cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/35985472
Ooft, the prize is literally just a trophy, why would you cheat this? Skimming takes skill, but to win you surely need a healthy dose of luck too. Anyway, Easdale looks a fun place to visit
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/35985472
Ooft, the prize is literally just a trophy, why would you cheat this? Skimming takes skill, but to win you surely need a healthy dose of luck too. Anyway, Easdale looks a fun place to visit
Aside from that this article only comes to the conclusion of broad implications and the author himself says he used both interchangeably in his book, this is an American source and the headline for this post is British. I don’t know about American Engkish, but there is no expectation of a stone being worked by humans in British English. In common usage here a rock is generally bigger than a stone - I’d say whether you can throw it one-handed is roughly where the extremely fuzzy line is - but you could absolutely just pick up any small piece of stone from the ground in nature and call it “a stone” without anyone questioning it
Yea, it’s nonsense to say “stone” means worked by human hands.
Here’s what Dictionary.com has to say:
The etymology of stone indicates same:
Anecdotal: I’ve never once heard anyone, ever, make this distinction. Stone and rock are synonymous.