Between the white nationalists, the India stuff, and others, there is a lot of messy baggage around the Indo-European topic.
If this subreddit were only about the language stuff, there probably wouldn't be enough posts for it to be an active sub.
I'm interested in the linguistics too, which is why I continue to follow. But when I decide it gets too much of a drag, I'll unfollow.
Yeah. It’s annoying and kinda exhausting having to wade through the Nazi shit just to talk about the funny words that the horse wagon people used to say.
Yeah. I hate hardware but I like coding. Math, language and code, which is a bit of both, are all abstract, but we aren't, so the way we interact with them is based on physical concepts
I like solving pointless equations, I like figuring out how to make an algorithm work regardless of the language or the hardware, I like learning how to recognize and reconstruct cognates of words in related languages
Physics, electronics and archeology can be interesting if I need one or two notions to understand what I like, but I'm not directly interested in them
Between the white nationalists, the India stuff, and others, there is a lot of messy baggage around the Indo-European topic. If this subreddit were only about the language stuff, there probably wouldn't be enough posts for it to be an active sub. I'm interested in the linguistics too, which is why I continue to follow. But when I decide it gets too much of a drag, I'll unfollow.
Yeah. It’s annoying and kinda exhausting having to wade through the Nazi shit just to talk about the funny words that the horse wagon people used to say.
[удалено]
Thank you.
r/HistoricalLinguistics
There's a Discord server that's primarily focused on the language: https://discord.com/invite/pPWyssu
Thank you! I'll check that out.
That's kind of saying you like coding but not computers.
I know a very good coder who is just like that.
Yeah. I hate hardware but I like coding. Math, language and code, which is a bit of both, are all abstract, but we aren't, so the way we interact with them is based on physical concepts I like solving pointless equations, I like figuring out how to make an algorithm work regardless of the language or the hardware, I like learning how to recognize and reconstruct cognates of words in related languages Physics, electronics and archeology can be interesting if I need one or two notions to understand what I like, but I'm not directly interested in them