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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries

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To: bela_ghoulashi who wrote (8286)9/6/2001 10:30:17 AM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (4) of 74559
 
Amazing assertions! Are you also an engineer? Nobody who loves language would assert that the words that another person uses are meaningless. Have you never opened up a specialized dictionary, riffled through the pages, half drunk with the pleasure of learning strange new words that offer enticing vistas into other modes of thought? Here, let me entice you a bit out of your box:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Martindale's Reference Desk guide to specialized dictionaries (be sure to check out the entire site - Martindale's is one of the treasures of the modern world):

www-sci.lib.uci.edu
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Go about 4/5 of the way to the bottom of the page, to the box captioned "Dictionaries & Encyclopedias/Encyclopædias" - there's more there:

www-sci.lib.uci.edu
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This one is an on-line compendium of specialized dictionaries in the following fields:

harcourt.com

Abbreviations
Acoustical Engineering
Acoustics
Agriculture
Agronomy
Analytical Chemistry
Anatomy
Anthropology
Archaeology
Architecture
Artificial Intelligence
Astronomy
Astrophysics
Atomic Physics
Aviation
Bacteriology
Behavior
Biochemistry
Biographies
Biology
Biotechnology
Botany
Building Engineering
Cardiology
Cartography
Cell Biology
Chaotic Dynamics
Chemical Engineering
Chemistry
Civil Engineering
Computer Programming
Computer Science
Computer Technology
Control Systems
Crystallography
Design Engineering
Developmental Biology
Ecology
Electrical Engineering
Electricity
Electromagnetism
Electronics
Endocrinology
Engineering
Engineering & Technology
Entomology
Enzymology
Evolution
Fluid Mechanics
Food Technology
Forestry
General
Genetics
Geochemistry
Geodesy
Geography
Geology
Geophysics
Graphic Arts
Hematology
Histology
Horology
Hydrology
Immunology
Industrial Engineering
Inorganic Chemistry
Invertebrate Zoology
Life Sciences
Linguistics
Materials
Materials Science
Mathematics
Mathematics & Computers
Mechanical Devices
Mechanical Engineering
Mechanics
Medicine
Metallurgy
Meteorology
Metrology
Microbiology
Military Science
Mineralogy
Mining Engineering
Molecular Biology
Mycology
Naval Architecture
Navigation
Neurology
Nuclear Physics
Nucleonics
Nutrition
Oceanography
Oncology
Optics
Ordnance
Organic Chemistry
Paleontology
Particle Physics
Pathology
Petroleum Engineering
Petrology
Pharmacology
Photogrammetry
Physical Chemistry
Physical Sciences
Physics
Physiology
Plant Pathology
Psychology
Quantum Mechanics
Radiology
Robotics
Science
Social Sciences
Solid-State Physics
Space Technology
Spectroscopy
Statistics
Surgery
Systematics
Telecommunications
Textiles
Thermodynamics
Toxicology
Transportation Engineering
Vertebrate Zoology
Veterinary Medicine
Virology
Volcanology
Zoology

harcourt.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hope you have fun, and maybe get over this idea that specialized language is jargon - of course jargon is the right word, if you take out the disapproving element:

>>jargon noun [U] DISAPPROVING
special words and phrases which are used by particular groups of people, esp. in their work<<

dictionary.cambridge.org*1+0
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Of course academics speak a specialized language - they are speaking to each other, so they don't have to translate. My own experiences in trying to understand a specialized area of history make me long to speak with others who are interested in the same thing and share ideas. The point is not to keep translating, the point is to speak on similar levels, and share insights directly. It's exhilarating.

Someday soon I am going to start on an oral history of day-traders - if you want to be in it, send me a PM - I would bet almost anything that many of the words and concepts you use will require explanation.
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