The superiority of ISO paper sizes isn’t obvious at all if you don’t know how US paper is different. Seems like different countries just use different sizes. But as anyone accustomed to using A- or B-series papers knows, A4 is made of exactly 2 A5s, and the pattern holds up to A10 and down to A0, whereas the US paper sizes are completely unrelated to each other.
So good!
YTG123
- 0 Posts
- 4 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
Cake day: March 11th, 2024
You are not logged in. If you use a Fediverse account that is able to follow users, you can follow this user.
To be fair, I found a freely accessible version of this with a single search. Also to be fair, it wasn’t the published version.
YTG123@sopuli.xyzto
World News@lemmy.world•Pope says Trump's threat to destroy Iranian civilization is 'truly unacceptable'English
14·8 days agoI think the comment was about Vance

That depends on whether you interpret “when” + past tense in English to also assert the reality of the temporal clause. The interpretation which allows the vacuous truth is, in my opinion, not even technically correct (by correct I mean aligns with actual spoken usage). It would amount to formalizing the sentence as
Which is indeed vacuously true, if there have been no past meetings, or even if the meetings aren’t well-ordered in time :). On the surface this is a perfectly good interpretation, but it doesn’t really align with real usage (though I would love to see an example of “when” + past tense being used this way, e.g. in a legal document).
On the other hand, most people would interpret “when” + past to assert that the event actually happened, which in this context means
Or even more formally
And this can be reduced to
I think this interpretation is most closely aligned with how “when” is actually used in practice. “If” feels different, though. It can act as simple logical implication, logical equivalence, or anything in between, so it may be more interesting to study. Also note that all of this doesn’t apply to “when” + simple present, which acts very similarly to “if”.