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Date:      Tue, 20 Apr 2004 11:42:33 +1000 (EST)
From:      Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
To:        John Baldwin <john@baldwin.cx>
Cc:        Ceri Davies <ceri@submonkey.net>
Subject:   Re: bin/41071: make NO to NO_ transition patch
Message-ID:  <20040420105054.H752@gamplex.bde.org>
In-Reply-To: <200404191135.37983.john@baldwin.cx>
References:  <00f401c4232b$8700d0c0$7890a8c0@dyndns.org> <20040417101206.N16280@gamplex.bde.org> <20040417131617.GD465@submonkey.net> <200404191135.37983.john@baldwin.cx>

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On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, John Baldwin wrote:

> On Saturday 17 April 2004 09:16 am, Ceri Davies wrote:
> > On Sat, Apr 17, 2004 at 10:19:58AM +1000, Bruce Evans wrote:
> > > For a more modest task, try fixing the English spelling of "nothing"
> > > to "no thing" and "consistent" to "consistant".
> >
> > There's noway that could be considered the same thing.

Your reply notwithstanding, they (fixing non-broken spelling of no*) are
considered the same thing, but "consistant" is just a spelling error.

> > (Disclaimer: I really don't care which way this falls out).
>
> FWIW, nothing and nobody are special cases much like cannot and are certainly
> the exception, not the rule.  Phrases such as 'no one', 'no cars', 'no code',
> 'no libraries', 'no binaries', 'no comments', 'no bikesheds', 'no spam', 'no
> pets', etc. abound and all have 'no' as a separate word rather than as a
> compound word.

They are exceptions which prove the rule.  Words in common use get
combined.  This has already happened for 'nothing', 'nobody' and
'NOMAN', etc., and is starting to happen for 'no one'.  NOMAN was
presumably a combined word to begin with so that it is easier to type.

Bruce



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