2/22/2023 0 Comments Todolist beamer![]() all of the phrases I listed had >1000 google hits. Lee, I believe you are trying to overrule the Internet here. Likewise the other phrases seem to propagate because they either had meaning at some distant point in the past when they were used very sincerely and specifically, or because they were so malformed to begin with that they had to propagate to survive at all. but in context of *both* "all your base" *and* "Let's Roll" it becomes very interesting. LDC define "worthy" - personally I think that move zig is probably not all that interesting on its own. It isn't even a common enough idiom to be found in a dictionary-you certainly wouldn't find it, say, in a New York Times used without reference to its source. "Move zig" is another phrase, probably meaning more or less the same thing, but it isn't worthy of inclusion here. "Let's roll" isn't a concept at all-it's a phrase that has made the news recently, and it's the title of a song, both of which deserve to be covered. "Meme" is already treading on thin ground, but is at least well known enough to be semi-respectable. that words or phrases should mean something specific, at least within one field, and that there ought to be some controls on who can use what to mean what. ![]() I therefore think a substantially looser academic standard should apply to this subject, which is antithetical to the ideals of academia itself, e.g. Academics are biased against recognizing viral memes as such since their entire careers are usually based on free-riding on same. The concept of "viral meme" is not a mainstream academic concept, and only merits the briefest mention in an encyclopedia. Policy on viral memes ought to be established early, as with references to risk and cognitive bias, which will otherwise creep into every single article. ![]() ![]() very much help people not familiar with English or Engrish to understand each. prevent people from spreading either brand of crap into other areas of wiki and 2. Furthermore, I suspect that defining "Let's Roll" *as* "move 'zig'" will tend to 1. ![]() I believe quite strongly that the concept identified with "move 'zig'" is exactly as real as the concept identified with "Let's Roll" and in fact the two are the same idea expressed to two different audiences. People expect encyclopedias to be able to tell them that there is one concept with two names. ![]()
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