jzer0cool21 hours ago
Unbelievable. Are you actually Stephen Fry is disguise?
farmerbb19 hours ago
I understood that reference.
piekvorst13 hours ago
Not just a Futurama reference
marceldegraafa day ago
Ah, I see someone has listened to "The Rest is Science" recently. Great podcast with Michael Stevens (VSauce) and Hannah Fry (the mathematician)
flyingcircus3a day ago
Actually, its just one of the 170k English words we all totally already knew this morning.
nkrisca day ago
Which was also heavily featured on the podcast mentioned.
culia day ago
Funny that https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zenzizenzic
redirects to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_power
I supposed the 16th power would then be Zenzizenzizenzizenzic and so forth.
Jblx2a day ago
I always wondered what the Spice Girls were singing about in that song.
momoraula day ago
Just "zenzi" stacked three times. They really committed to the bit.
hun317 hours ago
(zenzi)³
I mean zenzi-cubic
aldanor9 hours ago
Or cubizenzic?
gre21 hours ago
hemidemisemiquaver vibes
epihelix18 hours ago
Well no, by the same logic it would be quaverquaverquaverquavic.
A hemidemisemiquaver, while a little scary for the performer, at least makes immediate perfect sense. Unlike that stupid "sixty-fourth note" rubbish. Music is art, not fractions!
dhosek17 hours ago
Fractions are art and man, music relies so much on fractions.
gste16 hours ago
Someone should make a language where every math formula is a word.
Then give it to an LLM and let it go nuts
JumpCrisscross12 hours ago
This isn’t far off from Gödel’s work.
graypegga day ago
> …it survives as a linguistic oddity: zenzizenzizenzic has more Zs than any other word in the OED.
I am an absolutely garbage scrabble player, but I will be keeping this gem in my back pocket… probably a rare case to play it though haha
Sparkle-sana day ago
Scrabble only comes with one Z, so some of those are gonna have be sideways N's.
gjm11a day ago
Also, a Scrabble board is 15 squares across and ZENZIZENZIZENZIC is 16 letters, so even with a Scrabble set with extra Zs or blanks you couldn't ever play it.
dylan604a day ago
even if you just played the root zenzic would be great score, but again, the solitary z would make a wee bit difficult
darth_aardvarka day ago
In addition to the Z's everyone else pointed out, Scrabble boards are 15 tiles across. This is 16 letters. You fool. You utter gumdrop.
graypegga day ago
Ah! Wrong on the internet! Oh no!
conradludgatea day ago
With one Z tile and 2 blanks...
binary1329 hours ago
This is exactly what first came to my mind as well. Pretty funny scenario to imagine
not_a_bot_4shoa day ago
Waiting for an AI startup to create a phononym of this, in the same vein as Google did...
dkarla day ago
I assume it's already trademarked as a pharmaceutical name.
Waterluvian18 hours ago
Kind of! It’s the official patented name for the formulation of the original Powerade. Back then it was known as PowerEight. The recipe hasn’t changed.
They take the finest electrolytes from whatever side of the salt flats we’re on, distil them twice, then thrice, then once again thrice more. They then rehydrate it, thus infusing it with the pure essence of hydration. They add red dye (for the flavour) and memories of cherry (for the colour) and bottle it. The bottles are then dozenized and loaded onto trucks to be immediately re-homed.
Learned about all this on late night deep delve Discovery Channel soirée… or maybe it was a fever dream (which has a fascinating origin story as well, but that’s for another time.)
tosh17 hours ago
nb: Robert Recorde also came up with the equals sign as two horizontal parallel lines "=". Yes, that one.
"bicause noe 2, thynges, can be moare equalle"
(and helped make + and - signs more popular)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Recorde
see page 5:
https://sigapl.org/Articles/Language%20as%20an%20intellectua...
obligatory mention of Notation as a Tool of Thought
1979 Turing Award lecture by Ken Iverson
https://www.eecg.utoronto.ca/~jzhu/csc326/readings/iverson.p...
sublineara day ago
> dating from a time when powers were written out in words rather than as superscript numbers ... he wrote that it "doeth represent the square of squares squaredly".
This is a great example of why bad naming conventions are a "smell". It strongly implies that the solution does not yet fully understand the problem it's trying to solve.
lbo462a day ago
That is actually pretty cool
AStrangeMorrowa day ago
Someone watched “The rest is Science” I imagine!
marcusba day ago
Or tried that vocabulary estimator that is currently on the front page (it gave me zenzizenizenic in the last section.)
AStrangeMorrow21 hours ago
Yes possible. But really that video of them features the word prominently (even on the thumbnail) AND that vocabulary estimation website. The video/podcast is just slightly over a week old.
Anyway doesn’t really matter, it was more to see if anyone else was a listener of that podcast.
epihelix18 hours ago
Listened to, I assume you mean?
(Also, is it just me, or is anyone else mildly annoyed that the cleverly-titled "The rest is history" spawned a heap of meaningless "The rest is ..." siblings. Talk about letting the side down. I'm just waiting for Goal Hanger to recruit a pair of meditation gurus into their podcast stable, to make the "The rest is resting" ...)
[deleted]a day agocollapsed