising
    it as a "suit" devaluates the word!

    The second alternative is more figurative... but I think
    you were on the right track when you mentioned
    perseverance WRT Alexander's citation.

    But I dislike that citation on the same ground as the
    dict.org exmaple. A suit of a man to a maid (whence
    `suitor') is more to my taste.

    No matter what talents an individual was born with, they
    may be improved by hard work & perseverance.

    I quote the above for the fun of mentioning my surprise upon
    initiaal misreading of `improved' as `removed'.

    We could also say neatness isn't a person's forte, using
    the term as it's used in music to refer to strength (but
    not necessarily to volume). :-)

    I believe `forte' refers to the attack of the sound rather
    than to its volume -- a term I know not from music but from
    electroacoustics. Yours is a fine point in both senses. It
    leads to many interesting insights and contrasts: Imagine a
    fast-rocking song with minor chords (example upon request!),
    a naturally bright color (Yellow, Cyan) in a low tone.


    P.S.: I offer my warmest compliments on the coming of the
    New Year and the going of the Old one. Has anything
    changed, except the snow in the streets is not last
    year's?

    P.P.S.: I see you indent the first line of your paragraphs
    by nine spaces, which may be a typewriter
    convention. But they having no line breaks, each
    one is essentially a very long single line, whose
    proper display depends on whether and how the client
    software re-flows it to screen width. I therefore
    propose another step towards the typewriter
    canon -- breaking lines at a readable lenght, which
    is usually between sixty-five and seventy two
    characters.

    ---
    * Origin: nntp://news.fidonet.fi (2:221/6.0)
  • From Ardith Hinton@1:153/716 to Anton Shepelev on Fri Mar 10 19:23:17 2023
    Hi, Anton! Recently you wrote in a message to Ardith Hinton:

    "Neatness is not his strong suit". But neatness is a
    passive quality, not requiring creativity, courage,
    fortitude, or vigour.


    It may be challenging for those to whom it does not come naturally... but I see your point. A better example might be one or more of the subjects we were required to learn about at school: math, science, history, geography, and whatnot. I felt I had a knack for English, meaning the payoff for the effort I put into my studies was considerably greater than with other alternatives. :-)



    A suit of a man to a maid (whence 'suitor') is more to my
    taste.


    Suits me... [chuckle].



    No matter what talents an individual was born with, they
    may be improved by hard work & perseverance.

    I quote the above for the fun of mentioning my surprise
    upon initial misreading of `improved' as `removed'.


    Once again, your initial impression may not be as far off the mark as you think. IIRC Picasso said it took him sixty years to learn how to draw like a child (or possibly to unlearn what others tell children they should do). :-Q



    We could also say neatness isn't a person's forte, using
    the term as it's used in music to refer to strength (but
    not necessarily to volume). :-)

    I believe `forte' refers to the attack of the sound rather
    than to its volume -- a term I know not from music but from
    electroacoustics. Yours is a fine point in both senses.


    In my youth I also studied acoustics, and while my own experience has more to do with instruments like the violin & the clarinet than with electronic instruments I think you see my point. An accent mark or a sforzando is used to indicate the attack, but what happens next is quite a different matter.... :-)



    P.S.: I offer my warmest compliments on the coming of
    the New Year and the going of the Old one. Has anything
    changed, except the snow in the streets is not last year's?


    Thank you... and the same back to you! For Dallas & me last year had many ups & downs, but so far 2023 hasn't been very different... [wry grin].



    P.P.S.: I see you indent the first line of your paragraphs by
    nine spaces, which may be a typewriter convention.


    Yes. Theoretically it's ten spaces for a paragraph & five for quoted material. As a teacher, however, I do take some liberties in EchoMail.... :-)



    But they having no line breaks, each one is essentially a very
    long single line, whose proper display depends on whether and
    how the client software re-flows it to screen width.


    Uh-huh. Some of my Russian correspondents prefer longer lines, where others don't. Generally speaking I find hard returns counterproductive.

    In English we say "You can't please everybody all the time".... :-))



    I therefore propose another step towards the typewriter
    canon -- breaking lines at a readable lenght, which
    is usually between sixty-five and seventy two characters.


    Alexander & I discussed the issue awhile ago, and essentially both of us agree with you. But while I try to divide my words into reasonable chunks I can't necessarily predict how other people's software will interpret them. :-)




    --- timEd/386 1.10.y2k+
    * Origin: Wits' End, Vancouver CANADA (1:153/716)