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They need to hurry up and tow that windmill outside of the environment.
They need to hurry up and tow that windmill outside of the environment.
Dassinteresting!
But there’s got to be something out there!?
They need to hurry up and tow that windmill outside of the environment.
Thanks so much! I typed this agonizingly slowly with my left hand! :D
Case in point.
“Does anyone else… (have trouble finishing video games/use their toenail clippings to add texture to a pot of chili/etc.)?”
Where science? Where meme?
Eh, letter’s height to width ratio looks better.
Yeah, this strip requires a bit of context.
Hobbes always pounces on Calvin when he gets home from school. This is an ongoing set of comics where Calvin tries different things to avoid/outsmart Hobbes to avoid getting pounced on (you can see all of the recent strips on this community for that context).
This time, however, Hobbes is hiding behind the door instead of setting up for his pounce in front of the door, and is counting down to the perfect moment to strike, as Calvin futilely looks for him where he usually comes from.
TIL tortellini is a sandwich.
No, I have it the right way around. Artificial languages can be irregular, so your order doesn’t follow.
No regular language can be natural, though, so if you come across a regular language, you can always correctly conclude that it’s artificial through modus tollens:
“If a language is natural, then it is not regular. This language is regular, therefore it is not natural.”
Lots of !badlinguistics in this thread (but some goodlinguistics too though!).
You must resent every single natural human language then, since all of them show the exact same kinds of irregularities, for the most part.
And, if we all did decide to use Esperanto because it’s regular (and therefore artificial), irregularities would inevitably be introduced within a single generation, because the nature of human language is to change, and that change will always result in irregularity.
This is a great resource! Thanks for your effort!
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Here’s the video for anyone interested. It’s well worth a watch, and there are a couple of follow-ups as well.
An excellent choice.
That looks much more like ‘so’ ソ than ‘n’ ン