Today I learned...

But still, learning the rules of style is an ongoing process, and like we say in writing, gotta know the rules to know when to break them.

*shrug* I have a nice white shirt that I matched with a black silk tie. Trouble is, it's a button-down shirt. So ... should I not wear it with a tie? *shrug*

To be honest, I don't think anyone would care enough about this to raise a stink, unless you're at a dinner party given by one of the royals.

And this reminds me of a royal gaffe, which was committed by -- who else? -- Prince Phillip. ;) During his visit to Chile in 1968, Phillip was introduced to Dr Allende, soon to become president of his country. It was an official function, and Allende was wearing a lounge suit instead of white tie and tails.

Prince Phillip asked him, 'Why are you dressed like that?'

Allende replied, 'because my party is poor and they advised me not to hire evening dress.'

'If they told you to wear a bathing costume,' snapped the Prince, 'I suppose you'd have come dressed in one.'

Ahem ... :rolleyes:
 
*shrug* I have a nice white shirt that I matched with a black silk tie. Trouble is, it's a button-down shirt. So ... should I not wear it with a tie? *shrug*
The shirt buttons are fine, it's the buttons around the collar that are the faux pas, allegedly. Makes sense. I don't have any shirts with the collar buttons, so looks like I'm good to go!
 
The shirt buttons are fine, it's the buttons around the collar that are the faux pas, allegedly. Makes sense. I don't have any shirts with the collar buttons, so looks like I'm good to go!

Hmm. Fair enough, but ... can I still wear the button-down shirt with the collar unbuttoned? :)
 
I've made a little adjustment in my house clothes. I always wore yoga pants and t-shirt. But I picked myself up a couple of "house dresses" and find they are so comfortable.
 
I've made a little adjustment in my house clothes. I always wore yoga pants and t-shirt. But I picked myself up a couple of "house dresses" and find they are so comfortable.
I'm getting visions of my grandmother's cotton seersucker candy-striped dresses covered in an apron...
 
I'm getting visions of my grandmother's cotton seersucker candy-striped dresses covered in an apron...

yes! back in the day, all my gramma wore were dresses!!

I can picture exactly what you are describing
 
(Mark Twain's alleged comment on cold San Francisco summers applies equally well to Monterey Bay, particularly when a stiff wind is coming off the bay.)
I spent fifteen months listening to sea lions and other incomprehensibles at that school on the top of the hill. Monterey is indeed a chilly place to be.
 
To be honest, I don't think anyone would care enough about this to raise a stink, unless you're at a dinner party given by one of the royals.
Yes, but really I think it is good to  know the rules, outdated though they might be, if,  if, dressing nicely is important to you. And I don't look down on those for whom it isn't. I spend a lot of money and time when all my job really requires is khakis and a polo shirt to meet student and management expectations, but it makes me happy to go that extra sartorial mile. Just as a nicely turned phrase will attract positive attention here where plain English will do, there's a subset of professors (and students) who notice and appreciate attention to appearance and style. There was a member of the old forum who was absolute hell on comma splices...
 
Yes, but really I think it is good to  know the rules, outdated though they might be, if,  if, dressing nicely is important to you. And I don't look down on those for whom it isn't. I spend a lot of money and time when all my job really requires is khakis and a polo shirt to meet student and management expectations, but it makes me happy to go that extra sartorial mile. Just as a nicely turned phrase will attract positive attention here where plain English will do, there's a subset of professors (and students) who notice and appreciate attention to appearance and style. There was a member of the old forum who was absolute hell on comma splices...

Fair enough. I certainly don't mind - indeed, I welcome - dressing up when the occasion calls for it. :) I have two suits, two vests, innumerable shirts and ties, and two different winter coats. But I don't usually put on a full three-piece suit for anything less than a wedding, a funeral, or a very special birthday, because most of my family's men wouldn't, and I wouldn't want to upstage them. ;)

I like and enjoy going that extra sartorial mile, but I find that having a button-down shirt helps me keep my bow-tie from getting crooked, so why not? A button-down shirt with a tie is a lesser faux pas than a mischievous bow-tie deciding to turn itself sideways. ;)
 
Beauty and the Beast is not a traditional European fairy tale. It was written by French novelist Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve as "La Belle et la Bête" in 1740. The version we know today is an abridged version published by Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont several years later, which cuts out an entire arc, which deals with Beauty's own royal lineage, her family relationships and rival fairy godmothers.
 
Saturn's moon, Titan, has hydrocarbon "snow" that precipitates from the atmosphere and collects on the ground. Mainly ethane and methane, which liquify from their normally gaseous state when it gets cold enough. The snow is flammable! I know have to write a scene somewhere with burning snow.
 
This book was on the desk of Einstein at the time of his death.

Worlds in Collision

by Immanuel Velikovsky: This controversial 1950 book proposed that many ancient myths and historical events were caused by celestial near-collisions between Earth and other planets (specifically Venus and Mars). Despite being widely dismissed by the scientific community as "pseudoscience," Einstein maintained a correspondence with Velikovsky and was reportedly reading the book at the time of his death.
  • Renewed interest:
    Some of its predictions, such as Venus having comet-like properties (like a hot atmosphere), have been confirmed by modern space probes, leading to a re-evaluation of his work.

I tried reading this heavy tome and came away with a new perspective on some of the cataclysmic events and resulting parables that humans have recorded throughout its history.
 
Einstein maintained a correspondence with Velikovsky and was reportedly reading the book at the time of his death.

My guess is that Einstein was a voracious learner with a deep interest in all things.

A scientist, after all, is best open-minded - but approaching all things as a skeptic!
 
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Saturn's moon, Titan, has hydrocarbon "snow" that precipitates from the atmosphere and collects on the ground. Mainly ethane and methane, which liquify from their normally gaseous state when it gets cold enough. The snow is flammable! I know have to write a scene somewhere with burning snow.

Wouldn't actually burn on Titan though. There's virtually no free oxygen to sustain the combustion, AFAIK. Dunno how much is locked up in the snow though. No free gas dropping out of the sky.
 
Wouldn't actually burn on Titan though. There's virtually no free oxygen to sustain the combustion, AFAIK. Dunno how much is locked up in the snow though. No free gas dropping out of the sky.
No doubt. There's an ass-ton of liquid water beneath the service, so we'd just need to degas things a bit, dissolve the oxygen from solution, and then torch the joint!
 
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