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Lancair crash at SnF



 
 
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  #1  
Old April 25th 08, 11:38 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6
Default Lancair crash at SnF

On Apr 25, 3:43 pm, Stefan wrote:
WingFlaps schrieb:

In everyday's language, the word velocity stands for the _magnitude_ of
the vector.
Nope. Not even at high school. The magnitude is "speed".
Maybe where you live. Not where I live.
BS. This is stated in any basic physics text book -even Wiki knows it:
"In physics...The scalar absolute value (magnitude) of velocity is
speed."
What part of "everyday's language" wasn't clear?

I can see you have trouble with English too.


If my mediocre English is offending you, then feel free to converse in
German, French, Italian or Spanish with me. I know all those languages
better than English, which obviously isn't my native language. How many
languages do _you_ speak?

Nevertheless I know English good enough to know that in general use
velocity is synonymous to speed. I don't expect you to agree with me,
but maybe you accept an excerpt from the OED:

velocity

1. a. Rapidity or celerity of motion; swiftness, speed.

1849 Macaulay Hist. Eng. iii. I. 379 The flying coaches are extolled as
far superior to any similar vehicles ever known in the world. Their
velocity is the subject of special commendation.

c. In scientific use, speed together with the direction of travel, as a
vector quantity.

So again: If, outside a strictly scientific or technical environment,
you choose to use a technical term which has a different meaning in
general use than in scientific use, then better advise it.


Stefan, this English speaker understands you (both your grammar and
your arguments) perfectly. I can't say the same of the gibberish
posted by Wingflaps.
  #2  
Old April 26th 08, 12:09 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
WingFlaps
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 621
Default Lancair crash at SnF

On Apr 26, 10:38*am, wrote:
On Apr 25, 3:43 pm, Stefan wrote:





WingFlaps schrieb:


In everyday's language, the word velocity stands for the _magnitude_ of
the vector.
Nope. Not even at high school. The magnitude is "speed".
Maybe where you live. Not where I live.
BS. This is stated in any basic physics text book -even Wiki knows it:
"In physics...The scalar absolute value (magnitude) of velocity is
speed."
What part of "everyday's language" wasn't clear?
I can see you have trouble with English too.


If my mediocre English is offending you, then feel free to converse in
German, French, Italian or Spanish with me. I know all those languages
better than English, which obviously isn't my native language. How many
languages do _you_ speak?


Nevertheless I know English good enough to know that in general use
velocity is synonymous to speed. I don't expect you to agree with me,
but maybe you accept an excerpt from the OED:


velocity


1. a. Rapidity or celerity of motion; swiftness, speed.


1849 Macaulay Hist. Eng. iii. I. 379 The flying coaches are extolled as
far superior to any similar vehicles ever known in the world. Their
velocity is the subject of special commendation.


c. In scientific use, speed together with the direction of travel, as a
vector quantity.


So again: If, outside a strictly scientific or technical environment,
you choose to use a technical term which has a different meaning in
general use than in scientific use, then better advise it.


Stefan, this English speaker understands you (both your grammar and
your arguments) perfectly. *I can't say the same of the gibberish
posted by Wingflaps.- Hide quoted text -


Bwhahahhahaha. Stefan's got a TROLL fwend.

Cheers
  #3  
Old April 26th 08, 12:30 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6
Default Lancair crash at SnF

On Apr 25, 5:09 pm, WingFlaps wrote:
On Apr 26, 10:38 am, wrote:



On Apr 25, 3:43 pm, Stefan wrote:


WingFlaps schrieb:


In everyday's language, the word velocity stands for the _magnitude_ of
the vector.
Nope. Not even at high school. The magnitude is "speed".
Maybe where you live. Not where I live.
BS. This is stated in any basic physics text book -even Wiki knows it:
"In physics...The scalar absolute value (magnitude) of velocity is
speed."
What part of "everyday's language" wasn't clear?
I can see you have trouble with English too.


If my mediocre English is offending you, then feel free to converse in
German, French, Italian or Spanish with me. I know all those languages
better than English, which obviously isn't my native language. How many
languages do _you_ speak?


Nevertheless I know English good enough to know that in general use
velocity is synonymous to speed. I don't expect you to agree with me,
but maybe you accept an excerpt from the OED:


velocity


1. a. Rapidity or celerity of motion; swiftness, speed.


1849 Macaulay Hist. Eng. iii. I. 379 The flying coaches are extolled as
far superior to any similar vehicles ever known in the world. Their
velocity is the subject of special commendation.


c. In scientific use, speed together with the direction of travel, as a
vector quantity.


So again: If, outside a strictly scientific or technical environment,
you choose to use a technical term which has a different meaning in
general use than in scientific use, then better advise it.


Stefan, this English speaker understands you (both your grammar and
your arguments) perfectly. I can't say the same of the gibberish
posted by Wingflaps.- Hide quoted text -


Bwhahahhahaha. Stefan's got a TROLL fwend.

Cheers


Yep, I'm someone who recognizes the futility of arguing with an
arrogant, clueless blowhard. But as long as you're critiquing the
grammar of non-English speakers, critique this from a self-declared
English speaker:

Well I cannot understand you you can load the plane up like that and
not raise stall speed beyond 1.2Vs so you must be using a wing drop to
acclerate the turn? Do you could just stall out of the turn -but how
much height do you loose in the stall and it's recovery?

  #4  
Old April 26th 08, 12:51 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
WingFlaps
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 621
Default Lancair crash at SnF

On Apr 26, 11:30*am, wrote:
On Apr 25, 5:09 pm, WingFlaps wrote:





On Apr 26, 10:38 am, wrote:


On Apr 25, 3:43 pm, Stefan wrote:


WingFlaps schrieb:


In everyday's language, the word velocity stands for the _magnitude_ of
the vector.
Nope. Not even at high school. The magnitude is "speed".
Maybe where you live. Not where I live.
BS. This is stated in any basic physics text book -even Wiki knows it:
"In physics...The scalar absolute value (magnitude) of velocity is
speed."
What part of "everyday's language" wasn't clear?
I can see you have trouble with English too.


If my mediocre English is offending you, then feel free to converse in
German, French, Italian or Spanish with me. I know all those languages
better than English, which obviously isn't my native language. How many
languages do _you_ speak?


Nevertheless I know English good enough to know that in general use
velocity is synonymous to speed. I don't expect you to agree with me,
but maybe you accept an excerpt from the OED:


velocity


1. a. Rapidity or celerity of motion; swiftness, speed.


1849 Macaulay Hist. Eng. iii. I. 379 The flying coaches are extolled as
far superior to any similar vehicles ever known in the world. Their
velocity is the subject of special commendation.


c. In scientific use, speed together with the direction of travel, as a
vector quantity.


So again: If, outside a strictly scientific or technical environment,
you choose to use a technical term which has a different meaning in
general use than in scientific use, then better advise it.


Stefan, this English speaker understands you (both your grammar and
your arguments) perfectly. *I can't say the same of the gibberish
posted by Wingflaps.- Hide quoted text -


Bwhahahhahaha. Stefan's got a TROLL *fwend.


Cheers


Yep, I'm someone who recognizes the futility of arguing with an
arrogant, clueless blowhard. *But as long as you're critiquing the
grammar of non-English speakers, critique this from a self-declared
English speaker:


I declare you're a troll.

Cheers
  #5  
Old April 26th 08, 06:26 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Highest Quality Squack
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default Lancair crash at SnF

On Fri, 25 Apr 2008 16:51:53 -0700 (PDT), WingFlaps wrote:

I declare you're a troll.


http://www.silverraven.com/fy.htm
 




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