Just FYI, "to wear (out)" has an irregular past tense, and past participle forms: "wore" and "worn". So: 1) These disk, because of constant throughput, wore out. 2) These disk, because of constant throughput, are worn…
I haven't seen it in my texts, and actually perusing the dictionaries and sign-lists right now, I think I'm getting a sense for how the derivation came about. I modern reading of the signs that make up the word they're…
Totally agree, there are publications out there that are starting to bridge the gap. But really now more and more academics are taking to twitter and sharing their research in a more public way often with much of the…
I'm working on editing my PhD dissertation into a book right now and I'm dealing with this exact problem. I work on Babylonian astrology and the text I studied for my PhD was a complex table of astrological material…
Just FYI, "to wear (out)" has an irregular past tense, and past participle forms: "wore" and "worn". So: 1) These disk, because of constant throughput, wore out. 2) These disk, because of constant throughput, are worn…
I haven't seen it in my texts, and actually perusing the dictionaries and sign-lists right now, I think I'm getting a sense for how the derivation came about. I modern reading of the signs that make up the word they're…
Totally agree, there are publications out there that are starting to bridge the gap. But really now more and more academics are taking to twitter and sharing their research in a more public way often with much of the…
I'm working on editing my PhD dissertation into a book right now and I'm dealing with this exact problem. I work on Babylonian astrology and the text I studied for my PhD was a complex table of astrological material…