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2:00 PM
My grandmother taught me to knit once. I decided to knit a scarf. The scarf was maybe 1" long and 4" wide. I never kept up at it and unfortunately she died, and I never learned how to finish the scarf, that is, get it off the needle. I think I still have that sad little scarf somewhere.
 
@MrShinyandNew安宇 Aww, a stunted scarf. Consider it a dear childhood memory, because I'm sure your grandmother would have laughed about it.
 
@Cerberus Yeah, she would have.
 
I wonder whether grandmothers still knit these days.
Is it a tradition that we perpetuate itself? My mother sure as hell can't knit.
 
@Cerberus There was a big resurgence in knitting in the UK recently. My ex was into it, and probably does a bit now and again.
 
Haha, what fashion can make people do...
Did men do it too?
 
2:07 PM
@Cerberus possibly. I did not. I did help her by holding the wool!
 
@Cerberus My mother doesn't knit either. She used to, so maybe she will take it up again when she retires. But I know some young people who knit, so presumably the tradition won't be totally lost.
 
@MattEllenД Oh God, you are her slave!
 
@Cerberus I was
:D
 
@MrShinyandNew安宇 Hmm but how many young people?
@MattEllenД And you liked it!
 
@Cerberus There were perks ;-)
 
2:08 PM
Ahhh I see.
That makes a difference.
 
I can think of more friends my age who knit than older people of my acquaintance (but perhaps I'm not privy to everyone's knitting habits).
 
@aediaλ Really! That's astounding.
I have one friend who might remotely pick it up when she gets older. But I've never seen anyone do it.
But if this new vogue should hit the capital, who knows.
 
No one in my family knits that I can think of, except my great-grandmother and maybe my husband's great-grandmother... although now that I think about it, I think my mother-in-law might be learning.
 
Wow you have great-grandmothers!
 
Well, not living any more, but we did know them.
 
2:11 PM
Cool.
 
I never met any of my great-grandparents.
 
@FallenAngelEyes Aww :( I'm sorry.
 
everyone ssshhhhh, @Mana is here
 
But they were alive during your life?
Oh! sets hat straight
 
My parents tried for a long time to have kids before they adopted us, so my parents are older than average for most people of my age.
 
2:13 PM
I see. How old were they when they got you?
 
@Cerberus I'm not sure really. Probably on par with most of the other hobbies for people I know. For example, I don't know many AFOLs personally, but I know OF them. I don't know many people who do kung fu, or food blogging, or prosumer photography, etc etc.
 
Mine were 36 and 43.
 
@MattEllen waves
 
@FallenAngelEyes I only ever knew my step great grandmother, all the rest were dead by the time I was born
@Manaಠдಠ hi :)
 
I didn't know how lucky I was. My one great-grandmother was fairly sane for quite a bit of my childhood and lived in a town nearby, so I have many fond memories of visiting with her and going to the store and her letting us have ice cream :)
 
2:14 PM
@MrShinyandNew安宇 AFOL?
 
@Cerberus On average, it seems that people start families later here in the NL than in the US, I've noticed.
 
@aediaλ That's really cool!
 
@Cerberus Adult Fan of Lego
such as me, or @RegDwight
 
I'm 27 and a whole bunch of the other people in my graduating class are having kids this year. It's "that time," it seems.
 
@FallenAngelEyes Could be? It always depends on what circles you're in. But I believe the average age of first child birth was around 25 even in the 17th century.
 
2:16 PM
Though a small chunk of them did have kids already by the time we graduated.
I know more than a few who already have 2-3 kids.
 
@FallenAngelEyes 27 would be "young" for children in my peer group. we're early 30s and having kids now.
 
@FallenAngelEyes I know perhaps 4 people my age with children, and most are a few years older actually, 30ish.
 
@Cerberus From people I've talked to here, it seems that the opinion is that 27 is perceived as young to start a family.
 
And we look at those having children with some pity.
"Ooh, she's pregnant already, at this age, how sad, her life is over."
 
@Cerberus Haha, wow, ouch.
 
2:18 PM
@Cerberus lol. I have quite a few friends with kids, now (but I am 30) we don't regard them with pity :D
 
@Cerberus Really? But that was middle age in the 17th century, wasn't it?
 
Hehe.
@KitΘδς Nah not really. I don't know what the average age of death was, but probably around 65 or so?
 
My parents were almost 30 when they had me, and my mom tells me now that her doctors kept telling her she was rather old to be having her first child.
 
No probably 70.
@aediaλ Preposterous!
 
@Cerberus That old?
 
2:19 PM
@FallenAngelEyes Now I must look it up.
 
@FallenAngelEyes I wouldn't say it's "too young" but rather than "younger than average". But of course, I hang around with people like me, so there's probably a large dose of confirmation bias.
 
I think early to mid-twenties is common in the US, but getting older recently.
 
@Cerberus I was under the impression that life expectancy then was way younger.
@KitΘδς Yeah, that's what I've seen as well.
 
@FallenAngelEyes 65 is about 15 to 20 years younger than today
 
Of course, in my home state, which is poor and rural, we have lots and lots of teenage parents.
 
2:20 PM
@KitΘδς Yeah, that's another factor to take into consideration. I grew up in a very rural area, lots of farmers and working-class.
Not a lot to do, so weekend activities were usually underage drinking and unprotected sex.
 
@FallenAngelEyes Ugh it's complicated. At birth, it was 25 years.
 
@FallenAngelEyes Yep. Sounds familiar.
 
Guess what those usually combine to make!
 
@FallenAngelEyes I think it depends on how the infant deaths are averaged in, too. Like if you look at people that survived past 3 or something, the #s are way different. I can't remember where I read this, so I hope Cerberus knows ;)
 
@FallenAngelEyes Babies!
 
2:21 PM
Perhaps the average life expectancy I read was at the age of first child birth.
 
@aediaλ That's true!
 
@aediaλ You're absolutely right.
 
Yay I know a thing!
 
If you survived your teens, your life expectancy used to rise a great deal.
 
F'x
also, I heard that the average lifespan of a centenarian is quite high
 
2:24 PM
No way.
Certainly not over 100 years?
 
F'x
@Cerberus you wouldn't believe it
 
I mean, that's way old!
 
F'x
it's because of a guy named Bayes
I guess he develops all sorts of old-age medicine
 
Hah I know him.
 
I had sexual relations with him.
 
2:25 PM
By the way, can you tell me why Balzac thought it was a good idea to start his story with a 5+-page-long description of a house? And in French, too!
 
It was the butterflies what did it.
 
Oh, is there not a feed for site questions in the chat? I thought mine would pop up.
 
That is, I am at page 5, and he is still describing the house.
 
F'x
@Cerberus I can tell you why Balzac thought it was a good idea to write it in French; for the rest, no idea either
 
@FallenAngelEyes There is!
@Fx Hmm well I might have a clue as to that part myself.
@FallenAngelEyes Just post the bare link, no other text, in your line.
 
2:27 PM
Hi @Fx, I've heard you are a non-pingable person.
 
@Cerberus You misspelled isn't.
 
@aediaλ Oh, wait, I misinterpreted "feed".
Read too fast.
 
1
Q: Is there an American English equivalent of the British idiom "carrying coals to Newcastle"?

FallenAngelEyesI'm an American living in the Netherlands who is learning Dutch. There's an idiom in Dutch that describes performing a needless/futile activity, "water naar de zee dragen," which literally translates to "carrying water to the sea." My Dutch parents-in-law asked me if there was an English equivale...

 
@FallenAngelEyes There is not. I have mentioned it to Reg
 
@MattEllenД Yeah. I heard there was a feed in other rooms.
 
2:29 PM
@Cerberus Yeah, in the python room and the programmers room for sure
 
@Cerberus — Wait, there's food in other rooms? Where's ours?
 
@Robusto it's with your swag
 
@MattEllenД — Ah. The null set.
 
@Robusto I ate it.
 
@MattEllenД We have both our main site and our Meta site in Gaming chat.
 
2:30 PM
I would die if we had a feed.
 
Our most active users tend also to frequent chat, so it helps with question visibility as well as fast response to improve posts and cast close votes.
 
F'x
@FallenAngelEyes not by mere mortals, that is
 
@Cerberus NOOOOO!!!!!
 
@Cerberus If we ever have a feed, it should be full of chocolate.
 
@KitΘδς I mean, all those single-word requests!
 
2:31 PM
@aediaλ Meh. I'm a salty person by nature. Chocolate hurts my teeth.
 
@aediaλ that would require all the questions on EL&U to be "Chocolate?"
 
@aediaλ Yay!!
@KitΘδς Use special toothpaste.
 
@Cerberus Doesn't help. I need new teeth.
 
@MattEllenД Then we can answer "Yes, please," and die happy.
 
Really? Hmm.
@KitΘδς Do you have that with black chocolate too?
 
2:32 PM
@aediaλ :D
 
@Cerberus Dark chocolate. Yes, because of the holes in my teeth.
Now you all find me less attractive, I'm sure.
 
@KitΘδς Wait isn't "black" a chocolate term? sad face
@KitΘδς Everyone has holes.
2
 
@Cerberus Not to my knowledge.
@Cerberus ahem Excuse me?
 
F'x
@FallenAngelEyes in fact, you can ping me by reply to a random message of mine
 
@Fx Ah, like so?
 
2:34 PM
@Fx Like this?
 
F'x
@FallenAngelEyes yes
@KitΘδς yes
 
@Cerberus We say dark chocolate over here. Black coffee, dark chocolate, baking chocolate, milk chocolate, white chocolate...
 
> "Dark chocolate", also called "plain chocolate" or "black chocolate", is produced by adding fat and sugar to cocoa. It is chocolate with zero or much less milk than milk chocolate.
From Wiki. phew
 
@Cerberus you just edited into wiki
 
@Cerberus Huh, I've never heard the phrase "black chocolate"
 
2:35 PM
Hmm. Regional difference?
 
@KitΘδς Probably!
 
British vs. American maybe?
 
If only there were some place where we could ask...
 
@MattEllenД So? It's still on the Wiki!
 
@FallenAngelEyes not any British I know
 
2:35 PM
@KitΘδς But where?
 
Wait, you put that there? You bastard!
 
I don't know where I picked that up. It isn't Dutch.
@KitΘδς Hehe. I didn't but I could have!
I must add that I like my chocolate really dark, 80 %.
 
We say chocolat noir because it sounds fancier.
 
So it's almost black.
 
2:36 PM
I like 71%.
 
I never liked dark chocolate before I came here then I got hooked
 
@Cerberus Mmm.
 
Chocolate is that horrible sugary stuff.
 
80%-85% is yum
 
@FallenAngelEyes Excellent! Isn't it popular in America?
 
2:37 PM
Americans don't know how to make chocolate the right way.
 
Really?
 
'Struth.
 
Well many Dutchmen eat bad chocolate too.
 
What about Dutchwomen?
 
I don't know, they are inferior.
We hold them in pens.
Why?
 
2:38 PM
@Cerberus Ha ha ha. face punch
 
You expected uncomfortableness, didn't you!
 
@Cerberus Milk chocolate is way more popular in the US
 
I mean that affectionately.
 
@KitΘδς And I receive it that way.
 
@FallenAngelEyes Especially the yucky cheap waxy kinds.
 
2:40 PM
@FallenAngelEyes Hmm I see. Meh.
 
@Cerberus I don't believe you could keep Dutch women in pens, at least not for very long.
 
I don't understand why people eat chocolate at all if they want a dumbed down version.
@z7sgѪ Not after child birth.
Then they're just in the doghouse.
 
@Cerberus I don't enjoy the bitterness of 80%. I think 60% dark chocolate is good.
 
@Cerberus It that what you call your apartment?
 
@MattEllenД It should be a process that takes about a year, where you want stronger and stronger stuff and buy it a few percentage points stronger than the last time every week.
@KitΘδς Yes, but I'm not holding any women here.
 
2:43 PM
@Cerberus they're there of their own free will?
 
@MattEllenД They escaped when I had them knit through the night to finish an order in time.
 
well I guess that's something for the courts to decide
 
I have hostages so it won't come to that.
 
@Cerberus I liked it when it was wrong :D
 
@MattEllenД Haha what was wrong?
 
2:44 PM
@Cerberus night <- knit
 
Oh, heh, yes.
An odd typo.
 
Aren't you the one who is supposed to knit, and then claim it was your slave women who actually did it?
 
Is my first question okay? Is there any way I should improve it? I'm all paranoid now.
 
@FallenAngelEyes It's okay, calm down, you'll be alright.
 
flails
 
2:49 PM
I like it.
There is an expression. I've almost thought of it.
 
@KitΘδς That was my problem too. It was on the tip of my brain, but for the life of me, I can't think of anything.
 
@KitΘδς Shhhh nonsense!
 
I was going to say "selling snow to Eskimos" but it's already been done
 
In Dutch we also have "carry owls to Athena" (uilen naar Athene dragen).
 
@Cerberus That's adorable!
 
2:51 PM
is it also in Greek?
 
@MattEllenД Not that I know!
But could be.
 
@MattEllenД !!! That's the one I was thinking of! goes look at the answer list
 
@aediaλ Thanks! bows on behalf of Dutch language
 
@Cerberus Huh, I haven't heard that one, just the water one.
 
@FallenAngelEyes It is less common. Ask your boyfriend.
 
2:53 PM
@FallenAngelEyes I was also going to say "pissing in the wind" but that has different connotations
 
@Cerberus Hm, he hasn't heard that one.
 
@FallenAngelEyes Well it isn't very common. I think I only learned it at a later age.
Did you pronounce the ui correctly? Hehe.
 
@Cerberus Well, 3-headed dogs are quite old.
 
But they were once pups too!
 
"Er is een muis in het huis die uien eet."
I do my best. I do admit I'm a bit lazy sometimes when I speak quickly. :P
 
2:56 PM
@Cerberus I've never heard of it either.
 
One thing that I have a lot of difficulty with is the really subtle difference between "ie" and "ee." Jochem's mother has lived here for 45+ years now and says she still sometimes has to think about it.
Like mier and meer
 
That's pretty much the difference between a short and a long i sound.
 
@FallenAngelEyes Well ui is pronounced weird in many dialects too, so don't worry.
 
@FallenAngelEyes It's like herding cats.
 
@ArdaXi "ei" and "ij"?
 
2:58 PM
yes! good one
 
@ArdaXi And yet it exists! I know some people who use it regularly.
 
That's the one I was trying to think of.
 
@FallenAngelEyes No, i and ie.
 
@KitΘδς Ah ha!
 
The ee in meer are really just a long i sound.
 
2:59 PM
@FallenAngelEyes Those sound exactly the same.
 
@FallenAngelEyes Boy, you've gotten some fun answers to that question.
 
@Cerberus Yeah, I know, that's why I confused, lol.
@KitΘδς Haha, indeed.
 
@FallenAngelEyes -eer is like clear and here. -ier is probably rare in English, like a *fleeer, someone who flees.
 
That would be a fleer.
Not to be confused with a fleet.
 
Yeah... but then it doesn't look as neat.
 
3:07 PM
hey, did everybody else get the excavator badge today? i got it on two different sites
 
I did, and it was nonsense!
 
@JSBᾶngs Yes
 
to me fleer and clear sound the same
 
i now have exactly 40 silver badges and 80 bronze badges, which is pleasantly symmetric
 
That's why I tried it spell it with an extra e... but I'll have to find another word.
 
3:08 PM
@JSBᾶngs Yes.
 
@Cerberus it sounds to me like you're just talking about the difference between [i] and [i:]
 
@MattEllenД Fleer has a little hitch. Clear is perfectly elided.
 
@JSBᾶngs Are you never going to post another answer, to keep it at this?
 
@JSBᾶngs I am two days away from my first Gold badge!
 
@Cerberus unfortunately, i suspect that the ravages of people continuing to upvote my existing answers will ruin it
@KitΘδς congrats? is that the 100 consecutive days badge?
 
3:10 PM
@JSBᾶngs Yes. Fool's Gold.
 
@KitΘδς well, you'll have it before me. i'm only at 22 consecutive
 
@JSBᾶngs Rather /ɪə/ v. /iːə/.
 
@JSBᾶngs Not far from the Silver.
 
@KitΘδς That was a hard won badge for me, I had to make 3 attempts or more
 
@Cerberus so you meant "clear" in the british style. anyway
 
3:11 PM
@JSBᾶngs Same here! Ish.
 
@KitΘδς silver is at 30 days? i forget
 
@JSBᾶngs Most probably; but is that different in America? Let me think...
 
@JSBᾶngs yes: "Enthusiast", I must have got that the other day. I'm at 35 now
 
@JSBᾶngs I think so. I thought it was going to be my first silver, but I got a Good Answer (or Question) badge a few days before it.
 
All these badges are essentially not that cool. You know what's cool? Getting your picture on paper money.
 
3:13 PM
@KitΘδς well congrats or that, too
 
@Robusto Congrats!
 
@Cerberus those words don't have schwas in them in American (rhotic) english. "clear" is [kli:r]
i am sort of proud of being the first person on ELU to ever get Great Answer: english.stackexchange.com/badges/40/great-answer
of course Reg got it too, three days later
 
@JSBᾶngs Hmm when I listen to Forvo, I seem to hear the first American say /ɪə/ and the second /i:/ ? forvo.com/word/clear/#en
 
@JSBᾶngs Congratulations! That is a badge of distinction.
 
@JSBᾶngs Wowie! But you had such a catching opening drumroll!
And I picked up 22 votes on that same question with my mediocre answer, so I suppose I have you to thank for bringing the question to so many people's attention.
 
3:19 PM
All you people with gold badges... I have only one in the whole network.
 
@Cerberus falconfling has a typical American rhotic pronunciation. i'm currently doubting the placement of josephaw on the map, because that is not a normal standard american accent. it sounds like Australian to me, but it could also be Bostonian or one of the other non-rhotic american accents
 
@MrShinyandNew安宇 I have zero and proud of it!
 
@MrShinyandNew安宇 They are mostly undeserving! Except @JSBngs.
 
okay, this is weird. if you click through to josephaw's user page (forvo.com/user/josephaw) and listen to his recordings, it sounds like two different people to me. one uses a typical middle american accent, the other uses an Australian accent
 
@Cerberus With such high rep, it's inevitable that one of your older questions eventually gets enough up-votes
 
3:23 PM
@MrShinyandNew安宇 Oh dear. Then perhaps I should crappify it...
 
@JSBᾶngs only "there" sounds Aussie to me
 
@Cerberus in any case, falconfling is saying something like [klɪr]. there may be a transitional schwa in the movement from [ɪ] to [r], but that's not essential to the vowel
@z7sgѪ it's very likely that i'm misidentifying it. in any case, josephaw is not using a general american pronunciation there
 
Hmm it sounds complicated.
 
@Cerberus — Not yet.
 
@Robusto you need to finish your conquest of a small island nation first, i presume
 
3:26 PM
What does @Robusto think of this pronunciation of clear by Falconfling?: forvo.com/word/clear/#en
 
@JSBᾶngs or have a monopoly edition made in honour of you
 
The differences are too subtle for me to distinguish.
 
@Cerberus — That is 100% echt American.
 
Ah!
 
The other American sounds non-standard to me.
 
3:30 PM
@Cerberus yes, but the contention was that josephaw's pronunciation on that page is not general rhotic american, despite the fact that it's labeled as such
@Robusto yes, right
 
@JSBᾶngs Oh I confused those two: I agree 100 % that Joseph sounds Australian, that immediately struck me as Australian. I thought you were saying that the other guy sounded Australian in some subtle way I couldn't hear.
My bad.
But then I still don't hear the /i:/ in falcon's "clear".
 
@Cerberus That is definitely American pronunciation
 
@JSBᾶngs Sounds more English to me. Especially after you listen to falconfling
 
It's not just the rhotic /r/, it's the lack of gratuitous diphthonging in falconfling's pronunciation.
 
@FallenAngelEyes Yeah it was all a misunderstanding, I was listening to the wrong guy.
 
3:32 PM
Also, that is a really neat site.
 
Yup is is, and they have Dutch too.
 
I was just checking that, haha.
 
@Robusto Do you mean gratuitous lack of? Diphthongs are wholly necessary imo!
 
The Brit, and to a greater extent the Aussie, both replace the rhotic /r/ with a diphthong: clee-yuh.
@z7sgѪ — Well, thayunks for that data point.
 
@Robusto got a forvo of that I wanna hear it?
 
3:35 PM
@JSBᾶngs Okay I think I "agree" with you entirely now. The Brits have the schwa because they drop the r; but one could say some weak schwa is also heard in American clear. Dutch meer sounds much like American mere.
 
@Cerberus i concur with this
 
But Dutch has great variation in r sounds across dialects/accents.
 
@Cerberus as does english, as we've just demonstrated
 
@z7sgѪ — You hear it in the Southern states. No forvo, apparently. Hiatus maxime deflendus. (Or something like that. @Cerberus will sort you out.)
 
3:37 PM
@JSBᾶngs Yup! But Dutch variation per square km is greater, I believe.
@Robusto I don't know what that means but it looks wrong!
Ah, you've changed it, that's better.
 
@Cerberus It's crazy. I can't believe how many dialects and accents there are across such a small area.
 
A hiatus that should be blown out as much as possible?
 
like plat Haags
 
@FallenAngelEyes Yup! But don't American lower-class accents vary a great deal too across cities?
 
@Cerberus — "A want greatly to be deplored."
 
3:39 PM
@Cerberus I don't know if you can hear as strong a difference between someone from Buffalo and someone from Rochester as compared to Den Haag and Leiden.
 
@Cerberus BTW, it's war.
 
@Robusto Ah! Yes that sounds right. I have no objections.
 
britain has a dialectal density comparable to the neederlands, i believe. but no part of america or australia does. the only part of america that comes even close is new england
 
@FallenAngelEyes Hmm it could be that your cities have less tradition and hence less variation. They say that the variation of sounds in languages increases as one approaches Africa, the source of mankind.
@JSBᾶngs *Nederlands (language) / Nederland (country)
 
@Cerberus what makes you think i was speaking in dutch? :P
i should just go back to calling it dutchistan
 
3:42 PM
@JSBᾶngs What else could it have been?
 
@JSBᾶngs What about NYC's boroughs?
 
I have to go for a bit.
 
More to the point, what makes you think that he was speaking in the same accent?
 
Later!
 
@Cerberus bye. have fun whatever with you're doing
 
3:43 PM
Multas gratias tibi ago!
(Not sure that's correct.)
 
@FallenAngelEyes i'm not sure... there sure is a lot of linguistic diversity in a dense space there, but to compare apples to apples you'd have to compare it against london, and i'm pretty sure that london wins. in any case, NYC is an extreme outlier for the US on the dialectal diversity scale
 
@JSBᾶngs Hm, very true.
 
@Robusto Thank you for sharing.
 
4:03 PM
@KitΘδς np
 
4:38 PM
"I haven't got much credibility as a German" ~ Heike Finke
 
Gah! Now this is just unfair.
 
This is what 'Thursagen' was after eh?
Let's encourage people to bump old posts with pointless edits.
 
Yeah, for real.
Let's also encourage people not to edit stuff now, but let it rust for 6 months.
 
1 hour ago, by Robusto
All these badges are essentially not that cool. You know what's cool? Getting your picture on paper money.
 
Exactly, once you have the 'Strunk and White' there is no point in editing new posts now.
 
4:42 PM
Seriously, you can either top the charts, or you can have Archaeologist. But not both.
 
Jez
> Actually, it sounds to me like he says ['li.nəks] with an [i] in the first syllable, but I'd attribute that to his Finnish accent. I've never heard an English speaker use a vowel other than [ɪ] in this word.
Could someone tell me what the difference is between the IPA 'i' and the IPA 'ɪ'?
 
@RegDwightѬſ道 — Stop being nostalgic.
 
Jez
oh... 'i' is an eeeeeee sound
 
@Robusto Being nostalgic is my raison d'être.
 
@RegDwightѬſ道 — You misspelled "used to be" ...
 
4:44 PM
@Robusto Sorry. Used to be is my raison d'être.
 
@RegDwightѬſ道 — That's why we ... etc.
 
... go under these things?
 
@RegDwightѬſ道 — Through.
 
Nono, that's what mirrors are their four.
 
@FallenAngelEyes wild goose chase?
 
4:52 PM
@KitΘδς What who what?
 
@FallenAngelEyes I added wild goose chase to my answer.
As an idiom involving a futile activity.
 
@KitΘδς Oh! I thought you meant my post was, and I was like "Wait, but... I tried so hard!"
 
See?
 
@RegDwightѬſ道 You could get that badge too!
@Jez Yup! But now you're making it very long, so /i:/.
 
@Cerberus That's irritating.
 
4:55 PM
@KitΘδς What? The badge? I?
 
@Cerberus Um. Sure, I don't know. Whatever I was thinking at the time.
Oh. Lauren.
 
Ah.
 
Her job is to do that stuff, so she gets a sticker for it.
That's irritating.
I don't get treats for doing my job.
 
I tried to follow along with this conversation but once again, the room lives up to its name. Or else I've been fooling myself all along, and I can't actually read.
 
That's what my paycheck is for.
Aug 9 at 0:51, by random
This room was placed in timeout for 2 minutes; the topic of this room is "aka The Incomprehensible Room" - conversation should be limited to that topic.
 
4:57 PM
@MrShinyandNew安宇 There is a trick, you know: don't even try.
 
@Cerberus I guess I'm better at saying random things than I am at reading them. It LOOKS like there is a thread here. Must be pareidolia.
 

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