Cornish counting is base 12 instead of 10.
I played the trailer with a bit of scepticism but I have to say it looks quite good! Very⌠âdreamworks styleâ.
Also, the mother nagging Caesar is peak Asterix
âminus one village is not everythingâ
âdrop it mom!â
I think thatâs the problem with these computer cartoons. Either they overuse the Pixar look or they take too much from DreamWorks.
Returning to the topic, I think it will be good material for anyone who wants to study French.
I donât think so. The penultimate syllable is the stressed one. We usually mutter this word under our breath to express contempt.
Also in spanish. Is porquerĂa.
I think that what happens is the RK sound in spanish is a strong barrier that almost splits the word in two, so if someone is commenting something along the lines of âDAMMMNNNN THAT THING IS FUCKING NASTEEYYYYYYâ they are going to let the R roll a bit, so itâs going to sound like âPORRRRquerĂaâ
this RK caesura is not exclusive of spanish, but we bring it to the next level, specially in central american dialects.
âOh, no you diânât!â
That 1st apostrophe indicates a glottal stop, like a Cockneyâs dropped T.
World Atlas of Languages (Beta Version)
The World Atlas of Languages is an interactive and dynamic online tool that documents different aspects and features of language status in countries and languages around the world. It aims to provide a detailed record of languages as communicative tools and knowledge resources in their sociocultural and socio-political contexts.
According to the World Atlas of Languagesâ methodology, there are 8324 languages, spoken or signed, documented by the governments, public institutions and academic communities; out of 8324, around 7000 languages are still in use. On the World Atlas of Languages, every language is marked distinctly according to its type, structure and affiliation, its situation, state and status and, finally, their functions, users and usage.
Â
Iâve noticed that right-wing trolls often insist news stories âare bias,â or âis bias,â but Iâve never noticed them write âare biased,â nor âis biased,â nor âis biased.â
Is it just right-wing trolls, or is this more widespread? And why?
I think itâs just that right wing trolls are just dipshits who donât know how to grammarâŚ
They probably use âfloutâ and âflauntâ interchangeably.
This is why I always spell it "white supremist,â b/c thatâs how those shitheads pronounce it.
Bonus:
Yeah, Iâve noticed that as well, and I just donât get it. Yes, itâs because theyâre dumb, as @mindysan33 says, but why are they dumb in this particular way, and why is it all of them? Itâs such a strange phenomenon
Using âbiasâ as an adjective instead of âbiasedâ usually comes from hearing it said, where the final d is often subtle to the point of non-existence, and not seeing it written, where it is obvious. And itâs not hard to think of some people who might hear the word shouted a lot but never read anything thatâs been spellcheckedâŚ
But surely they must realise that other adjectives donât behave that way. I mean, theyâre shrieking about things being based all the time, do they can make to leap from substantive to adjective thereâŚ
The only parts of speech they believe needs to be absolutely exact every single time is pronouns.