KRONOS OWNERS :-) Are you Stage or Studio based?

Discussion relating to the Korg Kronos Workstation.

Moderators: Sharp, X-Trade, Pepperpotty, karmathanever

What do you / will you use your Kronos for?

Only on stage / live. Never in a studio.
2
3%
Only in a studio. Never live.
24
38%
Mostly live. Some studio.
16
25%
Mostly studio. Some live.
13
21%
Roughly the same, Live and Studio.
8
13%
 
Total votes: 63

User avatar
michelkeijzers
Approved Merchant
Approved Merchant
Posts: 9112
Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 3:10 pm
Location: Netherlands
Contact:

Post by michelkeijzers »

Subpar wrote:
RichF wrote:To be honest, I'm still up in the air on the pluralization. Sometimes it's Kronii, sometimes it Kronoses, sometimes it's Kronos, sometimes it's "Kronos units."

In general, I try to talk about only one of them at a time to avoid confusion. :)

-Rich
Freakin hillarious!!!

:lol:
And even if you only think of one of them there are 9 synth engines ... luckily that's easy (or shall we call it enginos or enginea ?)
Image
Developer of the free PCG file managing application for most Korg workstations: PCG Tools, see https://www.kronoshaven.com/pcgtools/
User avatar
madbeatzyo111
Guest
Posts: 379
Joined: Mon Jun 13, 2011 5:45 pm

Post by madbeatzyo111 »

jimknopf wrote: Hope not to to sound like some smart alec, but I happen to know old Greek, and there the plural of masculine words with -os at the end is -oi. So the correct plural would be "Kronoi".

Call it like you like :lol:
But are proper names pluralized in the same fashion in old Greek? Because n modern English they are usually not; for example "Amy" does not become "Amies," even though "army" becomes "armies."

Felsineus brings up a good point though. Kronos is a god and as such there can only be one formal entity--as in the modern Christian "God." However to reconcile the many units out there, I would submit that just like the concept of the Holy Trinity, each individual element can be seen as part of the whole and ALL parts are ultimately one God--or Kronos.
User avatar
madbeatzyo111
Guest
Posts: 379
Joined: Mon Jun 13, 2011 5:45 pm

Post by madbeatzyo111 »

Now that my interest is fully piqued, here is part of a discussion regarding "Eos" as the name of the VW car.
This is an irregular noun - not, for example, a second declension (-os) noun which would automatically take the nominative plural ending of -oi. Thus the form which some have suggested, ἠοῖ (êoi), is not the plural here...
(http://ask.metafilter.com/49269/An-idle ... bout-Greek)

Besides which, the ancient Greek would never have pluralized Kronos, so the word Kronoi would not exist in the vocabulary in the first place.
User avatar
iixorbiusii
Full Member
Posts: 198
Joined: Sat Aug 30, 2008 4:59 pm

Post by iixorbiusii »

Somewhat of a digression... but as I started this thread, then I guess it's my prerogative :D

Maybe as forum members we should run a thread "what should the plural of Kronos be known as furthermore". We could take suggestions for a few weeks, and then collate them into a poll and let "the people" decide which one they prefer !


My own personal grammatically-incorrect suggestion, which started off this discussion, is "Kron-i"

Cheers.

iix.
CURRENT GEAR: A yellowing Casio PT-80, 4 leaking batteries and some broken headphones.
WISHLIST: A PSU and some different headphones.
Post Reply

Return to “Korg Kronos”