• Re: Resilience

    From HenHanna@21:1/5 to Marco Moock on Mon Jun 17 00:25:03 2024
    XPost: alt.usage.english

    On 6/17/2024 12:17 AM, Marco Moock wrote:
    On 17.06.2024 um 08:59 Uhr Steve Hayes wrote:

    "Resilience" was a word I used to see about -10 times a year, and now
    I'm seeing it as many times in a day.

    Has anyone else noticed this?

    In Germany it started during the covid era. Most use cases include a
    vast amount of bullshit.



    do yo u mean the German word for [Resilience] ?


    tell us about similar trendy words (in German).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Helmut Richter@21:1/5 to HenHanna on Mon Jun 17 12:42:22 2024
    XPost: alt.usage.english

    On Mon, 17 Jun 2024, HenHanna wrote:

    On 6/17/2024 12:17 AM, Marco Moock wrote:
    On 17.06.2024 um 08:59 Uhr Steve Hayes wrote:

    "Resilience" was a word I used to see about -10 times a year, and now
    I'm seeing it as many times in a day.

    Has anyone else noticed this?

    In Germany it started during the covid era. Most use cases include a
    vast amount of bullshit.



    do yo u mean the German word for [Resilience] ?

    I do not think there is a single German word with the same meaning. That’s why the word has been adopted (as "Resilienz") into many scientific
    contexts, see https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resilienz . It is not (yet?)
    used in everyday language.

    A translation in dictionaries is "Widerstandsfähigkeit" (lit. meaning: resistence ability), but this denotes first and foremost the prevention of
    harm and damage in case of an attack (no matter whether by natural or
    human forces); in English I would call that robustness. Resilience does
    more focus on (or at least include) the ability to recover from harm and
    damage already suffered.

    --
    Helmut Richter

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From HenHanna@21:1/5 to Helmut Richter on Mon Jun 17 11:11:47 2024
    XPost: alt.usage.english

    On 6/17/2024 3:42 AM, Helmut Richter wrote:
    On Mon, 17 Jun 2024, HenHanna wrote:

    On 6/17/2024 12:17 AM, Marco Moock wrote:
    On 17.06.2024 um 08:59 Uhr Steve Hayes wrote:

    "Resilience" was a word I used to see about -10 times a year, and now
    I'm seeing it as many times in a day.

    Has anyone else noticed this?

    In Germany it started during the covid era. Most use cases include a
    vast amount of bullshit.



    do yo u mean the German word for [Resilience] ?

    I do not think there is a single German word with the same meaning. That’s why the word has been adopted (as "Resilienz") into many scientific
    contexts, see https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resilienz . It is not (yet?)
    used in everyday language.

    A translation in dictionaries is "Widerstandsfähigkeit" (lit. meaning: resistence ability), but this denotes first and foremost the prevention of harm and damage in case of an attack (no matter whether by natural or
    human forces); in English I would call that robustness. Resilience does
    more focus on (or at least include) the ability to recover from harm and damage already suffered.



    thanks...
    Empowerment, Empowered... Self-Esteem... used be big Buzzwords

    today... Sustainable, Resilience ...
    have some of that quality.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)