They did an interview last year with the dude who drove Junior's car around the country. He was a sweetie.
Natter 58: Let's call Venezuela!
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Most of the people I've met or known around racing have been really the nicest people.
Plus? Parking those rigs all parked with less than an inch between? Impressive. Phenomenal cosmic hauler, itty-bitty parking space.
NASCAR related: Have you guys seen this chocolate bar? And am I the only one that giggles at its name?
The issue about words for colors is so much bullshit, IMHO -- there are millions of shades of colors that humans can see, and we don't have words for them all -- hence when you get into web or digital or print design, you start using RGB values.
The more important question to ask about languages and color words is whether the culture thinks the differentiation is necessary between two colors.
ita, can you eat mascarpone? Because it is of the yum!
The more important question to ask about languages and color words is whether the culture thinks the differentiation is necessary between two colors.
That differentiation can be on a personal perceptual level. There are lots of purple/pink, purple/blue, yellow/green hues that I have had arguments with others about. Especially about the colour of tennis balls. I say they are green, everyone else seems to think they are yellow.
The Florida Marlins wore teal.
They won 2 World Series Championships faster than any other franchise.
Conclusion: Evil wins.
Then, when you stop spending a brazilian dollars on players, evil loses.
Somehow this seems like the wrong take-away message.
I like teal. The Marlins, not so much.
Tennis balls are tennis-ball colored. Also, they smell like something a preteen would inhale for the high.
People end up with such crazy wrong ideas about color. Like, most people would be aghast at the idea of the classical Greek statues being painted bright colors. That dignified, gently faded rustic antique from New Mexico? Used to be neon-colored! People did it that way on purpose!
The colour thing is a nuisance in learning Mandarin. They do have separate words for blue and green, but then they have this whole other word that means blue and green. Or possibly black. So far I have not discerned any guiding principles for their use.
I haven't studied any languages where the word for "blue" and "green" are the same. Oh, and blue + green can also = turquoise.
English seems to have a bi-level treatment of color -- a generic word broken down into specifics. Example -- scarlet, crimson, and wine are all subsets of red.