X-VM-v5-Data: ([nil nil nil nil nil nil nil nil nil] ["678" "Mon" "8" "November" "93" "10:49:37" "CET" "Hubert Palme" "palme@WRCD1.URZ.UNI-WUPPERTAL.DE" nil "18" "Re: the name NFSS" "^Date:" nil nil "11"]) Return-Path: Received: from sc.ZIB-Berlin.DE (mailserv) by dagobert.ZIB-Berlin.DE (4.1/SMI-4.0/24.6.93) id AA04901; Mon, 8 Nov 93 11:04:18 +0100 Received: from vm.urz.Uni-Heidelberg.de (vm.hd-net.uni-heidelberg.de) by sc.ZIB-Berlin.DE (4.1/SMI-4.0-sc/03.06.93) id AA06236; Mon, 8 Nov 93 11:04:02 +0100 Message-Id: <9311081004.AA06236@sc.ZIB-Berlin.DE> Received: from DHDURZ1 by vm.urz.Uni-Heidelberg.de (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 9985; Mon, 08 Nov 93 11:02:30 CET Received: from DHDURZ1 by DHDURZ1 (Mailer R2.08 R208004) with BSMTP id 1279; Mon, 08 Nov 93 11:02:21 CET Received: from DHDURZ1 by DHDURZ1 (Mailer R2.08 R208004) with BSMTP id 1277; Mon, 08 Nov 93 11:02:19 CET Reply-To: Mailing list for the LaTeX3 project In-Reply-To: from "Frank Mittelbach" a Date: Mon, 8 Nov 93 10:49:37 CET From: Hubert Palme Sender: Mailing list for the LaTeX3 project To: Multiple Recipients of Subject: Re: the name NFSS Status: R X-Status: X-Keywords: X-UID: 1107 Frank Mittelbach writes: > > its an abbreviation and such things have their own lives. who knows > what foo/bar means without looking into the hackers dictionary? The Anglicist I recently asked didn't :-) Who can enlighten me? (May be, I'm living behind the moon, but that's life!) > who is using it? I don't until I know what it means! ============================================================================ Hubert Palme Bergische Universitaet-Gesamthochschule Wuppertal Computing Center D-42097 Wuppertal Email: Palme@wrcd1.urz.uni-wuppertal.de (Germany)