Oh wow! How long had you been married to her?
Oh wow! How long had you been married to her?
I used to know someone who learnt Dutch from age 60, and granted he’s very sharp, but if he can do that, I’m sure you can do this.
I can’t remember the term for that type of strike but I believe it was outlawed under Thatcher.
Okay, I follow now. Thanks for your patience, ha.
So you mean for example that typing <p>…</p> is more comporable pressing enter in Microsoft Word? But then you’re typing a code instead, no?
You mean the code behind the scenes is like HTML? But then I don’t see how it’s not in a programming language.
But a font is an instance of a typeface, so you just mean they’re different gestalts? My question was how they’re different things.
I’m not a programmer so I’m tending towards accepting HTML as a programming language, because it’s a language you type in to make the computer do stuff. Is there maybe another example of something that does what HTML does but obviously isn’t a programming language?
On the contrary, since gluten-free food became trendy, there’s been more of it on offer, which is better people with coeliac disease. The problem arises when chefs and cooks start thinking gluten-intolerant people are asking for gluten-free food because it’s trendy, so they decide to just run the risk of poisoning someone because they think they know better. I used to have a chef like this, and he ended up poisoning someone. Massive cunt, he was.
If you gave me a day and a very big piece of paper to list all of words I found sensual on, I don’t think I’d go for “garnish”, but I suppose I could be talked round.
Think about us poor Brits, who have an offhand knowledge of the imperial system the American system’s based on, plus the metric system, and usually the formula to convert between them at least for speed, length, and weight.
Very nice pickled too! Or you can cut it into strips with a peeler and flash-pickle them for a nice little garnish.
Using any country’s capital as shorthand for its current government is a common form of metonymy to be fair!
Well, Scots would often say “we’re not British but we are Scottish” since British usually means “from the UK” but I don’t think any of them would deny that most of Scotland is in Great Britain.
“PIN number”
vs.
“FOSS software”
Who’d win in a fight?
Even “the sea” would’ve been a better guess, haha.
the most Caucasian place outside of Europe (I’ll let you guess)
Georgia!
“Chewy?”
The sources are anyone who’s paying any fucking attention.