Marine Aquarium 2.6 Under Vista & XP Pro

D

D. Spencer Hines

Have folks tried this EXCELLENT screensaver under Vista and does it function
cleanly there?

It runs beautifully under XP Pro SP2.

DSH

Fortem Posce Animum
 
H

HEMI-Powered

Today, D. Spencer Hines made these interesting comments ...
Have folks tried this EXCELLENT screensaver under Vista and
does it function cleanly there?

It runs beautifully under XP Pro SP2.

DSH

Fortem Posce Animum
Illigitimus Non Carborundum
 
D

D. Spencer Hines

Illigitimus [sic^2] Non Carborundum-------------------------------Cordon Sanitaire--------------------------

Nope...

Wrong...

Bad Mock Latin.

_Illegitimis Non Carborundum_

Even Mock Latin should follow some Basic Grammatical Rules.

DSH
-------------------------------------------------------

"Illegitimis non carborundum"

Yes, this means "Don't let the bastards grind you down", but it
is not real Latin; it is a pseudo-Latin joke.

"Carborundum" is a trademark for a very hard substance composed
of silicon carbide, used in grinding. (The name "Carborundum" is a
blend of "carbon" and "corundum". "Corundum" denotes aluminum
oxide, and comes to English from Tamil kuruntam; it is related to
Sanskrit kuruvinda = "ruby".) "The "-ndum" ending suggests the
Latin gerundive, which is used to express desirability of the
activity denoted by the verb, as in Nil desperandum = "nothing to
be despaired of"; addendum = "(thing) fit to be added";
corrigendum = "(thing) fit to be corrected"; and the name Amanda,
from amanda = "fit to be loved").

Illegitimis is the dative plural of illegitimus =
"illegitimate"; the gerundive in Latin correctly takes the dative to
denote the agent. Illegitimus could conceivably mean "bastard" in
Latin, but was not the usual word for it: Follett World-Wide Latin
Dictionary (Follett, 1967) gives _nothus homo_ for bastard of known
father, and _spurius_ for bastard of unknown father.

The phrase seems to have originated with British army
intelligence early in World War II. It was popularized when U.S.
general Joseph W. "Vinegar Joe" Stilwell (1883-1946) adopted it as
his motto. Various variant forms are in circulation.

Mark Israel

Alt.Usage.English FAQ.

NOW:

BACK to:

Marine Aquarium 2.6 Under Vista & XP Pro

DSH

Lux et Veritas et Libertas

Veni, Vidi, Calcitravi Asinum

Today, D. Spencer Hines made these interesting comments ...
Have folks tried this EXCELLENT screensaver under Vista and
does it function cleanly there?

It runs beautifully under XP Pro SP2.

DSH

Fortem Posce Animum
Illigitimus [sic^2] Non Carborundum
 
H

HEMI-Powered

Today, D. Spencer Hines made these interesting comments ...
Illigitimus [sic^2] Non Carborundum
-------------------------------Cordon
Sanitaire--------------------------

Nope...

Wrong...

Bad Mock Latin.

_Illegitimis Non Carborundum_

Even Mock Latin should follow some Basic Grammatical Rules.
Twit, you're missing the point. That was the motto of my
engineering school and was jokingly put together to mean "don't let
the bastards grind you down". Well, you are and I don't.
 
D

D. Spencer Hines

Thank you kindly.

It's a beautiful little piece of software.

I'd hate to lose it.

DSH
 
G

Guest

I had a post on this same issue a few weeks ago. How can I get the
screensaver from my husbands laptop with xp to my laptop with vista?
 

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