Jxn Vol
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Thats why the rams drastically improved whenever he left.
Lots of English majors on VN.
Nah, knowing English is not the same as majoring in English.
English majors do oddly fascinating things like quote entire 128-line poems, and argue the finer points of William Butler Yeats versus John Keats.
The stuff in this thread, that's just folks who understand idomatic English correcting people who don't (or didn't, prior to the discussion).k:
Ease up on the kid, bro. OK? We get the message and, to millenials (due to their common vernacular), such a reconfiguration of an existing overall dynamic is, indeed, considered (although SIC) a quantum leap. We know the true definition, but who's all that concerned? Semantics getting in your way? This is just common slang for the youngsters. Anyways...I'd call it a paradigm leap. Look it up professor. Changing from Cincinnati to SEC football conditioning...no matter how you put it...was apparently too big an apple for poor ol' Butch to peel.Quantum, by definition, cannot mean very large no matter the context.
quantum definition per Cambridge Dictionary....
(physics)the smallest amount of energy that can be measured
Quantum definition per Merriam-Webster....
one of the very small increments or parcels into which many forms of energy are subdivided
Lots of English majors on VN.
I doubt that. However, in the 35 years I listened to John Ward. I never heard him misuse the the principals of the English language. I shudder when I hear TV and Radio announcers, talk show hosts and most others who have children listing to them murder our English. I guess this all started when they a Tv network hired Dizzy Dean to broadcast Major League Baseball.
during the latter years of my work, one of the most difficult task was hiring new/young employees was their inability to use correct English, both in their oral and written presentations.
It absolutely can, and often does, mean "very large." Or, more precisely, "very significant, dramatic change."
A quantum jump, or quantum leap is, in physics, "an abrupt transition of an electron, atom, or molecule from one quantum state to another, with the absorption or emission of a quantum."
The emphasis is on abrupt transition ... sudden, dramatic change.
That doesn't necessarily mean "large," but in a non-physics, idiomatic, context it can certainly imply it. In spite of quantum mechanics being the world of the very small, the idiom really has nothing to do with the idea of "small."
p.s. KB, you were right about "quantum," but wrong about the phrase "quantum leap" or "quantum jump." Totally separate ideas, especially when applied idiomatically.
I doubt that. However, in the 35 years I listened to John Ward. I never heard him misuse the the principals of the English language. I shudder when I hear TV and Radio announcers, talk show hosts and most others who have children listing to them murder our English. I guess this all started when they a Tv network hired Dizzy Dean to broadcast Major League Baseball.
during the latter years of my work, one of the most difficult task was hiring new/young employees was their inability to use correct English, both in their oral and written presentations.
I doubt that. However, in the 35 years I listened to John Ward. I never heard him misuse the the principals of the English language. I shudder when I hear TV and Radio announcers, talk show hosts and most others who have children listing to them murder our English. I guess this all started when they a Tv network hired Dizzy Dean to broadcast Major League Baseball.
during the latter years of my work, one of the most difficult task was hiring new/young employees was their inability to use correct English, both in their oral and written presentations.[/QUOTE
many schools don't teach cursive anymore, much less grammar...
GO VOLS!