@lukeisamazing I don't know of any European city that doesn't have a sizeable population of people from the Mediterranean and Levant and thus doesn't have baclava. What a weird thing to say. Even weirder: to imagine people are mad about something that only exists in your imagination 😄
@thisisnefertiti Did we stop having things after the millennial generation? Don't younger people still use phones, keys, wallets and stuff? Do you have some extra-dimensional portal of holding or did you get them surgically implanted in your bodies?
- a confused Gen-X
@RepLuna@Keir_Starmer There were 14 thousand brutal murders in the US last year. You literally did nothing about that even though it's your job. Insane of you to focus on other countries when your own is a complete failure in this regard
@Spelt_D_o_n_a_l@2024dion Yeah it's a prison made partially of your own making and partially of the making of other people (ultimately politicians). It's still human choices though - not laws of nature. It's not about what's possible but about priorities and decisions.
@lewpy@LeighGiangreco Okay but you chose to live 35 miles away from your job so you chose not to be able to bike. That doesn't say anything about what's possible for people in general, it was your decision.
(In a first world country you could take the train though)
@lavenderkayy@Mr__Comics@Majkawscianie "complex sound"... I just remembered that the word is "diphtong". W is a diphthong in English: two combined vowel sounds.
@lavenderkayy@Mr__Comics@Majkawscianie Kind of? W is a complex sound and often it makes a sort of u sound. That's again because the pronunciation changes when we slide from one letter to another.
The word "one" is sort of weird though. It has an invisible W (does that make O a consonant?)
@Tsar_Martyr Let's say I don't believe there's a tiger in the closet.
How would you go about proving me wrong?
Yes, it's fairly easy if you actually do it.
@lavenderkayy@Mr__Comics@Majkawscianie In those three words it makes the same sound that the letter "i" would make in those situations (e.g. "iambic") . Is "i" not a vowel?
You have it backwards: it's not that the letters are not vowels. It's that there's a shift when 2 vowels slide into each other.
@Majkawscianie Yeah. It's bizarre. A giant collective gaslighting experience. They all use the letter every day and have just convinced themselves that it doesn't exist or doesn't do what it clearly does.
@AIROIJitters@steffen_groth - *kender ikke forskel på en verdensreligion, en nationalitet og en terrororganisation. Sidestiller medlemmer af de førstnævnte med sidstnævnte*
- "der afslørede du lige dig selv!"
Dude. Hvis man bytter ord ud med andre ord så er det faktisk noget andet af og til. Nyt for dig?