Originally Posted by
SPN Lifer
Some of us are reading your every word carefully, and are very grateful for what you share.


Thank you, I’ve always tried to embrace the “to teach” part of “doctor”*, your comment helps make my participation here worthwhile.
Originally Posted by
SPN Lifer
… Father of FT "notional business" terminology 🤠
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU. I learned it from you. Among my 2 or 3 favorite terms, here and elsewhere.
Originally Posted by
SPN Lifer
… should be 400%.

Thank you, overly zealous with that clause, corrected.
(* “AI Overview: Doctor" originates from the Latin docēre ("to teach"), originally denoting a "teacher" or learned academic in the 14th century, not a medical practitioner. … Key Etymological Points: Doctor (Teacher): Used in the 14th century for eminent theologians or scholars approved to teach. Not until the 17th century did medical schools, particularly in Scotland, began popularizing "doctor" for physicians.”)