Confusing headlines and other trips down the garden path

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Salmoneus
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Salmoneus »

Rolling football news
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Salmoneus
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Salmoneus »

Oh, I love this one:

Wanted Caerphilly Facebook police taunt man arrested
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But the river tripped on her by and by, lapping
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Civil War Bugle »

Woman stung by scorpion found on plane

Not a major one but I did pause to think about finding women on planes.

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din
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by din »

Salmoneus wrote:Oh, I love this one:

Wanted Caerphilly Facebook police taunt man arrested
Is the guy an individual from Caerphilly who taunts police over Facebook? Making him a 'Facebook police-taunt-man'? Otherwise I don't get it.
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by hwhatting »

din wrote:
Salmoneus wrote:Wanted Caerphilly Facebook police taunt man arrested
Is the guy an individual from Caerphilly who taunts police over Facebook? Making him a 'Facebook police-taunt-man'? Otherwise I don't get it.
That seems to be the intended meaning, yes.

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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by jal »

An oldie (2010) I just stumbled upon today: ‘Grim Sleeper’ Arrest Fans Debate on DNA Use. It took me some time to realise it wasn't fans of the Sleeper's arrest debating DNA use...


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linguoboy
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by linguoboy »

NYT Can't Math: "A number of residents speculated that the town’s employees left out of loyalty to Mr. Ramsey, who lost by 122 votes to 84."

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Salmoneus
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Salmoneus »

linguoboy wrote:NYT Can't Math: "A number of residents speculated that the town’s employees left out of loyalty to Mr. Ramsey, who lost by 122 votes to 84."
I don't get it.

I also originally didn't get this BBC headline:
Victim's video helps jail rapist
It makes perfect sense if you look at it right, but, perhaps because of newspaperese's obsession with nouns, I got it all wrong.
[The article itself has "victim's video helps convict rapist", which I found more straightforward, but theoretically is equally ambiguous]
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But the river tripped on her by and by, lapping
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I'se so silly to be flowing but I no canna stay!

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Matrix
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Matrix »

Salmoneus wrote:
linguoboy wrote:NYT Can't Math: "A number of residents speculated that the town’s employees left out of loyalty to Mr. Ramsey, who lost by 122 votes to 84."
I don't get it.
If the other person got 84 votes, you can't have lost to them by 122 votes, unless you somehow got negative votes.
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Kereb »

Matrix wrote:If the other person got 84 votes, you can't have lost to them by 122 votes, unless you somehow got negative votes.
not necessarily; there exists a convention in sports* to put the winning score first, so that it makes equal sense to say you "won 5 to 3" and "lost 5 to 3". the sentence reads just fine when talking about an election, too.

*some sports at least, don't 'correct' me with something about fuckin cricket or whatever or some basic ∃=∀ fail
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Matrix »

Kereb wrote:not necessarily; there exists a convention in sports* to put the winning score first, so that it makes equal sense to say you "won 5 to 3" and "lost 5 to 3". the sentence reads just fine when talking about an election, too.
The problem is the word 'by'. Mr. Ramsey didn't lose 122 to 84, according to the article - he lost by 122 to 84. That means that he got 122 votes less than 84.
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Adúljôžal ônal kol ví éža únah kex yaxlr gmlĥ hôga jô ônal kru ansu frú.
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Salmoneus »

Matrix wrote:
Kereb wrote:not necessarily; there exists a convention in sports* to put the winning score first, so that it makes equal sense to say you "won 5 to 3" and "lost 5 to 3". the sentence reads just fine when talking about an election, too.
The problem is the word 'by'. Mr. Ramsey didn't lose 122 to 84, according to the article - he lost by 122 to 84. That means that he got 122 votes less than 84.
Huh? No, "122 to 84" is what he lost by. That was the score he lost by. Your reading wouldn't make sense at all, regardless of the numbers. You can say "lost by five votes", but "lost by five votes to twelve" means you got 5 and they got 12, not that they got twelve and you got seven!
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But the river tripped on her by and by, lapping
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I'se so silly to be flowing but I no canna stay!

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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Kereb »

Salmoneus wrote:
Matrix wrote: The problem is the word 'by'. Mr. Ramsey didn't lose 122 to 84, according to the article - he lost by 122 to 84. That means that he got 122 votes less than 84.
Huh? No, "122 to 84" is what he lost by. That was the score he lost by. Your reading wouldn't make sense at all, regardless of the numbers. You can say "lost by five votes", but "lost by five votes to twelve" means you got 5 and they got 12, not that they got twelve and you got seven!
^^^ this.

when giving scores like this, "122 to 84" / "5 to 3" / "12 to 5" makes kind of a phrase unit that may or may not take "by" but means the same thing.
<Anaxandridas> How many artists do you know get paid?
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by pharazon »

Kereb wrote:
Salmoneus wrote:
Matrix wrote: The problem is the word 'by'. Mr. Ramsey didn't lose 122 to 84, according to the article - he lost by 122 to 84. That means that he got 122 votes less than 84.
Huh? No, "122 to 84" is what he lost by. That was the score he lost by. Your reading wouldn't make sense at all, regardless of the numbers. You can say "lost by five votes", but "lost by five votes to twelve" means you got 5 and they got 12, not that they got twelve and you got seven!
^^^ this.

when giving scores like this, "122 to 84" / "5 to 3" / "12 to 5" makes kind of a phrase unit that may or may not take "by" but means the same thing.
I agree that Salmoneus' reading must be the one intended, but maybe there's a dialect issue that's causing confusion here. I would say "lost by a score of 5 to 2" or "lost 5 to 2" or "lost by 3 points/runs/goals/etc.", but never "lost by 5 to 2".

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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Viktor77 »

New Federal Rules Aim to Stop Fiery Oil Train Crashes from NBC

It's good to have rules stopping fiery oil train crashes. Fiery oil train crashes are bad.

Not garden path, but the author might have mistaken NBC's audience with her young children, which is a perfectly reasonable mistake to make.
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Kereb »

Viktor77 wrote:Not garden path, but the author might have mistaken NBC's audience with her young children, which is a perfectly reasonable mistake to make.
what
is there a more 'adult' way you would have phrased this?
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Viktor77 »

Kereb wrote:
Viktor77 wrote:Not garden path, but the author might have mistaken NBC's audience with her young children, which is a perfectly reasonable mistake to make.
what
is there a more 'adult' way you would have phrased this?
New rules aim to prevent dangerous/disastrous oil train derailments/disasters. Basically anything that is not fiery. Fiery is not a very sophisticated word. Not only does it sound like something you'd say to a child, it sounds a tad sensationalist, a tad obvious, and a tad too colorful. Also stop is a bit weird, a word like prevent would sound a bit more elevated. So yes, this title can be improved.
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Kereb »

headline language tends toward the terse, you can't be unaware of this. your revision would appear to a newspaper editor to gain nothing but additional characters.
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Re: Cheese that smells

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Kereb wrote:headline language tends toward the terse, you can't be unaware of this. your revision would appear to a newspaper editor to gain nothing but additional characters.
If terseness is what you want, "aim" could've been scrapped from that head line without any loss of clearness. And, while we're at it, replace "fiery crashes" with "infernoes" :).


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Salmoneus
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Re: Cheese that smells

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Broadsheet: New rules to prevent rail crashes
Tabloid: Panic over train inferno threat
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Viktor77 »

Salmoneus wrote:Broadsheet: New rules to prevent rail crashes
Tabloid: Panic over train inferno threat
Yes, like that. Rail crashes, nice and succinct, not sensationalist or silly.

This Onion one took me a while:
All Of Child’s Fondest Memories Times When Dad Trying To Make Up For Things
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by Xephyr »

pharazon wrote:
Kereb wrote:
Salmoneus wrote:
Matrix wrote: The problem is the word 'by'. Mr. Ramsey didn't lose 122 to 84, according to the article - he lost by 122 to 84. That means that he got 122 votes less than 84.
Huh? No, "122 to 84" is what he lost by. That was the score he lost by. Your reading wouldn't make sense at all, regardless of the numbers. You can say "lost by five votes", but "lost by five votes to twelve" means you got 5 and they got 12, not that they got twelve and you got seven!
^^^ this.

when giving scores like this, "122 to 84" / "5 to 3" / "12 to 5" makes kind of a phrase unit that may or may not take "by" but means the same thing.
I agree that Salmoneus' reading must be the one intended, but maybe there's a dialect issue that's causing confusion here. I would say "lost by a score of 5 to 2" or "lost 5 to 2" or "lost by 3 points/runs/goals/etc.", but never "lost by 5 to 2".
Just throwing my voice in to say that I'm in the exact same boat as Pharazon here. "He lost by 122 votes to 84" is almost nonsensical to me.
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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by jal »

Xephyr wrote:Just throwing my voice in to say that I'm in the exact same boat as Pharazon here. "He lost by 122 votes to 84" is almost nonsensical to me.
As a non-native speaker my $.02 may be off, but for me, "by" in "to lose by X" means that X is the margin between the loser and the winning amount. So "Y lost by 2 seconds" means that the difference between Y and the winning time (or required time, or whatever) is 2 seconds. This is exemplified in a sentence like "Ed Milliband lost by a great margin". However, Merriam Webster lists an interesdting example: "We lost the game by a score of 4–2." If we agree that this is acceptable, from there it's a small step to say "We lost the game by 4-2", which comes dangerously close to the "lost by 122 votes to 84".


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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by linguoboy »

BBC: Events mark end of WW2 in Europe

Well thank goodness y'all finally wrapped that up.

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Re: Cheese that smells

Post by hwhatting »

linguoboy wrote:BBC: Events mark end of WW2 in Europe

Well thank goodness y'all finally wrapped that up.
I bet you'll be able to re-use that remark at least once per decade at least until 20145. ;-)

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