Archive for the ‘Administration’ Category

Orthography

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

I am sometimes taken to task for my spelling of the word “retractible”. Today, a newly Assiduous Reader writes in and says:

I note that you use the term “Retractible” in your work. I believe the correct spelling is “Retractable”. See http://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ASearch&search=retractible&go=Go

Well, I don’t think it’s as cut and dried as all that, and even if it’s not I won’t get too fussed. The great strength of English is that not only will we steal words from anybody, running amok like thugs, but there are so many English speakers nowadays that the very concept of the Queen’s English is obsolete (The Queen’s English? Anybody knows that!).

Indian English, for example, has something of a reputation for being “cute” (among other English speakers). I can’t remember any particular examples off-hand, but I’ll update this post if I do. There are similar views whenever languages diverge slightly – Swedes think Norwegian is cute. On the other hand, Frenchmen think Quebecois is hillbilly.

And, of course, language is always changing … I once totally impressed a linguistics grad by being familiar with the Great Vowel Shift … not as familiar as she was, of course, but let’s just say … it was a great date!

Anyway, after due consideration, I have decided that for now, my spelling of retractible is non-retractible. What’s more, it’s not just me being stubborn – I can back it up!

According to Random House:

Origin:
1535–45; < L retractāre to reconsider, withdraw, equiv. to re- re- + tractāre to drag, pull, take in hand (freq. of trahere to pull) Related forms: re⋅tract⋅a⋅ble, re⋅tract⋅i⋅ble, adjective re⋅tract⋅a⋅bil⋅i⋅ty, re⋅tract⋅i⋅bil⋅i⋅ty, noun re⋅trac⋅ta⋅tion

Pay attention to the derivation, it’s important!

According to the American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language

Latin retractāre, to revoke, frequentative of retrahere, to draw back : re-, re- + trahere, to draw. V., tr., senses 2 and 3, and v., intr., sense 2, Middle English retracten, from Old French retracter, from Latin retractus, past participle of retrahere.]
re·tract’a·bil’i·ty, re·tract’i·bil’i·ty n., re·tract’a·ble, re·tract’i·ble adj., re’trac·ta’tion

“Retractation” sounds like a good word! I think I’ll start using it!

Now, remember the derivation? From Latin? According to The English Club (I have no idea whether this should be considered an Authoritative Source or not, but I’m not sure if ANYBODY is an Authoritative Source):

-ible or -able
Many words end in -ible and -able. Sometimes it is difficult to remember which spelling to use.

The -ible ending is for words of Latin origin. There are about 180 words ending in -ible. No new words are being created with -ible endings.

They don’t list “retractible” amongst their examples, but the key part is the “Latin Origin” – and “retract” is from Latin.

On the other hand, there’s a bit on the Ohio Literary Resource Center website (note that I have spelt the word “Centre” incorrectly, in accordance with their spelling) stating:

Adding the letters able or ible to a word or word part makes it an adjective. An adjective is used to describe a noun. In the sentence Macy had an adorable cat, able is added to adore in order to describe what kind of cat Macy had. Below is one basic rule for adding the able/ible endings. Study the rule and then complete the practice exercise.

Rule : add able to roots that can stand alone and ible to roots that cannot stand alone
return + able = returnable terr + ible = terrible

So take your choice! I have!

Update: I remembered my favourite example of Indian English! It was an ad for some service or other that claimed that having the company provide this service would reduce your botheration. Perfectly understandable, but I was taken aback by seeing the word in a formal ad. I once told a Russian girl I had been taken aback by something, which she was surprised at because some Americans she knew had told her quite emphatically that nobody was “taken aback” any more.

Brad Setser's Blog Removed from BlogRoll

Saturday, November 28th, 2009

Sadly, Brad Setser’s blog is now dormant, he says:

I have accepted a new job, one that will require a certain level of discretion.

It has been removed from the BlogRoll.

Firefox May Block Links on This Site

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

I have been advised that Firefox Adblock censors pages on this site to avoid displaying images having “images/ad_” as part of their URL.

This just happens to be precisely the format in which I link to articles I have written and republished.

To gain access to these links and articles, you must either turn off Adblock, use a different browser, or access articles via my corporate publications page.

PrefInfo.com Hacked & Fixed

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

I regret to say that PrefInfo.com has been hacked, similarly to the hack in May.

The hack has been removed and security beefed up.

I continue to seek a reliable person to tighten the security on this site – please feel free to contact me with offers or suggestions.

Thanks to the guys on Financial Webring Forum for alerting me to this.

Themis Trading Added to BlogRoll

Monday, August 17th, 2009

I have added the Themis Trading Blog to the blogRoll.

Themis Trading bills itself as:

a leading independent, no conflict agency brokerage firm specializing in trading Listed and OTC equities for Institutions. We specialize in helping our clients navigate the fragmented electronic universe, find liquidity and minimize market impact. By design the Themis business model has no conflicts of interest with our clientele, and we do not make markets or provide investment banking services.

They have a lot of material on High Frequency Trading in the blog and elsewhere on their website. Naturally, it’s in their interest to portray HFT as a Bad Thing that has caused the trading process to be so complicated that poor innocent portfolio managers need a little help to keep ahead of the game … but that’s no bad thing. It certainly appears that they know their stuff … although I would need to do more digging before venturing an opinion on their actual skills and the value of their services, of course.

Power Outage Fixed: Sites Up

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

My off-site server host experienced a power outage on the afternoon of August 4; their automatic fail-over to generator power failed; and my websites were down for about eight and a half hours as a result.

My apologies for the inconvenience.

Naked Capitalism Removed from BlogRoll

Monday, July 20th, 2009

I rarely read the blog any more and consider it’s editorial stance not just intellectually dishonest (possibly too harsh. It might simply be grotesquely sloppy) but, what’s worse, boring.

PrefInfo.com Hacked

Friday, May 8th, 2009

I regret to advise that PrefInfo.com has recently been hacked. I believe that this hack has been operating for – probably, at least – two days.

The code for the hack has been removed from the index page, and I now seek to engage an expert to review security on the server – the site is hosted on RedHat Linux.

Please feel free to suggest experts.

Maintenance on himivest.com completed

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

I have completed the work on my corporate website, himivest.com, and everything should be back to normal.

There is the possibility that eMails sent during the maintenance period went astray – so if you sent me anything important between, say, 5pm April 14 and 9am April 15 and I haven’t responded, please try again.

Maintenance Alert for himivest.com

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

My corporate website, www.himivest.com, will shortly be undergoing maintenance and will be unavailable for a short period.

During the maintenance period, a short advisory will appear instead of the index page. Links to the site – from here and from other sites – may not work, or may be out of date.

I will post again once service has been restored.