pete moss wrote:this is not good enough
pete moss wrote:immagination
pete moss wrote:astrononomy
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pete moss wrote:we still say 'sunrise' and 'sunset'
Arguing with "sunrise" and "sunset" is as crazy as attributing these terms to astronomers.
pete moss wrote:invent and popularise
Coining a term is one thing, whereas society decides whether or not it will become popular. That's where "popular" comes from, and that's where anthropology comes into linguistic judgment. Since you're the expert, why don't
you invent some terms and see how popular they become? And don't say you lack the audience astronomers have; the number of people who listen to astronomers is minuscule, and you have the whole internet to work with. Go try the rest of the internet and come back in a couple of years to let us know how everything worked out. This will not be easy, so you must work from sunpete until sunmoss (or, if you prefer, from earthpete until earthmoss).
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http://www.myspace.com/peatmossandthefertilizers
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Astronomers already have scientific names for "sunrise" and "sunset". Sunrise is the interval between third and fourth contact of an eclipse of the sun by the earth (or by the planet or moon where the observer is). Sunset is the interval between first and second contact of an eclipse of the sun by the earth (or by the planet or moon where the observer is). First contact is also called SPE (start of partial eclipse), second contact is also called SCE (start of complete eclipse), third contact is also called ECE (end of complete eclipse), and fourth contact is also called EPE (end of partial eclipse). So sunrise is the ECE-EPE interval and sunset is the SPE-SCE interval. Popularize
that.
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Back on the anthropology front, look at some
sunset photos and
sunrise photos - you will find a lot of images of sunlit
clouds. Who are you going to pick on for
that?
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It just
dawned on me - what's wrong with "daybreak" and "nightfall", other than the facts that the day does not actually break (in one popular sense) and the night does not actually fall (in one popular sense)?
Bullwinkle (narrating): Night fell.
Sound effect:
Thump!
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Pete Moss wrote:DUE TO THE TILTING OF THE EARTH
That should simply be "TILT", not "TILTING". "Tilting" implies that an ongoing or seasonal change in the "tilt" is responsible for the phenomenon. While the tilt of the Earth is indeed changing on a long time scale, that change has nothing to do with the phenomenon described. Learn the language before lecturing on the subject.