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What is the difference between a disc and a disk?
What is the difference between a disc and a disk? Is it the difference between shoppe and shop or is there some meaningful accepted distinction?
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Pie's writeup is the answer I came here to give, but she already gave it. Outside of technology, "disc" is always the correct version (e.g., Discworld) because that's how the Latin root is spelled. I don't really know where the word disk-with-a-k came from, but I was taught long ago that it referred specifically to rewritable, magnetic data.
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I will bow to expert knowledge. But I admit I thought it was a Brit/ American thing. Less like color and colour and more like program and programme (ie more recently decided).
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Two points in scrabble.
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For geezers, please remember disc jockeys referred to 45 RPM discs.
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Speaking of geezers, since I'm one, since medicine prefers latin and greek, is it 'slipped disk' or 'slipped disc'?
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Hey now, this be the Cellar... we don't need no stinkin' useful information...
we can amuse ourselves with most any old information. Matter of fact, we can get mileage out of bare faced lies. :lol2: |
These are discs. Okay, there are a couple of balls in there, too. (2d try)
http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y10...0_1907-1-1.jpg |
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