• Tomtits
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    955 days ago

    It’s mental how this is pretty much known worldwide, like drawing that S thing. The one similar to the Suzuki logo

    • @TheEntity@lemmy.world
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      405 days ago

      As a non-native English speaker, I still have no idea why this specific phrase is so significant and at this point I’m afraid to ask.

        • @Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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          5 days ago

          I took biology in 1996; it wasn’t a thing yet. Someone else claimed it was already widespread by 2001. I don’t think I encountered it in the wild before 2005, but it could have been much later than that.

          KnowYourMeme suggests the phrase originated in a textbook from 1957, but it didn’t reach memehood until 2014.

      • Rob Bos
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        105 days ago

        I think it comes from an episode of Sabrina the Teenage Witch and exploded as a meme.

      • @xpinchx@lemmy.world
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        85 days ago

        I think it’s just the most simplified you can get talking about cellular biology, specifically when teaching organelles. So most primary science textbooks use that terminology and it’s more memorable than all the other organelles so it just stuck and it got repeated and reviewed every year and it sorta became a pre Internet meme and part of a shared consciousness if you were schooled in the US.

      • Sirence
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        35 days ago

        We actually had the same sentence as the headline for the chapter about mitochondria in our class in the late 90s, just translated. “Mitochondrien - das Kraftwerk der Zelle”