Richard Hachel wrote:
What do the terms "universal anisochrony" and "internal dilation of chronotropes" mean?
In a scientific world where empty words are used, are these concrete words or mere verbiage?
R.H.
Well, You and Ross are the "verbiage" experts here..
yous two use too many words to ...say not a lot.
Yous have a lot not to say a lot of not a lot to say with too many words
to say not a lot.
What do the terms "universal anisochrony" and "internal dilation of chronotropes" mean?
In a scientific world where empty words are used, are these concrete words
or mere verbiage?
R.H.
What do the terms "universal anisochrony" and "internal dilation of chronotropes" mean?
In a scientific world where empty words are used, are these concrete
words or mere verbiage?
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 546 |
Nodes: | 16 (0 / 16) |
Uptime: | 168:49:49 |
Calls: | 10,385 |
Calls today: | 2 |
Files: | 14,057 |
Messages: | 6,416,551 |