Agreed, that's why using the word "salt" to refer specifically to sodium chloride is poor communication and why following Skeet's strict rules would create confusion.
That's a valid point. Further chemical analysis will need to be done to determine what percentage sodium iodide content there is in this mixed assortment of salts so we can more correctly communicate the contents of this condiment to customers.
The system of accounting is one if the greatest inventions mankind has ever developed. There's a reason some places developed it before developing writing
Jimmy, even if he was correct in a technical sense he just comes off as an ass, especially since when most people already know what it really is but just call it salt anyway since it rolls off the tongue better for common usage or slang, that one shitpost accuratly explains it well
>especially since when most people already know what it really is but just call it salt anyway since it rolls off the tongue
You say this, but something I've noticed in discussing matters of nutrition with people online is that people from Europe seem to be a lot less likely to understand that table salt is sodium chloride. EU labels insist on replacing all mentions of sodium with the word salt, to the point where they don't even put the amount of sodium in a food on the label, they put the sodium chloride EQUIVALENT (taking the milligrams of sodium, doubling it, and calling it salt AS IF there was an equal amount of chloride for that sodium to be bonded to).
The result of this is that when I try to explain to Europeans about replacing electrolytes and how to get more sodium, they often have difficulty understanding how salt converts to sodium content and why it would even matter to distinguish. For example, you tell them they need X mg of sodium in something and that's why they need to add 2X mg of salt and they don't understand because they think sodium and salt are interchangeable terms. They think this because their food labels actually DO essentially interchange them without being very clear to the average observer on how or why they do it.
Americans pick up on the idea much more quickly because our nutrition labels specify sodium content and it forces us to understand that salt is only part sodium and that salt and sodium are not interchangeable things since salt is known to be sodium chloride and sodium alone will never be labeled as or converted to a measure of salt.
I find this kind of cultural difference really interesting, because how things are named and labeled in everyday life really can have a huge impact on just the basic ability of a person to understand a related concept.
jimmy homosexual neutraon
sneed
Jimmy for being a massive sperg. Just say salt you fricking moron
But salt is just a type of chemical compound that applies to countless substances. Sodium chloride is the actual substance they serve.
effective communication relies on shared understanding and consensus, not strict rule following
Agreed, that's why using the word "salt" to refer specifically to sodium chloride is poor communication and why following Skeet's strict rules would create confusion.
Perhaps you are right.
But it's not just sodium chloride. Salt used in restaurants typically contains trace minerals, most notably iodine.
That's a valid point. Further chemical analysis will need to be done to determine what percentage sodium iodide content there is in this mixed assortment of salts so we can more correctly communicate the contents of this condiment to customers.
How bout you drink some spermatozoon
I believe you meant to say "drink some spermatozoa," as that's the correct plural form of spermatozoon.
No dude, I'm your higher up, and what I say goes.
>skeet
wisdom
>jimmy
undisciplined intellect
I think if Jimmy had an older brother like Skeet as a mainstay character, the series would be received slightly better
>supposedly a genius
>doesn't understand that the till records sales
Was Jimmy really just a midwit?
The system of accounting is one if the greatest inventions mankind has ever developed. There's a reason some places developed it before developing writing
The show. For existing.
Why the frick is morrissey in this show??? Do americans really?
jimmy nu-troon
Carl for not fricking Jimmy's mom right there in mcspankies.
Kino.
Jimmy, even if he was correct in a technical sense he just comes off as an ass, especially since when most people already know what it really is but just call it salt anyway since it rolls off the tongue better for common usage or slang, that one shitpost accuratly explains it well
>especially since when most people already know what it really is but just call it salt anyway since it rolls off the tongue
You say this, but something I've noticed in discussing matters of nutrition with people online is that people from Europe seem to be a lot less likely to understand that table salt is sodium chloride. EU labels insist on replacing all mentions of sodium with the word salt, to the point where they don't even put the amount of sodium in a food on the label, they put the sodium chloride EQUIVALENT (taking the milligrams of sodium, doubling it, and calling it salt AS IF there was an equal amount of chloride for that sodium to be bonded to).
The result of this is that when I try to explain to Europeans about replacing electrolytes and how to get more sodium, they often have difficulty understanding how salt converts to sodium content and why it would even matter to distinguish. For example, you tell them they need X mg of sodium in something and that's why they need to add 2X mg of salt and they don't understand because they think sodium and salt are interchangeable terms. They think this because their food labels actually DO essentially interchange them without being very clear to the average observer on how or why they do it.
Americans pick up on the idea much more quickly because our nutrition labels specify sodium content and it forces us to understand that salt is only part sodium and that salt and sodium are not interchangeable things since salt is known to be sodium chloride and sodium alone will never be labeled as or converted to a measure of salt.
I find this kind of cultural difference really interesting, because how things are named and labeled in everyday life really can have a huge impact on just the basic ability of a person to understand a related concept.
I miss 1992-2001 Nick so much bros
Frick off, Timbox.
They canceled the splat and only rerun their current live action shows and SpongeBob and loudhouse
Jimmy for being autistic and calling salt sodium-chloride instead of just calling it salt like a normal perosn.
same animation style
Skeet used child labour.