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Re: What is the definition of "paradine shift". Very little. Maybe some ..
Miss Elaine Eos (Misc@*your-shoes*PlayNaked.com) 2005/05/21 12:00

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From: Miss Elaine Eos <Misc@*your-shoes*PlayNaked.com>
Newsgroups: alt.languages.english
Subject: Re: What is the definition of "paradine shift".
Organization: Very little. Maybe some on weekends.
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Date: Sat, 21 May 2005 18:00:03 GMT
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In article <3f93t6F6jsofU2@individual.net>,
 "Mike Lyle" <mike_lyle_uk@REMOVETHISyahoo.co.uk> wrote:

> Miss Elaine Eos wrote:
> > In article <3f40vbF5s5emU2@individual.net>,
> >  "Mike Lyle" <mike_lyle_uk@REMOVETHISyahoo.co.uk> wrote:
> >
> >> Scotius wrote:
> >>> On Thu, 24 Mar 2005 01:43:33 -0600, Bob@newsgroup.net wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> What is the definition of "paradine shift".  Is paradine a real
> >>>> word and did I spell it correctly.
> >
> >>> It's "paradigm", and it's pronounced "paradeem". A paradigm is
> >>> an idea, so a paradigm shift is a change in thought.
> >
> >> Pronounced "paradime" (dum-di-dum, of course) on these lips.
> >
> > Pronounced "paradime" here, too.
> >
> > Also a paradigm is more than just an idea, it's a whole set of
> > ideas
> > that, together, form a way of looking at things.  So a "paradigm
> > shift" is a whole different way of looking at things.

> Glad to meet with agreement. Though remember the word's basic
> meaning, just "model" or "pattern", can apply on a small scale; my
> own first acquaintance with it was as the "grid" displaying
> verb-forms in the grammar book.

Right, and the grid is a model or pattern which is one way of looking at
verb forms.  I'm certain there are other ways of looking at them.  See
what I mean?

You're right that a paradigm could have a very small scope; I only meant
to point out that the typical use of "paradigm shift" is a fancy way of
saying "a whole 'nother way of looking at [things/subject at
hand/whatever]".

Moving from entering commands at a unix prompt to the "desktop metaphor"
as a way of telling the computer what to do was a paradigm shift (a
rather large one.)  Designing an engine with triangular pistons that
roll around rather than cylindrical ones that pump up & down was another
(also substantial.)  If a paradigm shift is small enough, it's almost an
"analogy", right?

> (My message received a bizarrely excitable response from somebody,
> and I wondered what I'd done. I concluded that he thought
> "dum-di-dum" was an insult rather than a crude indication of the
> stressed syllables! You meet all sorts round here.)

Yeah, that's what I figured, too.  But is it "DUM-di-dum" or
"dum-DI-dum"?!  ;)

(It's "Dum-di-Dum", with smaller accents on the 1st & last.)

--
Please take off your shoes before arriving at my in-box.
I will not, no matter how "good" the deal, patronise any business which sends
unsolicited commercial e-mail or that advertises in discussion newsgroups.

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