Buss vs Bus (It's Bus)

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First off, I’m from the school of thought that you can call it whatever you want as long as I can understand what you are saying. So go right ahead if you prefer Buss.

( This is how I understand it: )

Buss
I believe this refers to a hardware component also called a busbar:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Busbar

This is the metal component that carries the signal towards the master. The word bus in busbar comes from the latin omnibus which means exactly what you think: a thing that carries things from one end to another.

Bus
As above, from the latin omnibus which just means transporting things. We’ve been using the word bus in computing even for hardware to mean just that, any mechanism that carries data from one point to another.

As we moved into the digital domain, your DAW doesn’t have a buss/busbar, a hardware device that acts as the bus. It uses digital processes to bus data around. So it still busses, or performs the activities of a bus, but not with a metal buss.

In honor of hardware units you can keep speaking of the main transit path as a buss, or a busbar, but those words in principle just mean bus anyway. You can also call a hardware buss bar simply a bus because it represents the same idea (to bus data around). But a buss speaks to the metal in hardware acting as a transit mechanism, while a bus is any transit mechanism be it hardware or digital.

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taxi!
:ud:

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jochicago wrote: Sun Dec 23, 2018 8:31 pmThe word bus in busbar comes from the latin omnibus which means exactly what you think: a thing that carries things from one end to another.
Sorry. If you consult a dictionary that features the etymology of the words defined, “omnibus” is from the Latin: “for all”, which is the dative plural of the noun “omnis”, meaning “all”.
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people from either oldham or wigan, the say "buzz"

as in "aye, get t' ateynine buzz to ars"

"yes, get the 89 bus to ours"
:ud:

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vurt wrote: Sun Dec 23, 2018 9:40 pm people from either oldham or wigan, the say "buzz" as in "aye, get t' ateynine buzz to ars"
"yes, get the 89 bus to ours"
So...pirates is who started the bus?

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no, pirates who did the "arrrrr"s where southerners.

sounds different. more emphasis on the a in the northern dialect, in the southern, the r is emphasised.
:ud:

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Ok. Now i'm confused. Isn't southern pirates from Somalia?

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devon/cornwall

oo ar jim lah! pieces of eight!

that type o pirate, ye scurvy dog!
:ud:

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Northern pirates goes up to Sweden.
I know because a friend of mine moved a lot of pirated stuff on the bus. :troll:

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cturner wrote: Sun Dec 23, 2018 9:31 pm Sorry. If you consult a dictionary that features the etymology of the words defined, “omnibus” is from the Latin: “for all”, which is the dative plural of the noun “omnis”, meaning “all”.
I'm in no position to argue etymology of latin. I was quoting Wikipedia. However, even if you are 100% correct that that word bus didn't originally mean exactly what we think now, that's not how language influence works. See the word "google". Words don't necessarily mean today what they meant a long time ago in some other society and in a different language. We can bastardize a word and change its meaning if we want to, as long as we all do it together.

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jochicago wrote: Sun Dec 23, 2018 10:49 pmEven if you are 100% correct that that word “bus” didn't originally mean exactly what we think...
I think you miss my point: “bus” isn’t a word in Latin, it’s how the noun “omnis” declines. “Bus” is the syntactic tag (“omni-bus”) that makes the noun “all” tagged as dative, or fulfilling the indirect object in a sentence.

“Omnibus” in the case of a motorized conveyance builds upon either “for all” in the sense of “public transportation”, or “to all” in the sense of “goes everywhere”. That’s its etymology in that specific meaning.
Last edited by cturner on Sun Dec 23, 2018 11:25 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Buss vs bus: Why make a fus?

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HA! was gonna say, "Don't make fuss, just GET ON THE BUS!!"



i write buss generally, cos i like it.

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cturner wrote: Sun Dec 23, 2018 9:31 pm
jochicago wrote: Sun Dec 23, 2018 8:31 pmThe word bus in busbar comes from the latin omnibus which means exactly what you think: a thing that carries things from one end to another.
Sorry. If you consult a dictionary that features the etymology of the words defined, “omnibus” is from the Latin: “for all”, which is the dative plural of the noun “omnis”, meaning “all”.
Luckily English isn't Latin, doesn't have the same grammar nor the same lexicon. All the words mean what everyone in that language community agrees they mean
what you don't know only makes you stronger

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