SMBC: Periodic Table - Who's on First?
Posted: Fri Aug 26, 2011 8:00 am
APOD and General Astronomy Discussion Forum
https://asterisk.apod.com/
That means that Nobelium struck out, eh?orin stepanek wrote:Oxygen; Potassium!
It means-- OK!Beyond wrote:That means that Nobelium struck out, eh?orin stepanek wrote:Oxygen; Potassium!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ununhexium wrote:
<<Ununhexium is the temporary name of a synthetic superheavy element with the temporary symbol Uuh and atomic number 116. There is no proposed name yet although moscovium (after Moscow Oblast in Russia, where the place of discovery, Dubna, is located) has been discussed in the media.
[Uuh] is placed as the heaviest member of group 16 (VIA) although a sufficiently stable isotope is not known at this time to allow chemical experiments to confirm its position as the heavier homologue to polonium.
[Uuh] was first detected in 2000 and since the discovery about 30 atoms of ununhexium have been produced, either directly or as a decay product of ununoctium, and are associated with decays from the four neighbouring isotopes with masses 290–293. The most stable isotope to date is ununhexium-293 with a half-life of ~60 ms.>>
-------------------------------------Ann wrote:
I thinks myj Engelsk not very good is. I understands not "struck out". I thinks it's means, Nobelium can't play with other elements. I thinks that's Nobelium much fair. I thinks baseball term "struck out" may is it be. I understands not baseball. Me Swedish, I think burnball good. Kid here plays burnball and strikes out maybe, in burnball strike you out sometimes. Nobelium strike out not.
Yes, that's it This whole thread is 'BATS'.neufer wrote:...bat.
So... nobelium produced by a collision? What did it produce? It forced out? What did it force out? It blotted out, effaced or erased? What did it blot out, efface or erase? It formed by a quick effort? Whose efforts formed it? It devised, invented or contrived - what? It struck out (the ball) - yes, that's what I thought. It started - what? It wandered, where? It made a sudden excursion - Into what? It struck what with full force? It was put out for not hitting the ball at its turn at the bat? I thought it was something like that, which is why I protested.neufer wrote:-------------------------------------Ann wrote:
I thinks myj Engelsk not very good is. I understands not "struck out". I thinks it's means, Nobelium can't play with other elements. I thinks that's Nobelium much fair. I thinks baseball term "struck out" may is it be. I understands not baseball. Me Swedish, I think burnball good. Kid here plays burnball and strikes out maybe, in burnball strike you out sometimes. Nobelium strike out not.
To strike out, v. t.:
[list](a) To produce by collision; to force out, as, to strike out sparks with steel.
(b) To blot out; to efface; to erase. To methodize is as necessary as to strike out." Pope.
(c) To form by a quick effort; to devise; to invent; to contrive, as, to strike out a new plan of finance.
(d) (Baseball) To cause a player to strike out; -- said of the pitcher.[/list]-------------------------------------
To strike out, v. i.:
[list](a) To start; to wander; to make a sudden excursion; as, to strike out into an irregular course of life.
(b) To strike with full force.
(c) (Baseball) To be put out for not hitting the ball during one's turn at the bat.[/list]-------------------------------------
What is suggested by that? And how can the answer to that question be "OK"?That means that Nobelium struck out, eh?
Oh! I never understood the title, either, but I ignored that. In your reply, the one that confused me, you referred to the title. No wonder I didn't get anything.Ann, if one strikes out, one cannot go to first base.Part of the Title of this thread is-->who's on first?
As bystander's clip shows:Ann wrote:Oh! I never understood the title, either, but I ignored that.Beyond wrote:
Ann, if one strikes out, one cannot go to first base. Part of the Title of this thread is-->who's on first?
In your reply, the one that confused me, you referred to the title.
No wonder I didn't get anything.
I was answering sarcastically! Like; OK! -- Like Huh! Sorry; I wasn't following the Script of Abbot and Costello! (BTY Two of the great comedians!)Beyond wrote:Ann, if one strikes out, one cannot go to first base.Part of the Title of this thread is-->who's on first? Orin answered-->Oxygen, Potasium, which are the third and fourth ones mentioned. Orin skipped over the first and second ones-->Nobelium and Sodium. Therefore i said "That means Nobelium struck out then, eh?", in reference to orin's referring to Oxygen and Potasium as candidates for who was on first. However, it could be that both Nobelium and Sodium had both hit home runs and were both gone from the bases, or perhaps that both of them had gotten 'base-hits' and were actually on second and third base, or any other combination of things that lead them to not be on first base. Of course my question about Nobelium was only a partial question about the first two elements, because orin appeared to be guessing that one of the third and fourth elements was on first, in reply to the question part of the thread-->Who's on First?
Perhaps if i had originally said-->That means that Nobelium and Sodium both struck out then,eh?, it might have made a little more sense to you. Does this help in the 'understanding my question', department?
bystander wrote:The cartoon has absolutely nothing to do with baseball, but is highly reminiscent of the classic Abbot and Costello skit. Sort of a Periodic Table "Who's on First?".
Oxygen Potassium
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_B ... ampionshipjessy27 wrote:Ann,
Can't be named after a Swede, the Swedish don't play baseball