Very true on the first point, I won’t apologize further or make excuses for my behavior.
I'm glad you're still around

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To your second point the very reason I am here and not perfecting my googlefu is to learn hopefully the right things. That said I have many more questions but I think it would be rude to continue asking questions before thoroughly reading most of the articles others have provided me. I have been interested in hi fi for a long time, poked around in some high end and extremely high end boutique shops and thought I had learned some things. Learning quickly I overestimated my knowledge of this stuff. Anyway, I started this thread to learn the vocabulary so I can quickly recognize the difference between a true review and paid for advertising, not real interested in wasting too much time reading BS thinking I learned something.
You are always welcome to ask questions. The only dumb questions are those you don't ask.
As I see it, the trouble with making a vocabulary list of audio terms, is that high-priced dealers often misuse otherwise legit terms. For example, in wires the term "skin effect" is tossed around when they try to sell overpriced speaker cables.
Wikipedia defines skin effect as:
the tendency of an alternating electric current (AC) to become distributed within a conductor such that the current density is largest near the surface of the conductor, and decreases with greater depths in the conductor. The electric current flows mainly at the "skin" of the conductor, between the outer surface and a level called the skin depth. … … At 60 Hz in copper, the skin depth is about 8.5 mm (0.33"). At high frequencies the skin depth becomes much smaller. Increased AC resistance due to the skin effect can be mitigated by using specially woven litz wire.
So skin effect is real, but using it to justify high-priced speaker cable is BS. In the audio frequency range, 20 to 20,000 Hz, the skin effect is so small that it has little or no effect on the signal. In cable TV or antenna cables, where the carrier wave frequency is in the mega Hz range, skin effect is significant. But that is more than 1,000 times higher than 20,000 Hz.