Pet peeve
-
Tsuyoku
- Dies in gote
- Posts: 65
- Joined: Mon Feb 28, 2011 5:26 pm
- Rank: SDK
- GD Posts: 0
- Has thanked: 17 times
- Been thanked: 7 times
Pet peeve
This is generally a bad move. Maybe sometimes it makes sense. No heuristic is an absolute truth.
But.
I wish people would stop doing this:
Please don't tsuke on the corner stone.
But.
I wish people would stop doing this:
Please don't tsuke on the corner stone.
- CSamurai
- Lives in gote
- Posts: 348
- Joined: Fri May 28, 2010 2:50 am
- Rank: KGS4k
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: CSamurai
- Has thanked: 16 times
- Been thanked: 31 times
Re: Pet peeve
I've.. never seen that.
Maybe I'm playing in the wrong servers, but I more often see something along..
with 5 often at A.
7 on the 4th line there feels odd and rather ineffective, even as a probe.
Maybe I'm playing in the wrong servers, but I more often see something along..
with 5 often at A.
7 on the 4th line there feels odd and rather ineffective, even as a probe.
- Laman
- Lives in gote
- Posts: 655
- Joined: Thu May 06, 2010 10:24 pm
- Rank: 1d KGS
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: Laman
- Location: Czechia
- Has thanked: 29 times
- Been thanked: 41 times
- Contact:
Re: Pet peeve
Tsuyoku:
just out of curiosity, did you play this game? if so, how did it go?
because if it was me, and i successfully took advantage of this 7 and easily won in the end, i guess i would just think to myself: what a weak opponent, let's crush another one and earn higher rank to play someone worthy
but i would be much more irritated in opposite result, that i knew my opponent played wrongly but still cheated me and pull out a win for himself. yet, that would be exactly the case where i would have no right to criticize him because his play proved better than mine
or was it completely different? you don't write much about the situation
just out of curiosity, did you play this game? if so, how did it go?
because if it was me, and i successfully took advantage of this 7 and easily won in the end, i guess i would just think to myself: what a weak opponent, let's crush another one and earn higher rank to play someone worthy
but i would be much more irritated in opposite result, that i knew my opponent played wrongly but still cheated me and pull out a win for himself. yet, that would be exactly the case where i would have no right to criticize him because his play proved better than mine
or was it completely different? you don't write much about the situation
Spilling gasoline feels good.
I might be wrong, but probably not.
I might be wrong, but probably not.
- Mnemonic
- Lives in gote
- Posts: 324
- Joined: Wed Aug 11, 2010 10:41 pm
- Rank: KGS 7 kyu
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: Mnemonic, dude13
- Location: Dresden
- Has thanked: 26 times
- Been thanked: 22 times
Re: Pet peeve
I sometimes play that move in high handicap games as a ladder breaker. Of course this only works on 15k+ opponents 
While I was teaching the game to a friend of mine, my mother from the other room:
"Cutting? Killing? Poking out eyes? What the hell are you playing?"
"Cutting? Killing? Poking out eyes? What the hell are you playing?"
- Loons
- Gosei
- Posts: 1378
- Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 4:17 am
- GD Posts: 0
- Location: wHam!lton, Aotearoa
- Has thanked: 253 times
- Been thanked: 105 times
Re: Pet peeve
Your opponent seems to be probing with a ladder breaker for a very well known 5-4 joseki.
Edited for clarity.
(I guess they did not want a white ponnuki on top)
Final edit: Took advantage of British English to achieve gender-neutrality without using a construct like "s/he" or the abominable (in my opinion) "he or she".
Edited for clarity.
(I guess they did not want a white ponnuki on top)
Final edit: Took advantage of British English to achieve gender-neutrality without using a construct like "s/he" or the abominable (in my opinion) "he or she".
- Dusk Eagle
- Gosei
- Posts: 1758
- Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 4:02 pm
- Rank: 4d
- GD Posts: 0
- Has thanked: 378 times
- Been thanked: 375 times
Re: Pet peeve
Completely O/T, but where did you use British English in that sentence?
Anyway, back on topic,
itself seems a little bit weird. How often do you get in this position? Do you mind posting how the game continued from here?
Anyway, back on topic,
itself seems a little bit weird. How often do you get in this position? Do you mind posting how the game continued from here?We don't know who we are; we don't know where we are.
Each of us woke up one moment and here we were in the darkness.
We're nameless things with no memory; no knowledge of what went before,
No understanding of what is now, no knowledge of what will be.
Each of us woke up one moment and here we were in the darkness.
We're nameless things with no memory; no knowledge of what went before,
No understanding of what is now, no knowledge of what will be.
- Loons
- Gosei
- Posts: 1378
- Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 4:17 am
- GD Posts: 0
- Location: wHam!lton, Aotearoa
- Has thanked: 253 times
- Been thanked: 105 times
Re: Pet peeve
It may be that I`ve been misled, but I am under the impression that Americans can`t use the word 'they' in a non-gender-descriptive-singular sort of way. If they can, why is "he or she" so widespread?
Still on the topic of the ladder; I do agree that preemptively breaking that particular ladder was strange, but in isolation that move against a 4-4 (sans approach) is a commonish ladder breaker. It is because this move is used to break ladders that I inferred it was to stop that ladder.
Still on the topic of the ladder; I do agree that preemptively breaking that particular ladder was strange, but in isolation that move against a 4-4 (sans approach) is a commonish ladder breaker. It is because this move is used to break ladders that I inferred it was to stop that ladder.
- emeraldemon
- Gosei
- Posts: 1744
- Joined: Sun May 02, 2010 1:33 pm
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: greendemon
- Tygem: greendemon
- DGS: smaragdaemon
- OGS: emeraldemon
- Has thanked: 697 times
- Been thanked: 287 times
Re: Pet peeve
I am an American, but I wasn't aware that singular they was commonly accepted in any form of English. Anyway a sentence like "If Black attaches, they break the ladder" creates a verb disagreement that I find grating. (Compare "If Black attaches, Black breaks the ladder").
- Redundant
- Lives in sente
- Posts: 924
- Joined: Thu Apr 22, 2010 3:00 pm
- Rank: lazy
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: redundant/silchas
- Tygem: redundant
- Wbaduk: redundant
- DGS: redundant
- OGS: redundant
- Location: Pittsburgh
- Has thanked: 45 times
- Been thanked: 103 times
Re: Pet peeve
Loons wrote:It may be that I`ve been misled, but I am under the impression that Americans can`t use the word 'they' in a non-gender-descriptive-singular sort of way. If they can, why is "he or she" so widespread?
Still on the topic of the ladder; I do agree that preemptively breaking that particular ladder was strange, but in isolation that move against a 4-4 (sans approach) is a commonish ladder breaker. It is because this move is used to break ladders that I inferred it was to stop that ladder.
Americans definitely do use they as a non-gendered singular, but this is definitely informal and considered by some purists to be ungrammatical.
- Loons
- Gosei
- Posts: 1378
- Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 4:17 am
- GD Posts: 0
- Location: wHam!lton, Aotearoa
- Has thanked: 253 times
- Been thanked: 105 times
Re: Pet peeve
I type how I speak; I did not claim to have any great grammar faculty. I did notice I was using male pronouns for black and was looking for an alternative, and had been told (by Americans ...) that they don't use they like that. Now I've learned something new. Hurrah.
Edit:
Do appreciate the humor within "Pet Peeves" thread. Accidentally looked up pronouns online. Shan't use personal pronouns ever again if avoidable.
Edit:
Do appreciate the humor within "Pet Peeves" thread. Accidentally looked up pronouns online. Shan't use personal pronouns ever again if avoidable.
-
xed_over
- Oza
- Posts: 2264
- Joined: Mon Apr 19, 2010 11:51 am
- Has thanked: 1179 times
- Been thanked: 553 times
Re: Pet peeve
Loons wrote: and had been told (by Americans ...) that they don't use they like that.
pfft... we're not all like that. some of us actually hate all that political correctness crap.
-
Stable
- Lives with ko
- Posts: 232
- Joined: Thu Apr 29, 2010 6:12 am
- Rank: KGS 1D
- GD Posts: 0
- Has thanked: 103 times
- Been thanked: 39 times
Re: Pet peeve
Some?! It seems like 90% of Americans I meet are lone rangers on a crusade against political correctness... although that might just be a comment on my friends...
It must be Englishenglish though, because I use they that way all the time. Even more on topic, the OP should just win more until they (hehehe) end up playing stronger opponents who don't play like that and use it as good fighting practice in the meantime. If a strong player starts making weird contact moves you have to start looking for ladders on the opposite side.
It must be Englishenglish though, because I use they that way all the time. Even more on topic, the OP should just win more until they (hehehe) end up playing stronger opponents who don't play like that and use it as good fighting practice in the meantime. If a strong player starts making weird contact moves you have to start looking for ladders on the opposite side.
-
robinz
- Lives in gote
- Posts: 414
- Joined: Thu Sep 16, 2010 3:40 am
- Rank: KGS 9k
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: robinz
- Location: Durham, UK
- Has thanked: 95 times
- Been thanked: 15 times
Re: Pet peeve
I'm British, and I don't particularly like the use of "they" as a singular - although I do often do it as there isn't a lot that's better. (I don't care about "political correctness", I just find the collision between singular and plural that often results somewhat painful, at least in some contexts.) I certainly never thought of this issue as anything to do with the distinction between British and American English, although it wouldn't surprise me at all if the usage of this particular grammatical construction differed from one side of the Atlantic to the other. (Although I think that the increasing amount of informal international communication - such as on this forum and thousands of others across the web - makes such distinctions increasingly hard to consider meaningful.)
-
hyperpape
- Tengen
- Posts: 4382
- Joined: Thu May 06, 2010 3:24 pm
- Rank: AGA 3k
- GD Posts: 65
- OGS: Hyperpape 4k
- Location: Caldas da Rainha, Portugal
- Has thanked: 499 times
- Been thanked: 727 times
Re: Pet peeve
Do you think I can link every single person who complains about singular 'they' to this article before I die? (http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/language ... 03572.html)Redundant wrote:Americans definitely do use they as a non-gendered singular, but this is definitely informal and considered by some purists to be ungrammatical.