That’s quite the level of trust there to just give out your cello
I often use tone tags, so in their absence, try to interpret everything I say as literally as reasonable.
Also:
Formerly @[email protected]
That’s quite the level of trust there to just give out your cello
According to the Bible, yes. Which is most likely not true. Remember that Zionism started as a secular movement, with religious people getting more (very) on board relatively recently
…but I can say its name!
(maybe)
Have you ever seen transcribed Georgian?
In Latin for example it’s just a “…near the noun? Whatever, just don’t be ambiguous."
It doesn’t need to be remotely close to the noun lol
Though Latin syntax can get annoying sometimes (when do I use the subjunctive? What’s the correct negation? Perfect or imperfect… maybe pluperfect? Which noun is this random genitive modifying?), it does make sense eventually. I guess that is also true for English, but I still mess up the tenses sometimes.
English syntax hard?
Yes. Sequence of tenses. It’s harder than Latin. As in, what the hell does “future-in-the-past” mean?
Or tenses (+aspect+mood) in general, I guess. You guys have too many of them.
As for the orthography, you know what is to blame. The Great Vowel Shift.
Does anyone have a link to her actual findings? I tend to be skeptical of headlines like this.
Also, the first woman? Props to her but I’m quite surprised no one else has done that
Is it imperative or bare infinitive?
Why does sudo su
exist? sudo -i
does exactly what you want.
American media being more pro-Israel than mainstream Israeli media is continuously baffling
Might as well just use Vim then
Yes. Though I believe it only kills the current frame if there are multiple
But then she comes back again, and they both disappear
You only really need youtu.be/
and then the video ID
deleted by creator
Reform copyright
I don’t know much history either. Maybe Sinai in the Yom-Kippur war (1973)?
Well, if you consider Israel to be a nuclear power…
I can follow this, up to
I believe that that’s a decision made by translators of the bible. Hebrew doesn’t have lowercase letters, and the Greek versions of the New Testament that I found don’t capitalize as much. And are they distinct?