• @lemonmelon
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    720 hours ago

    Sweat shaming, never did I think this would perspire here…

    FTFY

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      420 hours ago

      Question: I thought to ‘transpire’ could mean ‘shedding moisture’ and/or ‘things that happened or are revealed’

      English is not my first language though so there’s that

      • @lemonmelon
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        5
        edit-2
        18 hours ago

        Serious mode for a moment: transpire typically means “to happen” or “to occur”. The “to shed moisture or vapor” definition is now usually limited to discussions about plants (moisture) or the soul when speaking of death in a figurative manner.

        Perspire means “to shed matter” but is most commonly used in reference to sweating. The reason that the term referring to “matter” as opposed to the one referring to moisture is preferred is likely due to the salt content in sweat.

        Both words share the Latin base for “to breathe”, spirare, which is also where we get expire, aspire, conspire, and even spirit.

        Back to the joke: you were correct with the way you used transpire in your reply. I “miscorrected” it to make a pun that tied it back to sweat.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          311 hours ago

          Both words share the Latin base for “to breathe”, spirare, which is also where we get expire, aspire, conspire, and even spirit

          And, presumably, ‘respire’/‘respiration’?

          • @lemonmelon
            link
            310 hours ago

            Yup! Spirare is the Latin root of a lot of words, most likely due to how pneuma was believed to be the human soul. Breath and soul were one and the same, so it shows up in a lot of places.

      • @sensiblepuffin
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        English
        318 hours ago

        I’ve never heard of transpire being used for the first definition. Perspiration is the act of sweating, and it comes from Latin I think? High school was so long ago.