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QUÉ TAL?
Email: kehoea@parhasard.net. betrieben wird. Diese ist meine persönliche, private Weblog. Hier gibt es Links zu anderen Seiten und Informationsquellen, die nicht unter Kontrolle dieses Autors stehen. Also bin ich nicht für die Inhalte jener Seiten verantwortlich. Auch besteht hier die Möglichkeit, einen Kommentar auf der Seite zu OCTOBER 2018 ARCHIVE October 2018 archive — Aidan Kehoe’s Weblog. Thran. 23rd of October, 2018 POST·MERIDIEM 11:53. Thran /θræn/ (th of thin, rest of the word as in ‘ran’) is a word used in this part of the world to mean “stubborn, obstinate.”. This little vignette on Reddit, about the roads I drive to do my grocery shopping, prompted me to lookit up.
AUGUST 2003 ARCHIVE
30th of August, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 02:29 The contents of my Muvo at the moment; . Bono et al. Children of the Revolution , from the Moulin Rouge soundtrack.It’s as rockin’ as a T-Rex number is going to get, and Bono doing his soul thing with it suits. SEPTEMBER 2002 ARCHIVE 7th of September, 2002 ANTE·MERIDIEM 03:09 Reading Andrew Sheil’s weblog this evening, it strikes me how prolific the guy is when posting to the thing. Now, growing up—and I haven’t noticed a change in it the few times I’ve seen him since he left Ballycaden—Andrew was always really “well-spoken”, as Diane’s mother puts it. More than that too, he never had anyAUGUST 2005 ARCHIVE
Kreuzberg vs. Schröder Enemy at the Gates 28th of August, 2005 POST·MERIDIEM 03:03 Kreuzberg, where I’m living at the moment, is heavily Turkish, Kurdish and student, and as such the big question about how the election will go here is what the relative order of the left-wing parties will be—the CDU, the centre-right party that’ll probably be running the country in a few months, is FEBRUARY 2010 ARCHIVE Last comment from Aidan Kehoe on the 4th of February at 0:30 And now I realise that part of why I wasn’t posting was that this site is still on MySQL, and its version-incompatibilities in how it deals with character encodings had been driving me mildly crazy. SEPTEMBER 2006 ARCHIVE ESR in Somalia, now, that I’d endorse WJC on Fox News 26th of September, 2006 POST·MERIDIEM 05:32 Ach, Des, if you truly want three hundred million more people with the living standards of Somalia, the world’s leading Libertarian worked example, I will think much less of you. It has been everywhere over the last few days, but the Clinton interview on Fox News is really worth watching.JUNE 2005 ARCHIVE
22nd of June, 2005 ANTE·MERIDIEM 11:54 Update from the wie-geht-es-bei-Aidan front; I’m good, thanks. I’m currently living in very dilapidated student accomodation quite close to Potsdam, where even though the computer facilities are running Linux and FreeBSD, they block outgoing SSH—fuсkers—whence the lack ofupdates here.
JULY 2003 ARCHIVE
17th of July, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 06:52 Yesterday I finished work about fifty minutes later than usual. Since I live in a suburb of a suburb and thus am not well served by the public transport system, I had a choice of waiting just over an hour and getting a bus to my door, or getting an earlier bus and walking for twenty-five minutes. I chose the waiting, because after a twelve hour day AIDAN KEHOE’S WEBLOG. Aidan Kehoe’s Weblog. Breeze, and the less exciting echelon problem of actual vs. current. 6th of May, 2021 POST·MERIDIEM 11:26. A friend of mine put up débris as the word of the day in the IRC channel we both join now and then, and that prompted me to look up its etymology, and more particularly whether it is related to English breeze.QUÉ TAL?
Email: kehoea@parhasard.net. betrieben wird. Diese ist meine persönliche, private Weblog. Hier gibt es Links zu anderen Seiten und Informationsquellen, die nicht unter Kontrolle dieses Autors stehen. Also bin ich nicht für die Inhalte jener Seiten verantwortlich. Auch besteht hier die Möglichkeit, einen Kommentar auf der Seite zu OCTOBER 2018 ARCHIVE October 2018 archive — Aidan Kehoe’s Weblog. Thran. 23rd of October, 2018 POST·MERIDIEM 11:53. Thran /θræn/ (th of thin, rest of the word as in ‘ran’) is a word used in this part of the world to mean “stubborn, obstinate.”. This little vignette on Reddit, about the roads I drive to do my grocery shopping, prompted me to lookit up.
AUGUST 2003 ARCHIVE
30th of August, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 02:29 The contents of my Muvo at the moment; . Bono et al. Children of the Revolution , from the Moulin Rouge soundtrack.It’s as rockin’ as a T-Rex number is going to get, and Bono doing his soul thing with it suits. SEPTEMBER 2002 ARCHIVE 7th of September, 2002 ANTE·MERIDIEM 03:09 Reading Andrew Sheil’s weblog this evening, it strikes me how prolific the guy is when posting to the thing. Now, growing up—and I haven’t noticed a change in it the few times I’ve seen him since he left Ballycaden—Andrew was always really “well-spoken”, as Diane’s mother puts it. More than that too, he never had anyAUGUST 2005 ARCHIVE
Kreuzberg vs. Schröder Enemy at the Gates 28th of August, 2005 POST·MERIDIEM 03:03 Kreuzberg, where I’m living at the moment, is heavily Turkish, Kurdish and student, and as such the big question about how the election will go here is what the relative order of the left-wing parties will be—the CDU, the centre-right party that’ll probably be running the country in a few months, is FEBRUARY 2010 ARCHIVE Last comment from Aidan Kehoe on the 4th of February at 0:30 And now I realise that part of why I wasn’t posting was that this site is still on MySQL, and its version-incompatibilities in how it deals with character encodings had been driving me mildly crazy. SEPTEMBER 2006 ARCHIVE ESR in Somalia, now, that I’d endorse WJC on Fox News 26th of September, 2006 POST·MERIDIEM 05:32 Ach, Des, if you truly want three hundred million more people with the living standards of Somalia, the world’s leading Libertarian worked example, I will think much less of you. It has been everywhere over the last few days, but the Clinton interview on Fox News is really worth watching.JUNE 2005 ARCHIVE
22nd of June, 2005 ANTE·MERIDIEM 11:54 Update from the wie-geht-es-bei-Aidan front; I’m good, thanks. I’m currently living in very dilapidated student accomodation quite close to Potsdam, where even though the computer facilities are running Linux and FreeBSD, they block outgoing SSH—fuсkers—whence the lack ofupdates here.
JULY 2003 ARCHIVE
17th of July, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 06:52 Yesterday I finished work about fifty minutes later than usual. Since I live in a suburb of a suburb and thus am not well served by the public transport system, I had a choice of waiting just over an hour and getting a bus to my door, or getting an earlier bus and walking for twenty-five minutes. I chose the waiting, because after a twelve hour day BREEZE, AND THE LESS EXCITING ECHELON PROBLEM OF ACTUAL VS Breeze, and the less exciting echelon problem of actual vs. current. 6th of May, 2021 POST·MERIDIEM 11:26 A friend of mine put up débris as the word of the day in the IRC channel we both join now and then, and that prompted me to look up its etymology, and more particularly whether it is related to English breeze. TAJIK, THE MAIN LANGUAGE OF TAJIKISTAN Tajik is the national language of Tajikistan, a former Soviet republic of around seven million people located just to the north of Afghanistan and to the east of China. The language is also used in Uzbekistan, where two of the biggest Tajik-speaking cities, Samarkand and Bukhara, are found. CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE DR AIDAN KEHOE, BA (MOD), … CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE Name: Dr Aidan Kehoe, BA (Mod), MB, BCh, BAO, MICGP Born: 18th March 1981, Wexford, Republic of Ireland Address: Apartment 3 Kildrum Upper Killea FEBRUARY 2010 ARCHIVE Last comment from Aidan Kehoe on the 4th of February at 0:30 And now I realise that part of why I wasn’t posting was that this site is still on MySQL, and its version-incompatibilities in how it deals with character encodings had been driving me mildly crazy. DECEMBER 2006 ARCHIVE The City, Richard Roberts Also sprach Golem, Stanisław Lem талаба 29th of December, 2006 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:47 The City—A Guide to London’s Global Financial Centre, Richard Roberts, Profile Books: London, 2004.The Economist realises that a massive proportion of its readership is in the US and votes Republican, and as a result its reporting on the government over there hasAUGUST 2004 ARCHIVE
8th of August, 2004 POST·MERIDIEM 10:12 I’m reading a translation of a set of Umberto Eco lectures , Im Wald der Fiktionen: Sechs Streifzüge durch die Literatur, and I just came across this sentence, which bears sharing, I think. (Context; he’s just taken a quotation from the end of Edgar Allen Poe’s Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym , which is, basically, not an ending at all.)JUNE 2006 ARCHIVE
Kirshenbaum, X-SAMPA IPA with Quail Marrakesh from the BBC die Kasse 17th of June, 2006 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:38 For the throngs of you who prefer to do your editing in an emacs and find Kirshenbaum IPA and X-SAMPA more comfortable and more complete than the ad-hoc mapping supported by the editor’s IPA input method, here’s a development of that file to support typing FEBRUARY 2005 ARCHIVE 13th of February, 2005 POST·MERIDIEM 01:16 Food is cheaper and better here. Had I documentary instincts worth the name, and had the food not been really, really, good, this would be a picture of what I ate for dinner yesterday evening—pasta, pesto, Mozzarella, Feta, with smoked salmon and some grated random other cheese—but instead it’s a picture of my empty plate, the excellent wine IMAY 2004 ARCHIVE
5th of May, 2004 POST·MERIDIEM 05:25 On Ashkenazim having an average IQ of 111, and why calling them more intelligent based on that (and their historical performance in Soviet chess tournaments, too) is justified;. Ar an 3ú lá de mí 5, scríobh J. > Yes, it is. But that’s fine, because it measures something that is culture-specific; I’m sure you NOVEMBER 2003 ARCHIVE 20th of November, 2003 ANTE·MERIDIEM 09:49 Went to see Tommy Tiernan in Vicar Street last night, with Jas & Dave & Ian & Fintan & John Bligh & one of John’s random friends—Bill, the other Bligh that we expected to come had to go to start a job at Shelbourne Park :-( . AIDAN KEHOE’S WEBLOG. Aidan Kehoe’s Weblog. Breeze, and the less exciting echelon problem of actual vs. current. 6th of May, 2021 POST·MERIDIEM 11:26. A friend of mine put up débris as the word of the day in the IRC channel we both join now and then, and that prompted me to look up its etymology, and more particularly whether it is related to English breeze. BREEZE, AND THE LESS EXCITING ECHELON PROBLEM OF ACTUAL VS Breeze, and the less exciting echelon problem of actual vs. current. 6th of May, 2021 POST·MERIDIEM 11:26 A friend of mine put up débris as the word of the day in the IRC channel we both join now and then, and that prompted me to look up its etymology, and more particularly whether it is related to English breeze.QUÉ TAL?
Email: kehoea@parhasard.net. betrieben wird. Diese ist meine persönliche, private Weblog. Hier gibt es Links zu anderen Seiten und Informationsquellen, die nicht unter Kontrolle dieses Autors stehen. Also bin ich nicht für die Inhalte jener Seiten verantwortlich. Auch besteht hier die Möglichkeit, einen Kommentar auf der Seite zu TAJIK, THE MAIN LANGUAGE OF TAJIKISTAN Tajik, the main language of Tajikistan. Tajik is the national language of Tajikistan, a former Soviet republic of around seven million people located just to the north of Afghanistan and to the east of China.PARHASARD.NET
THE POSTMAN'S BELL God and the devil in these letters, stored in tin trunks, tossed in wastebaskets, or ticketed away in office files: love, hate, and business, mimeograph sheets, circulars, CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE DR AIDAN KEHOE, BA (MOD), … CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE Name: Dr Aidan Kehoe, BA (Mod), MB, BCh, BAO Born: 18th March 1981, Wexford, Republic of Ireland Address: Apartment 3 Killea Business Park Kildrum UpperAUGUST 2003 ARCHIVE
30th of August, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 02:29 The contents of my Muvo at the moment; . Bono et al. Children of the Revolution , from the Moulin Rouge soundtrack.It’s as rockin’ as a T-Rex number is going to get, and Bono doing his soul thing with it suits.AUGUST 2004 ARCHIVE
8th of August, 2004 POST·MERIDIEM 10:12 I’m reading a translation of a set of Umberto Eco lectures , Im Wald der Fiktionen: Sechs Streifzüge durch die Literatur, and I just came across this sentence, which bears sharing, I think. (Context; he’s just taken a quotation from the end of Edgar Allen Poe’s Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym , which is, basically, not an ending at all.)AUGUST 2005 ARCHIVE
Kreuzberg vs. Schröder Enemy at the Gates 28th of August, 2005 POST·MERIDIEM 03:03 Kreuzberg, where I’m living at the moment, is heavily Turkish, Kurdish and student, and as such the big question about how the election will go here is what the relative order of the left-wing parties will be—the CDU, the centre-right party that’ll probably be running the country in a few months, isJULY 2003 ARCHIVE
17th of July, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 06:52 Yesterday I finished work about fifty minutes later than usual. Since I live in a suburb of a suburb and thus am not well served by the public transport system, I had a choice of waiting just over an hour and getting a bus to my door, or getting an earlier bus and walking for twenty-five minutes. I chose the waiting, because after a twelve hour day AIDAN KEHOE’S WEBLOG. Aidan Kehoe’s Weblog. Breeze, and the less exciting echelon problem of actual vs. current. 6th of May, 2021 POST·MERIDIEM 11:26. A friend of mine put up débris as the word of the day in the IRC channel we both join now and then, and that prompted me to look up its etymology, and more particularly whether it is related to English breeze. BREEZE, AND THE LESS EXCITING ECHELON PROBLEM OF ACTUAL VS Breeze, and the less exciting echelon problem of actual vs. current. 6th of May, 2021 POST·MERIDIEM 11:26 A friend of mine put up débris as the word of the day in the IRC channel we both join now and then, and that prompted me to look up its etymology, and more particularly whether it is related to English breeze.QUÉ TAL?
Email: kehoea@parhasard.net. betrieben wird. Diese ist meine persönliche, private Weblog. Hier gibt es Links zu anderen Seiten und Informationsquellen, die nicht unter Kontrolle dieses Autors stehen. Also bin ich nicht für die Inhalte jener Seiten verantwortlich. Auch besteht hier die Möglichkeit, einen Kommentar auf der Seite zu TAJIK, THE MAIN LANGUAGE OF TAJIKISTAN Tajik, the main language of Tajikistan. Tajik is the national language of Tajikistan, a former Soviet republic of around seven million people located just to the north of Afghanistan and to the east of China.PARHASARD.NET
THE POSTMAN'S BELL God and the devil in these letters, stored in tin trunks, tossed in wastebaskets, or ticketed away in office files: love, hate, and business, mimeograph sheets, circulars, CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE DR AIDAN KEHOE, BA (MOD), … CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE Name: Dr Aidan Kehoe, BA (Mod), MB, BCh, BAO Born: 18th March 1981, Wexford, Republic of Ireland Address: Apartment 3 Killea Business Park Kildrum UpperAUGUST 2003 ARCHIVE
30th of August, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 02:29 The contents of my Muvo at the moment; . Bono et al. Children of the Revolution , from the Moulin Rouge soundtrack.It’s as rockin’ as a T-Rex number is going to get, and Bono doing his soul thing with it suits.AUGUST 2004 ARCHIVE
8th of August, 2004 POST·MERIDIEM 10:12 I’m reading a translation of a set of Umberto Eco lectures , Im Wald der Fiktionen: Sechs Streifzüge durch die Literatur, and I just came across this sentence, which bears sharing, I think. (Context; he’s just taken a quotation from the end of Edgar Allen Poe’s Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym , which is, basically, not an ending at all.)AUGUST 2005 ARCHIVE
Kreuzberg vs. Schröder Enemy at the Gates 28th of August, 2005 POST·MERIDIEM 03:03 Kreuzberg, where I’m living at the moment, is heavily Turkish, Kurdish and student, and as such the big question about how the election will go here is what the relative order of the left-wing parties will be—the CDU, the centre-right party that’ll probably be running the country in a few months, isJULY 2003 ARCHIVE
17th of July, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 06:52 Yesterday I finished work about fifty minutes later than usual. Since I live in a suburb of a suburb and thus am not well served by the public transport system, I had a choice of waiting just over an hour and getting a bus to my door, or getting an earlier bus and walking for twenty-five minutes. I chose the waiting, because after a twelve hour day BREEZE, AND THE LESS EXCITING ECHELON PROBLEM OF ACTUAL VS Breeze, and the less exciting echelon problem of actual vs. current. 6th of May, 2021 POST·MERIDIEM 11:26 A friend of mine put up débris as the word of the day in the IRC channel we both join now and then, and that prompted me to look up its etymology, and more particularly whether it is related to English breeze. RCEM LEARNING PODCAST. RCEM Learning Podcast. 6th of December, 2018 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:35 I worked as an SHO in the Mater Emergency Department in Dublin from July 2014 when Andy Neill was a registrar there, and my thinking then was ‘this man is clearly great as a doctor, I am glad of any input from him on almost any presentation, my one concern is not to overload him with questions, I’d prefer him not to burn outAUGUST 2005 ARCHIVE
Kreuzberg vs. Schröder Enemy at the Gates 28th of August, 2005 POST·MERIDIEM 03:03 Kreuzberg, where I’m living at the moment, is heavily Turkish, Kurdish and student, and as such the big question about how the election will go here is what the relative order of the left-wing parties will be—the CDU, the centre-right party that’ll probably be running the country in a few months, is FEBRUARY 2007 ARCHIVE The Stars’ Tennis Balls, book, Stephen Fry, 2000: One of the annoyances to growing older and learning more things is that you then become more able to pick holes in the work of people you previously thought were, without question, accurate and exact and generally great.Two such instances from this—diverting, good—novel. From the text: The following afternoon Gunther paid a visit to the CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE DR AIDAN KEHOE, BA (MOD), … CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE Name: Dr Aidan Kehoe, BA (Mod), MB, BCh, BAO Born: 18th March 1981, Wexford, Republic of Ireland Address: Apartment 3 Killea Business Park Kildrum UpperAPRIL 2003 ARCHIVE
28th of April, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 04:26 My Dad’s duffel coat (which I’ve been wearing for most of a month; I don’t know of any places that will do alterations/sewing in Dublin, so I left the yuppie overcoat in Wexford for my mother to leave in to the place she goesfor this sort of
NOVEMBER 2003 ARCHIVE 20th of November, 2003 ANTE·MERIDIEM 09:49 Went to see Tommy Tiernan in Vicar Street last night, with Jas & Dave & Ian & Fintan & John Bligh & one of John’s random friends—Bill, the other Bligh that we expected to come had to go to start a job at Shelbourne Park :-( .MARCH 2005 ARCHIVE
13th of March, 2005 POST·MERIDIEM 04:22 Right, news—I got back, early Friday, from five days in London with my friend Adam, during which time I caught upMAY 2004 ARCHIVE
5th of May, 2004 POST·MERIDIEM 05:25 On Ashkenazim having an average IQ of 111, and why calling them more intelligent based on that (and their historical performance in Soviet chess tournaments, too) is justified;. Ar an 3ú lá de mí 5, scríobh J. > Yes, it is. But that’s fine, because it measures something that is culture-specific; I’m sure you DECEMBER 2008 ARCHIVE PuTTY and Unicode non-locale keyboard input. 3rd of December, 2008 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:18 PuTTY is a fine piece of software, a terminal emulator that is very comfortable for Unix users, written by an expert in the Win32 API with, on Windows, the speed and size advantages implicit in that. It has excellent support for working around the odd server bugs that many people come across, for UTF-8 AIDAN KEHOE’S WEBLOG. COVID-19, negative nasopharyngeal swab, clinical positivity. 8th of February, 2021 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:21 I was in the interesting situation over the last few days of dealing with a patient with a recent hospital admission (discharged two weeks previously in the context of a distinct clinical problem), brought in by ambulance with a decreased level of consciousness, dyspnoea, and bilateral BREEZE, AND THE LESS EXCITING ECHELON PROBLEM OF ACTUAL VS Breeze, and the less exciting echelon problem of actual vs. current. 6th of May, 2021 POST·MERIDIEM 11:26 A friend of mine put up débris as the word of the day in the IRC channel we both join now and then, and that prompted me to look up its etymology, and more particularly whether it is related to English breeze.QUÉ TAL?
My name is Aidan. I’m in my twenties, I live in Dublin and I study medicine. I speak English, French and German, can understand and read Irish and could speak it again with some practice. TAJIK, THE MAIN LANGUAGE OF TAJIKISTAN Tajik, the main language of Tajikistan. Tajik is the national language of Tajikistan, a former Soviet republic of around seven million people located just to the north of Afghanistan and to the east of China.PARHASARD.NET
THE POSTMAN'S BELL God and the devil in these letters, stored in tin trunks, tossed in wastebaskets, or ticketed away in office files: love, hate, and business, mimeograph sheets, circulars, CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE DR AIDAN KEHOE, BA (MOD), … CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE Name: Dr Aidan Kehoe, BA (Mod), MB, BCh, BAO Born: 18th March 1981, Wexford, Republic of Ireland Address: Apartment 3 Killea Business Park Kildrum UpperAUGUST 2003 ARCHIVE
30th of August, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 02:29 The contents of my Muvo at the moment; . Bono et al. Children of the Revolution , from the Moulin Rouge soundtrack.It’s as rockin’ as a T-Rex number is going to get, and Bono doing his soul thing with it suits.JUNE 2006 ARCHIVE
Kirshenbaum, X-SAMPA IPA with Quail Marrakesh from the BBC die Kasse 17th of June, 2006 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:38 For the throngs of you who prefer to do your editing in an emacs and find Kirshenbaum IPA and X-SAMPA more comfortable and more complete than the ad-hoc mapping supported by the editor’s IPA input method, here’s a development of that file to support typingAUGUST 2005 ARCHIVE
Kreuzberg vs. Schröder Enemy at the Gates 28th of August, 2005 POST·MERIDIEM 03:03 Kreuzberg, where I’m living at the moment, is heavily Turkish, Kurdish and student, and as such the big question about how the election will go here is what the relative order of the left-wing parties will be—the CDU, the centre-right party that’ll probably be running the country in a few months, isJULY 2003 ARCHIVE
17th of July, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 06:52 Yesterday I finished work about fifty minutes later than usual. Since I live in a suburb of a suburb and thus am not well served by the public transport system, I had a choice of waiting just over an hour and getting a bus to my door, or getting an earlier bus and walking for twenty-five minutes. I chose the waiting, because after a twelve hour day AIDAN KEHOE’S WEBLOG. COVID-19, negative nasopharyngeal swab, clinical positivity. 8th of February, 2021 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:21 I was in the interesting situation over the last few days of dealing with a patient with a recent hospital admission (discharged two weeks previously in the context of a distinct clinical problem), brought in by ambulance with a decreased level of consciousness, dyspnoea, and bilateral BREEZE, AND THE LESS EXCITING ECHELON PROBLEM OF ACTUAL VS Breeze, and the less exciting echelon problem of actual vs. current. 6th of May, 2021 POST·MERIDIEM 11:26 A friend of mine put up débris as the word of the day in the IRC channel we both join now and then, and that prompted me to look up its etymology, and more particularly whether it is related to English breeze.QUÉ TAL?
My name is Aidan. I’m in my twenties, I live in Dublin and I study medicine. I speak English, French and German, can understand and read Irish and could speak it again with some practice. TAJIK, THE MAIN LANGUAGE OF TAJIKISTAN Tajik, the main language of Tajikistan. Tajik is the national language of Tajikistan, a former Soviet republic of around seven million people located just to the north of Afghanistan and to the east of China.PARHASARD.NET
THE POSTMAN'S BELL God and the devil in these letters, stored in tin trunks, tossed in wastebaskets, or ticketed away in office files: love, hate, and business, mimeograph sheets, circulars, CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE DR AIDAN KEHOE, BA (MOD), … CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE Name: Dr Aidan Kehoe, BA (Mod), MB, BCh, BAO Born: 18th March 1981, Wexford, Republic of Ireland Address: Apartment 3 Killea Business Park Kildrum UpperAUGUST 2003 ARCHIVE
30th of August, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 02:29 The contents of my Muvo at the moment; . Bono et al. Children of the Revolution , from the Moulin Rouge soundtrack.It’s as rockin’ as a T-Rex number is going to get, and Bono doing his soul thing with it suits.JUNE 2006 ARCHIVE
Kirshenbaum, X-SAMPA IPA with Quail Marrakesh from the BBC die Kasse 17th of June, 2006 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:38 For the throngs of you who prefer to do your editing in an emacs and find Kirshenbaum IPA and X-SAMPA more comfortable and more complete than the ad-hoc mapping supported by the editor’s IPA input method, here’s a development of that file to support typingAUGUST 2005 ARCHIVE
Kreuzberg vs. Schröder Enemy at the Gates 28th of August, 2005 POST·MERIDIEM 03:03 Kreuzberg, where I’m living at the moment, is heavily Turkish, Kurdish and student, and as such the big question about how the election will go here is what the relative order of the left-wing parties will be—the CDU, the centre-right party that’ll probably be running the country in a few months, isJULY 2003 ARCHIVE
17th of July, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 06:52 Yesterday I finished work about fifty minutes later than usual. Since I live in a suburb of a suburb and thus am not well served by the public transport system, I had a choice of waiting just over an hour and getting a bus to my door, or getting an earlier bus and walking for twenty-five minutes. I chose the waiting, because after a twelve hour day RCEM LEARNING PODCAST. RCEM Learning Podcast. 6th of December, 2018 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:35 I worked as an SHO in the Mater Emergency Department in Dublin from July 2014 when Andy Neill was a registrar there, and my thinking then was ‘this man is clearly great as a doctor, I am glad of any input from him on almost any presentation, my one concern is not to overload him with questions, I’d prefer him not to burn out CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE DR AIDAN KEHOE, BA (MOD), … CURRICULUM VITAE—AIDAN KEHOE Name: Dr Aidan Kehoe, BA (Mod), MB, BCh, BAO Born: 18th March 1981, Wexford, Republic of Ireland Address: 14 Academy Court Oliver Plunkett Road LetterkennyMAY 2004 ARCHIVE
5th of May, 2004 POST·MERIDIEM 05:25 On Ashkenazim having an average IQ of 111, and why calling them more intelligent based on that (and their historical performance in Soviet chess tournaments, too) is justified;. Ar an 3ú lá de mí 5, scríobh J. > Yes, it is. But that’s fine, because it measures something that is culture-specific; I’m sure youAUGUST 2004 ARCHIVE
8th of August, 2004 POST·MERIDIEM 10:12 I’m reading a translation of a set of Umberto Eco lectures , Im Wald der Fiktionen: Sechs Streifzüge durch die Literatur, and I just came across this sentence, which bears sharing, I think. (Context; he’s just taken a quotation from the end of Edgar Allen Poe’s Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym , which is, basically, not an ending at all.)JUNE 2004 ARCHIVE
22nd of June, 2004 POST·MERIDIEM 02:21 In the course of reading a big stack of material that I bought a few weeks ago, I came across a potted biography of Josiah Harlan, a Pennsylvania Quaker who, as well as being the first US citizen in Afghanistan, managed to get himself the title of Prince of Ghor, apparently a remote region in thatcountry.
NOVEMBER 2003 ARCHIVE 20th of November, 2003 ANTE·MERIDIEM 09:49 Went to see Tommy Tiernan in Vicar Street last night, with Jas & Dave & Ian & Fintan & John Bligh & one of John’s random friends—Bill, the other Bligh that we expected to come had to go to start a job at Shelbourne Park :-( .MARCH 2005 ARCHIVE
13th of March, 2005 POST·MERIDIEM 04:22 Right, news—I got back, early Friday, from five days in London with my friend Adam, during which time I caught up DECEMBER 2003 ARCHIVE 15th of December, 2003 ANTE·MERIDIEM 01:07 Insights; The taste of J&B whisky will probably always have me thinking of Louvain-la Neuve. (Jameson’s not to be had there, if you, for some strange reason, don’t feel like drinking beer.) OCTOBER 2003 ARCHIVE 31st of October, 2003 POST·MERIDIEM 01:23 Did I mention how I reached my credit limit in San Francisco? Okay, I’m in Seattle, I check my credit card balance, I’ve leeway of seven hundred Euro before I hit my limit—Euro, now, not dollars, so about eight in the latter—I get on a plane to San Francisco, hang around the airport for a few hours, get a plane to Tampa Bay in Florida via LasJUNE 2003 ARCHIVE
5th of June, 2003 ANTE·MERIDIEM 10:39 Working on the assumption that the disturbance of the previous entry was related to actual illness (the concept’s pretty foreign to me; other people catch debilitating bugs, I don’t) I got home after work yesterday and went straight tosleep.
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Breeze, and the less exciting echelon problem of actual vs. current. 6th of May, 2021 POST·MERIDIEM 11:26 A friend of mine put up débris as the word of the day in the IRC channel we both join now and then, and that prompted me to look up its etymology, and more particularly whether it is related to Englishbreeze.
Not at all, as it turns out, and the OED2 entry is further of interest in that has an echelon problemin rendering the
continental (“standard average European”) actuelle / aktuell / actual etc. as “actual” (which is not the current English meaning) rather than “current” (which is). Anyway, the full entry for breeze from the second edition of the Oxford English Dictionary below, for your edification. breeze (briːz), n.² Forms: 6-7 BRIZE, BRIEZE , 7 BRISE, BRESE , BREZE, BREAZE , 7–8 BREEZ, BREESE, 7 BREEZE. † 1. orig. A north or north-east wind; spec. applied within the tropics to the NE. trade-wind. 1565-8B9 Hawkins’ 2nd Voy. in Arb. Garner V. 121 The ordinary brise taking us, which is the north-east wind. 1595 Raleigh Disc. Guiana in Hakluyt Voy. (1600) III. 661 Against the brize and eastern wind. 1604 E. G D’Acosta’s Hist. Indies iii. iv. 128 In that Zone..the Easterly windes (which they call Brises) do raine. a1618 Raleigh Apol. 19 When the Easterly wind or Breeses are kept off by some High Mountaines. 1626 Bacon Sylva §398 The great Brizes which the motion of the Air in great Circles..produceth. 1685 Phil. Trans. XV. 1148 There are continual Eastern winds under the line which they call Brises. 1706 Phillips, Brizes, or rather Breezes, certain Winds, which the motion of the Air in great circles doth produce, refrigerating those that live under the line. † 2. a. The cool wind that blows from the sea by day on tropical coasts. (This was on the Atlantic sea-board of tropical America an east or north-east wind, i.e. a breeze in sense 1; thence the name was extended to the ‘sea-breeze’ from any point of the compass.) Obs.exc. as in b.
1614 Raleigh Hist. World i. iii. §8 These hottest regions of the World..are..refreshed with a daily Gale of Easternly Wind (which the Spaniards call the Brize). A1618 — Inv. Shipping 39 Southerly winds (the Brises of our Clymate) thrust them..into the Kings ports. 1627 Capt. Smith Seaman’s Gram. x. 46 A Breze is a wind blowes out of the Sea, and commonly in faire weather beginneth about nine in themorning.
1628 Digby Voy. Medit. 38 Intending to goe in in the morning with thebrize.
1665 G. Havers P. della Valle’s Trav. E. Ind. 373 Sending a breeze, or breath, or small gale of wind daily. 1696 Phillips, Breez, a fresh gale of wind blowing off the Sea by day. 1839 Thirlwall Greece II. 307 A strong breeze which regularly blew up the channel at a certain time of the day. b. Extended to include the counter-current of air that blows from the land by night; hence sea-breeze and land-breeze. A1700 Dryden (J.) From land a gentle breeze arose by night.1706 in Phillips.
1731 Bailey II, Breez, a fresh gale of wind blowing from the sea or land alternately for some certain hours of the day or night only sensible near the coast. 1782 Cowper Loss Royal George 9 A land-breeze shook the shrouds. 1832 Macaulay Armada 31 The freshening breeze of eve unfurled that banner’s massy fold. 3. a. A gentle or light wind: a breeze is generally understood to be a lighter current of air than a wind, as a wind is lighter than a gale. ‘Among seamen usually synonymous with wind in general’ (Smyth Sailor’s Word-bk.). 1626 Capt. Smith Accid. Yng. Seamen 17 A calme, a brese, a freshgaile.
1762 Falconer Shipwr. i. 350 The lesser sails that court a gentlebreeze.
1798 Coleridge Anc. Mar. ii. v, The breezes blew, the white foam flew. 1863 C. St. John Nat. Hist. Moray vii. 167 The breeze was gentle, but sufficient to take us merrily over. b. Slang phrases: to hit, split or take the breeze: to depart; to get (have) or put the breeze up: to get or put the wind up (see wind n.110 b).
1910 ‘O. Henry’ Whirligigs xiv. 168 We got to be hittin’ thebreeze.
1925 Fraser & Gibbons Soldier & Sailor Words 35 Breeze up, to have the: to be nervous, to have the ‘wind up’. 1931 Runyon Guys & Dolls (1932) 29 And with this she takes the breeze and I return to the other room. 1934 D. L. Sayers Nine Tailors iii. 279 He got a vertical breeze up. 1948 D. Ballantyne Cunninghams 89 She was only making out she hadn’t seen you so’s you wouldn’t get the breeze up. 1951 J. B. Priestley Fest. Farbridge 296 Put the breeze up me. 1959 I. & P. Opie Lore & Lang. Schoolch. x. 193 Expressions inviting a person’s departure, for instance:..sling your hook, split thebreeze, .
4. fig.
a. A disturbance, quarrel, ‘row’. colloq. 1785 Grose Dict. Vulgar Tongue, To kick up a breeze, to breed adisturbance.
1803 Wellington Let. in Gurw. Disp. II. 367 The cession would create a breeze in the Konkan. 1811 — ibid. VII. 320 There was an old breeze between General —and —.
1837 Marryat Dog-Fiend i. xv. (L.), Jemmy, who expected a breeze, told his wife to behave herself quietly. 1865 Sat. Rev. 28 Jan. 119 ‘Don’t be angry, we’ve had our breeze. Shake hands.’ b. A breath of news, whisper, rumour. colloq. 1879 Stevenson Trav. Cevennes 215 There came a breeze that Spirit Séguier was near at hand. 1884 Denver (Colorado) Tribune Aug., Give us a breeze on the subject. c. slang. Something easy to achieve, handle, etc. orig. U.S. 1928 G. H. Ruth Babe Ruth’s Own Bk. Baseball 299 Breeze, an easychance.
1958 M. Dickens Man Overboard ix. 136 This will be a breeze for you. 1962 S. Carpenter in Into Orbit 75 All in all, the test was a breeze. 5. Comb., as breeze-borne, -like, -shaken, -swept, -wooing, adjs. 1805 J. Grahame Sabbath, On the distant cairn the watch~man’s ear Caught doubtfully at times the breeze-borne note. 1798 Coleridge Day-Dream ii. 5 A soft and breeze-like feeling. 1802 Wordsw. To H.C., The breeze-like motion. 1742 Young Nt. Th. ii. 300 Fate..hair-hung, breeze-shaken, o’er the gulph A moment trembles. 1872 Calverley Fly Leaves 4 Lingers on, till stars unnumber’d Tremble in the breeze-swept tarn. 1894 G. Bell Safar Nameh 48 On the threshold of his breeze-sweptdwelling.
C1830 J. H. Green Morn. Invit. Child 22 The bee hums of heather and *breeze-wooing hill. COVID-19, negative nasopharyngeal swab, clinical positivity. 8th of February, 2021 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:21 I was in the interesting situation over the last few days of dealing with a patient with a recent hospital admission (discharged two weeks previously in the context of a distinct clinical problem), brought in by ambulance with a decreased level of consciousness, dyspnoea, and bilateral pneumonia on chest X-ray, CURB-65 of five. With our pre-test probabilities as they are, he almost certainly has COVID-19, and he improved dramatically on Airvo® treatment (high-flow nasal cannula), after iv dexamethasone, iv antibiotics, and a failed trial of CPAP. His nasopharyngeal swab was negative for COVID-19 (and it was correctly done, I was in the room as it happened), and I write this post to document that the man had a urea of about 48 mmol/litre (about 7 times the upper limit of normal) and was dry as a bone, with skin flaking and dry mucous membranes. From my assessment, the reason the nasopharyngeal swab was negative was because the man was secreting nothing at all from his upper airway, because he had little to no fluid to help with that secretion process, as is not shocking with a severe acute kidney injury. Free Kirk o Scotland (1843—1900) 7th of April, 2020 POST·MERIDIEM07:43
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free Church of Scotland (1843—1900) > _“The first task of the new church was to provide income for her > initial 500 ministers and places of worship for her people. As she > aspired to be the national church of the Scottish people, she set > herself the ambitious task of establishing a presence in every > parish in Scotland (except in the Highlands, where FC ministers were > initially in short supply.) Sometimes land owners were less than > helpful such as at Strontian, where the church took to a boat.”_ An individual I used to know well grew up speaking a Turkic language in Iran, together with good Persian. Neither of those have grammatical gender, something that contrasts with classical Arabic and with many European languages. This person was very much on board with the idea that languages either had grammatical gender or did not, and was very irritated by the standard English-language habit of referring to ships as ‘she’ and the less standard habit of referring to individual vehicles as ‘she’. The above paragraph describing the circumstances of one of the presbyterian churches seems calculated to enrage my acquaintance. As a non-Scottish English speaker, it is only remotely comfortable to read for me because of my German, and I would be irritated if the gender differed from that of Kirche in German. I write this entry to document my surprise at this sort of consistent use of grammatical gender for the word church in English. RCEM Learning Podcast. 6th of December, 2018 ANTE·MERIDIEM 12:35I worked as an SHO
in the Mater
Emergency Department in Dublin from July 2014 when Andy Neill was a registrar there, and my thinking then was ‘this man is clearly great as a doctor, I am glad of any input from him on almost any presentation, my one concern is not to overload him with questions, I’d prefer him not to burn out while I’m here.’ The Irish secondary care system is, let me phrase this diplomatically, uneven, and when I was working as an SHO in non-central-Dublin hospitals the guidance from registrars was of limited benefit to the patient or to either of the doctors. There was no whisper of this situation from Andy, and from most of the registrars in MMUH. The correct specialty (in terms of benefit to patients and long-term quality of life for the doctor) for most of the doctors most of the time in the Republic is General Practice. And so I applied for the training scheme, and have been in Donegal since July of 2015; I thoroughly recommend the Donegal Specialist Training Scheme in General Practice, I have spoken at length with trainees across the Republic and the North about their schemes, and in terms of almost anything objective, the Donegal scheme comes out best. But; the first specialty I worked in post-intern-year, early 2013, was Emergency Medicine. And, well, I really enjoyed it. I enjoyed how general it was, I enjoyed randomly having to deal with an Afghan refugee where my Persian was of some use, knowing that نقرس is gout was of actual help to the patient, I enjoyed managing patients well through French without issue when the triage nurse in Blanchardstown (closest hospital to the airport!) was worried about the need for an interpreter but hadn’t actually organised an interpreter on triage. I even enjoyed that anyone who had put up with the fourteen hour wait was actually sick enough to need to be in hospital, and so I knew how to manage them from my intern year! I didn’t know much about sprained ankles or migraines, but I didmanage to learn it.
And I still like it. Five years later, I am still consistently seeing ED patients a proportion of the week and enjoying it, there is no prospect of me stopping ED work in the medium term. I’m not doing it in Dublin, but that is mainly a constraint of my registration rather than an explicit choice. Which is a roundabout way of saying I listen to the RCEM Learningpodcast because
I enjoy it and it is relevant to my day-to-day work. I write this post today because I now contend that _it is a high point of humanlearning._
I attended some local teaching in Donegal yesterday from a medical specialist, about one of her areas of interest and the appropriate management and approach to referral; and it reminded me of how BAD medical teaching can be. She used data from the US population that differed importantly from the Irish population to make decisions; she appeared to have no insight into the day-to-day pattern of presentations to GPs in general and how her recommendations would impact on her clinic numbers, when making a presentation to GPs in large part advertising her service; practicality and pragmatism were at no point involved in the presentation. It was as bad an experience as any of the bad presentations involved in my experience of Computer Science lecturers, and those fellows had the theory of mindof a four-year-old
Sheldon Cooper.
Nothing like the above ever happens with the RCEM Learning podcast, of which Andy is the backbone. Doctors’ weaknesses of understanding are usually with formal statistics; the RCEM Learning podcast gets this right consistently. Practicality and pragmatism are front and centre. The variation in speakers, from the UK to ourselves to Australia, a little bit the US (certainly not a massive cultural variation, but a big variation in how health care systems are funded and how the associated incentives play out), mean that the decision-making cul-de-sacs that give bad outcomes for economic reasons are mentionedas avoidable.
I listen to lots of North American podcasts relevant to Emergency Medicine, and they’re great, much better than our medical specialist above. RCEM Learning still edges in front of all of those I listen to. If you are a doctor who drives and has anything to do with Emergency Medicine (whether working in it, taking referrals from it, or making referrals to it), make your car handle podcasts in some way, and listen to the RCEM Learning. podcast when
it comes out. You will make better decisions, you will have a better understanding of the decisions made when you refer, and you may incidentally start rhyming ‘now’ with the French word for‘eye’,
which will be entertaining for everyone.Details
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