Thule, if you think it over… (Friday AI-Day series #3)

Two distinct prehistoric Arctic groups—Dorset and Thule Inuit—cooperate around a wide ice hole on a frozen landscape. The Dorset figures wear simpler pale furs and use older tools, while the Thule group wears layered parkas and stands with sleds, dogs, and advanced harpoons. Both groups gesture toward a live beluga whale surfacing in the ice hole, which remains alert and able to dive. Multiple polar bears appear as tiny silhouettes on the far horizon, observing from a safe distance. The scene is set under low winter light with long shadows and distant ridges, evoking a rare moment of peaceful interaction.
Two distinct prehistoric Arctic groups—Dorset and Thule Inuit—cooperate around a wide ice hole on a frozen landscape. The Dorset figures wear simpler pale furs and use older tools, while the Thule group wears layered parkas and stands with sleds, dogs, and advanced harpoons. Both groups gesture toward a live beluga whale surfacing in the ice hole, which remains alert and able to dive. Multiple polar bears appear as tiny silhouettes on the far horizon, observing from a safe distance. The scene is set under low winter light with long shadows and distant ridges, evoking a rare moment of peaceful interaction.

This is the first post of this year 2026, and of the second quarter-century of the 21st Century, as I view it at any rate, although few people seem to be focusing on that, maybe they are not accountants.

I obviously intended more posting this year, but the year did kick off in a predictably busy way.

Thankfully there is always AI.  Thanks, or maybe rather “due” to which, whereas before we were all crying out for content, it now seems that the boot is on the other foot and content is crying out for us, like in the Russian reversal jokes. (“In Post-AI internet, content creates you”, etc.)

Clearly not all my exchanges with AI would necessarily interest my readers, so I do need to be selective but in this “Friday AI day” series, of which this is now the third, we at least have the chance to look together with AI (I mainly use Copilot) at some topics.

The topic for today is indeed topical as we are mainly focussing on Greenland, which dominates the news. The aim here is to try and understand better the country and its people but also a little bit a couple of aspects of its wildlife, we do meander off into that at one point, do keep scrolling if that is not your bag, we come back firmly into the linguistic topic and explore a little bit the mystery of Paleo-Eskimos such as the Dorset peoples and their possible intercations with the Thules who are the ancestors of modern Greenlanders.

The main aspect we are going to be exploring below is the area of language. We won’t be learning any Greenlandic, not today anyway, but we are going to be trying to understand what the linguistic landscape looks like and how it fits with other Northern countries.

I will be adopting the simple convention that my questions are in Italics and the AI’s answers the way it gives them, which has sparse use of Italics thankfully.

If you want to find out more, then you can always ask your own AI.  Sometimes minor variations on a question can produce different answers, or the same one, in defiance of Einstein’s maxim, rather different answers depending on the mood the AI is in on a given day, it would seem.

Please respond and let me know what you think.

Continue reading “Thule, if you think it over… (Friday AI-Day series #3)”

Friday AI Day #2: Poetry Mashup and Illustration

With AI I put together the mash-up of John Masefield’s Sea Fever and T.S. Eliot’s The Love Song of J. Arthur Prufrock, and turned it into a festive scene as well.

The result is a little bit surreal but I hope you get a chuckle out of it, as did the machine.

Friday AI Day #1 – using AI to explain an intranslatable joke from German and then invent a dynamically equivalent one in English

This article is going to demand a bit of knowledge from the reader as it starts off in German. I was a bit stumped by a German joke I read online because it hinges on the Swiss German and Swabian dialects being almost like foreign languages to a Prussian who speaks a more standard German – called “Hochdeutsch” although in linguistic terms a Prussian would tend more to Low German and the Swabian and Alemannic forms of German are HIgh German dialects becuase originally that meant upland German, with the second German sound shifts and the vowel shifts.

The AI explains the joke in German and then takes my challenge to produce an equivalent joke in English. It first selects Yorshire and Scouser dialects to understand each other and helpfully “translate” the dialect for the benefit of the Londoner but to no effect, as he doesn’t get either. This choice of dialects however makes for a fairly confusing joke as the reader is led to the conclusion that the Londoner must be really thick not to have understood what the other two were saying, although in performance it conceivably might work. I suggested confronting the Londoner in the train witgh Scots and Geordie, and then the AI came up with a more convincing example of how those two dialects might understand one another better than a Londoner might understand either.

All of this I now share with you to illustrate how capable the AI – in this case Copilot – is to deal not only with standard forms of languages but also to communicate and even compose in less standard forms of the language.I’m still experimenting with the best ways to show who is speaking, me or the AI, so for now I am using header formats for when it’s me talking to the AI.

Kennst Du einen Witz über die Schweiz? Ein Schweizer, ein Schwabe und ein Preuße fahren mit der Bahn von Basel nach Stuttgart. Schweigen im Abteil, während die Landschaft vorbei zieht. Um die Stimmung aufzuheitern, fragt der Schweizer den Preussen „sind sie au in Basel gsie?“. Fragende Blicke des Preussen. Springt der Schwabe helfend ein „Err moint gwä“.

😄 Sehr schön erzählt! Das ist ein klassischer Dialekt‑Witz, der mit den feinen Nuancen zwischen Schweizerdeutsch, Schwäbisch und Hochdeutsch spielt. Der Preuße versteht „gsie“ nicht, der Schwabe übersetzt es mit „gwä“ – und beide meinen natürlich „gewesen“.

Das Lustige daran ist, dass sich die drei Dialekte gegenseitig fast wie Fremdsprachen anhören, obwohl sie alle deutsch sind. Gerade im Zug von Basel nach Stuttgart ist das eine sehr realistische Szene: man fährt durch die Sprachgrenzen und merkt, wie unterschiedlich die Regionen klingen.

Wenn du magst, kann ich dir noch ein paar andere Schweizer Witze erzählen, die mit Sprache und Missverständnissen spielen. Zum Beispiel:

  • Ein Tourist fragt in Zürich: „Sprechen Sie hier auch Hochdeutsch?“ – Antwort: „Ja, aber nur mit Gästen.“
  • Oder der Klassiker: „Was ist das Beste an der Schweiz?“ – „Ich weiß es nicht, aber die Flagge ist ein großes Plus.“ 🇨🇭

Möchtest du lieber noch ein paar Dialekt‑Witze (Schwaben, Bayern, Schweizer) oder eher die typischen Schweiz‑Klischee‑Witze hören?

If you had to make an equivalent of that joke using English dialects, how would that go?

Great challenge! Let’s mirror the Swiss–Swabian–Prussian joke with English dialects. The humor comes from one speaker using a regional verb form, another trying to “helpfully” translate it into another dialect, and the outsider still being lost. Here’s how it could work in English:

🚂 English Dialect Version

Three men — a Yorkshireman, a Scouser (Liverpool), and a Londoner — are riding the train from Manchester to London. Silence in the carriage as the countryside rolls by. To break the ice, the Yorkshireman asks the Londoner:

“Tha bin i’ Manchester, then?”
The Londoner looks puzzled.

The Scouser jumps in to help:

“He means, ‘Have yer been?’”

The Londoner still looks baffled, muttering:

“Been where?”

Why it works

    • Yorkshire dialect: “Tha bin” = “Have you been.”

 

    • Scouse dialect: “Yer been” = “You’ve been.”

 

    • Londoner: Used to standard English, still doesn’t get the point.

 

    • The joke plays on the same rhythm as the Swiss one: regional verb forms that sound alien to outsiders, and a “translation” that doesn’t actually clarify.

 

Would you like me to sketch a few alternative versions — say with Scots, Irish, and Cockney — so you can see how the humor shifts depending on which dialects clash?

 

It seems like the English accents are more mutually intelligible than the German ones.

That’s a sharp observation. You’re right: English dialects are usually more mutually intelligible than German dialects, and the reason lies in history and linguistic structure.

🗣 Why English Dialects Stay Closer

  • Standardization: English had early standardization through printing (London English became dominant in the 15th–16th centuries).
  • Mass media: Radio, TV, and now the internet reinforce a common “Standard English,” so even strong accents rarely block comprehension.
  • Shared vocabulary: Most dialects use the same core words, with differences in pronunciation or a few local terms.

🇩🇪 Why German Dialects Diverge More

  • Late standardization: Standard German (Hochdeutsch) only became widespread in the 19th–20th centuries. Before that, local dialects were the everyday language.
  • Regional isolation: Mountain valleys, rural communities, and political fragmentation meant dialects evolved independently.
  • Deep structural differences: Dialects like Swiss German or Bavarian aren’t just accents — they have distinct grammar, verb forms, and vocabulary. For example:
    • Swiss German “gsie” = “gewesen” (been).
    • Swabian “gwä” = also “gewesen.”
    • To a northern German (Preuße), both sound alien.

📊 Comparison

Language Dialect Variation Mutual Intelligibility
English Accents + some vocabulary High (Londoner understands Yorkshireman, even if puzzled)
German Dialects with grammar/vocab differences Lower (Preuße struggles with Swiss/Swabian speech)

🔑 Takeaway

English dialects are mostly pronunciation differences, while German dialects can be different languages in miniature. That’s why the Swiss–Swabian–Prussian joke works so well: the Preuße genuinely doesn’t understand, whereas in English the Londoner would at least catch the gist.

Would you like me to sketch a map of German dialect zones vs. English dialect zones, so you can visually see why German splits more sharply than English?

I think a Scot, a Geordie and a Londoner would be able to get closer to the rhythm.

Exactly — that trio captures the rhythm beautifully, because Scots and Geordies both have deeply distinctive dialects that can feel almost like separate languages to a Londoner. Here’s how an equivalent joke could play out:

🚂 English Dialect Joke (Scot, Geordie, Londoner)

A Scot, a Geordie, and a Londoner are riding the train from Edinburgh to London. Silence in the carriage as the countryside rolls by. To break the ice, the Scot turns to the Londoner:

“Were ye in Embra yestreen?” (Scots: “yestreen” = yesterday evening)
The Londoner looks puzzled.

The Geordie jumps in to help:

“He means, ‘Wor ye theer tha neet?’” (Geordie: “tha neet” or “last neet” = last night)
The Londoner still frowns:

“Sorry, mate… I’ve no idea what you’re on about.”
Why it works

  • Scots dialect: “yestreen” is a real Scots word, but opaque to outsiders.
  • Geordie dialect: “last neet” is clearer, but still foreign‑sounding to a Londoner.
  • Londoner: Even after the “translation,” still confused — just like the Preuße in the Swiss joke.

So yes, a Scot, a Geordie, and a Londoner recreate the same dynamic: two regional dialects bouncing off each other, while the “outsider” remains lost.

Would you like me to sketch a mini‑table of dialect equivalents (Swiss/Swabian/Preuße vs. Scot/Geordie/Londoner), so you can see the parallels side by side?

Yes, that gets closer to it.

I’m glad you feel that way — the Scot/Geordie/Londoner trio really does mirror the Swiss/Swabian/Preuße rhythm, because the dialect gap is wide enough to create genuine confusion, yet still close enough to be funny rather than incomprehensible.

Here’s a neat side‑by‑side comparison to show the parallel:

Trio Dialect Phrase “Helper” Translation Outsider Reaction
Swiss / Swabian / Preuße Swiss: „Sind Sie au in Basel gsie?“ Swabian: „Err moint gwä.“ Preuße: still puzzled
Scot / Geordie / Londoner Scot: “Were ye in Embra yestreen?” Geordie: “He means, wor ye theer last neet?” Londoner: still puzzled

Both jokes hinge on:

  • A regional verb form or time word that outsiders don’t recognize (gsie / yestreen).
  • A helper dialect that’s just as opaque (gwä / last neet).
  • An outsider who remains lost, even after the “translation.

That’s why the rhythm feels so similar — it’s the comedy of mutual intelligibility breaking down inside one language.

Plan for the next quarter century

As we come to the close of 2025, it’s worth remembering that this marks the end of the first quarter of a century for our current era. As far as this blog is concerned, we don’t go back twenty years – our first post other than the “Hello World” one you get given at the outset, was on 1st November 2009, so that means that we have now completed 16 years, with the following profile of views and posts made.

Views Posts published
2009 486 47
2010 21,595 117
2011 45,391 119
2012 36,704 63
2013 41,626 23
2014 38,193 29
2015 44,725 16
2016 32,771 8
2017 27,200 110
2018 44,484 306
2019 33,040 155
2020 29,608 213
2021 16,340 215
2022 15,321 65
2023 10,794 3
2024 11,179 8
2025 10,708 14
460,165 1,511

All of which shows that the site has been negleted for a number of years and therefore the views came right down, but in any case in 2021 when I was posting most days of the year the views halved.

This is probably to do with the fact that the posts were at that time largely connected to the main project of getting my YouTube Channel all repurposed to here and properly tagged up and with the possibility for more discussion. Given that the YouTube material was older and older over time, and technologically lagged behind whta newer, fresher videographers were doing, and also after a while I stopped producing regular content on YouTube as I think I had come to an end of that time of life where I was regularly going to new places (and also I got a new hobby in 2016, namely Ingress, and also the camera I was using for the YT things wore out and I was unable to get a similar one to my liking) one can scarcely be surprised that this channel became less frequently viewed.

That having been said, many thanks to the loyal few who did still maintain a regular viewership, especially those who joined in with comments and discussion and sharing posts with their friends.

I have not given up the idea of putting all of the YT material here, and I will have to pick that up again, but I thought that for the next phase of this blog, to seek to bring it back to life, for 2026 and onwards I woud go for a different daily theme and I thnk I have sahred before the basic idea I have for the different days of the week.

1) Monday Funday – a growing collection of jokes. A light-hearted start to the working week for my viewers.

2) Tuesday Reviews Day – Product and place reviews, recommendations and unrecommendations, including some product links to Amazon which may help cover costs if people click on them. You will note that Google Ads have been taken off the site as there is too little editorial control over them and I think I would prefer to be developing the Amazon influencer side, so you’ll have started seeing soe Amazon ads also on the site. They go straight to the American site whereas I will also include Amazon.co.uk product links on the Tuesday Reviews.

3) Wednesday Essay Day – this is a day for new Essays about various topics, some of them are expected to have a philosophical or Spiritual dimension. The aim will be to work towards a collection of essays of a thought-provoking or enlightening character.

4) Thursday Polling Day – here we will be offering polls for your opinion, and/or maybe some commentary on the news items which are current. Instead of a poll, there could be a quiz, it’s the same software.

5) Friday AI day.  The format of the material here will be a converstaion with AI, in which I try to make sense of various topics using AI. The conversation will be shown in full excpet for the bits where te AI asks it’s continuation quastions of what I would like to do next, as these spoil the flow. These will also be tagged “Interviews with a VampAIre” if you want to access the whole collection.

6) Saturday Natterday – this is a day for Language related topics, and among the ideas for Saturday we have a collection of dictation or translation exercises that will grow, and possibly the beginnings of a collection of hymns in various language versions.

7) Sunday is the day in which I would continue to place the historical YT films in the original order tey appeared on the channel, for the simple reason that the project is half way though and I would like to finish it. Clearly there is no rush and at that tempo it may take twenty years to do it, but at least it will be done if God grants me to live that long.

SO I will be using schedulingin order to prepare the material ahead. Maybe time will fail me to keep all these days full of content. My rule will be that for 2025 I will start with the current week and then if I do mor in the same category, place them in the next week.

If you are more interested in one type of content than another, then please look out for the mail that will come to you as a subscriber on that particular day and ignore the others.

I hope that you’ll like this new approach and that you’ll like, comment and share your favourite items.