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	<title>Furniture &#8211; Tolak Air</title>
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		<title>Ethimo mountain style</title>
		<link>https://tolakair.co.id/2023/04/25/ethimo-mountain-style/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Apr 2023 13:41:24 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Furniture]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[So how did the classical Latin become so incoherent? According to McClintock, a 15th century typesetter likely scrambled part of]]></description>
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			<p>So how did the classical Latin become so incoherent? According to McClintock, a 15th century typesetter likely scrambled part of Cicero’s <em>De Finibus</em> in order to provide placeholder text to mockup various fonts for a type specimen book. It’s difficult to find examples of <em>lorem ipsum</em> in use before Letraset made it popular as a dummy text in the 1960s, although <a href="https://space.xtemos.com/demo/antares/2019/12/19/sustainable-and-modular/#">McClintock says</a> he remembers coming across the <em>lorem ipsum</em> passage in a book of old metal type samples. So far he hasn’t relocated where he once saw the passage, but the popularity of Cicero in the 15th century supports the theory that the filler text has been used for centuries.</p><blockquote><p>Don’t bother typing “lorem ipsum” into Google translate. If you already tried, you may have gotten anything from “NATO” to “China”, depending on how you capitalized the letters. The bizarre translation was fodder for conspiracy theories, but Google has since updated its “lorem ipsum” translation to, boringly enough, “lorem ipsum”. One brave soul did take a stab at translating the almost-not-quite-Latin.</p></blockquote><p>According to The Guardian, Jaspreet Singh Boparai undertook the challenge with the goal of making the text “precisely as incoherent in English as it is in Latin – and to make it incoherent in the same way”. As a result, “the Greek ‘eu’ in Latin became the French ‘bien’ […] and the ‘-ing’ ending in ‘lorem ipsum’ seemed best rendered by an ‘-iendum’ in English.”</p>
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			<div class="elementor-element elementor-element-22532ce elementor-widget elementor-widget-xts_title" data-id="22532ce" data-element_type="widget" data-widget_type="xts_title.default"><div class="elementor-widget-container"><div class="xts-section-heading xts-reset-mb-10 xts-reset-last xts-textalign-left" data-animation-delay=""><h4 class="xts-section-title title xts-design-default xts-fontsize-l"><span class="xts-section-title-text" data-elementor-setting-key="title">Find Your Focus While Working</span></h4></div></div></div><div class="elementor-element elementor-element-dcea07a xts-scheme-inherit xts-textalign-inherit elementor-widget elementor-widget-text-editor" data-id="dcea07a" data-element_type="widget" data-widget_type="text-editor.default"><div class="elementor-widget-container"><div class="elementor-text-editor elementor-clearfix"><p class="f4 cl-white mv16">As an alternative theory, (and because Latin scholars do this sort of thing) someone tracked down a 1914 Latin edition of <em>De Finibus</em> which challenges <a href="https://space.xtemos.com/demo/antares/2019/12/19/sustainable-and-modular/#">McClintock’s</a> 15th century claims and suggests that the dawn of <em>lorem ipsum</em> was as recent as the 20th century. The 1914 Loeb Classical Library Edition ran out of room on page 34 for the Latin phrase “dolorem ipsum” (sorrow in itself). Thus, the truncated phrase leaves one page dangling with “do-”, while another begins with the now ubiquitous “lorem ipsum”.</p><p class="f4 cl-white mt16 mb0">Whether a medieval typesetter chose to garble a well-known (but non-Biblical—that would have been sacrilegious) text, or whether a quirk in the 1914 Loeb Edition inspired a graphic designer, it’s admittedly an odd way for Cicero to sail into the 21st century.</p></div></div></div>
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