by Hugh mann » Wed Jun 05, 2019 1:42 am
7221. Yeah, fine, this is getting kinda boring...
7222. No, I didn't read them, but wikipedia was not the first place I checked, and the definition provided there was the same as what I had already seen.
7223. I think you missed the point, 'Terrapin' seems more of a slang term than a biological term, meaning different things in different places, and to different people.
7224. And I am actually agreeing with you, (At least, I think I am) a terrapin is, in fact, somewhere between a turtle and a tortoise.
7225. However, it is also true that there is just as much difference between a terrapin and a tortoise as between a turtle and a tortoise. (Because English is dumb)
7226. Howeverer, it is also true that the scientific name for the order to which turtles, terrapins, and tortoise belong to, translates to "tortoise" first, and "turtle" second or not at all, so logically, they should all be called tortoise.
7227. Which was the point I was making by (Mostly jokingly) refusing to accept the English names for different types of turtle, and replacing them with Latin names, the semantic difference we were argue about does not exist in Latin, therefore there is nothing to argue.
7228. Again, I was actually agreeing with you, by throwing a tortoise, you threw a turtle, and by throwing a turtle, you threw a terrapin...
7229. Oh, I almost forgot *Hits sogekik over the head with a hammer made of tortoise shell*
7230. *Goes searching for the honeybadger that has no doubt wondered off during this pointless argument*