- Not a solar flare but a coronal mass ejection. And while the subsequent G5 geomagnetic storm can do damage to various technological systems, it shouldn’t be anything too bad. 
- What about it? It’s a big solar flare, but my understanding is that it’s still not big enough to do any real damage. - no real damage. this time. 
 
- I just looked it up on Wikipedia. - The extreme ultraviolet and x-ray radiation from solar flares is absorbed by the daylight side of Earth’s upper atmosphere, in particular the ionosphere, and does not reach the surface. - What else should I know? - You should know that this wasn’t a solar flare, but a coronal mass ejection. Look that up instead. No, it’s nothing too bad either. The one in 1859 was a big one and some people got electrocuted at telegraph stations, but this ain’t like that. - Electrocuted? Or shocked? - Electrocuted as in they received injuries from an electric shock. - I’m generally a linguistic descriptivist, but in the case of “electrocuted”, I do think the distinction is worth having. - I think there’s a distinction between “electrocuted” and “electrocuted to death”. Same as with “stabbed” vs. “stabbed to death” or any other such verb that can, but may not necessarily result in death. - [Edit- I’m blind, the definition I give below does include injury. However, I stand by the fact the word has changed over time, and there is at least some value in following the “old” definition.] - Per Merriam-Webster: 
 1: to kill or severely injure by electric shock
 2: to execute (a criminal) by electricity- Now, granted, because the word is used often enough to mean “shocked”, there is a “descriptivist” argument to be made that we should accept the new definition (like “literally” meaning “not literally”). - While I’m generally in favour of this approach, I think the distinction here being literally life-and-death (especially when used in a workplace context) warrants some push-back against this new definition. - That said, English doesn’t have language police, so you’re more than free to disagree with my take, haha. - I’m a big fan of words being used wrong so often that they change meaning. Glad my education was largely useless. 
- The definition does include mere injury. Though it does add the qualifier “severely” so now I need to know how that dictionary defines “severe.” - Also: The Internet has proven for years that the Language Police exist for all languages. Though they’re more like gestapo. Hence the moniker “Grammar Nazi.” 😌 
 
 
 
- Iirc it’s only electrocution if you die - Google and the Oxford dictionary disagree. - Google and the Oxford dictionary disagree - You mean the opinion of Google is different from that of the Oxford dictionary? 
 
 
- Electrocution = death - Google and the Oxford dictionary disagree.  - And Cambridge says it means to die from it. 
- I wonder if the origin of the word was a portmanteau of electricity and execute. - Execute to death, of course - Could be, but there’s other words with that same ending  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- … you mean the skies are looking Fantastic tonight? 
- mhmm tasty evolution juice - The best way to describe it! - it’s good that you properly capitalized your name 
 
 
- I live in Germany, nothing happened. So this is barely news. - It was visible in the uk as well, it was best seen through a camera, almost impossible to see without one - Ah, right, didnt know, thanks! Only heard about it afterwards 
 
 
- Don’t look directly at the solar flair - If the solar flare approaches you, do not engage with it - Lay down and pretend you are dead. This way the solar flare will most likely lose intrest and leave. 
 
- It’s only 1 though. We need to talk with the sun about its flair. - It claimed it wanted to express itself, but the Crab Pulsar expresses itself every 0.8 seconds. 
 
- I don’t know and I wanna. What’s so bad about it? - It’s the Internet, so I assume buttholes. 
 
- This only makes me want to do it more 
- And life goes on… 
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