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Comment Re:No notice, no reference (Score 1) 892

You haven't worked much in big business, have you?

I've known people who have been threatened legal action for giving bad references ("you cost me the job!"). I've known people who have been threatened legal action for good references ("you said this person was going to be good!"). Amusingly, I know one person who's gotten both (the founder of a 20ish-person shop)

There's a reason lots (most?) big company nowadays makes it official HR policy to only confirm salary and dates of employment. Said founder, above, also never gives out references.

If getting a statement like that raises questions for you, it raises questions for me whether you're experienced enough to be a good hiring manager.

Comment English's roots used to be this way, too (Score 1) 919

Keep in mind that counting theory is relatively new and the addition into language reflects that. Many languages did not count past three (instead of two). Three is generally understood to be about the average maximum number you can tell just by "looking" at it, without having to quietly count it (save your bragging if you think you can do 4 or 5)

There are examples of this in English, still. The words describing items #1, 2, and 3 are distinctly different than the rest: first, second, and third rather than just appending a "th" on the end of the number like fourth, fifth, etc. We still put commas after every 3 digits in numbers.

What's more interesting is how thought shapes language, not vice-versa, IMO

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