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02:07
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Korean character in title, mostly non-Latin body, mostly non-Latin title, blacklisted user: 카톡 br987 포천 출장안마-포천 출장만남-포천 출장마사지-포천 출장서비스카톡 br987 24시간 문의주세요 by yev4a on ell.SE
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Korean character in title, mostly non-Latin body, mostly non-Latin title: 8문의 카톡 Br987 전국 출장만남 출장안마 출장마사지 출장샵 출장서비스카톡 br987 by lsqfsgzaoa on ell.SE
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Korean character in title, mostly non-Latin body, mostly non-Latin title: 9문의 카톡 Br987 전국 출장만남 출장안마 출장마사지 출장샵 출장서비스카톡 br987 by peyrnha on ell.SE
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Korean character in title, mostly non-Latin body, mostly non-Latin title: 0문의 카톡 Br987 전국 출장만남 출장안마 출장마사지 출장샵 출장서비스카톡 br987 by whpna on ell.SE
03:15
Kim Jong Un attacks?
03:28
Useless research fact of the day:
> Experiments showed that VMHvl cells actively transmitting signals, or "firing," while females were mating were not the same cells firing when they were fighting. But in male mice, many of the same cells were firing during both activities. Further analysis showed that males had a mixed spatial distribution of the VMHvl cells involved in either behavior.
> In females, the cells involved in fighting were arranged along the center of the VMHvl, while those involved in mating were distributed along its borders.
 
1 hour later…
04:40
Word of the Day: cates (tasty things, dainty food)
 
1 hour later…
05:57
Hello
06:54
@CowperKettle Kimchi tastes terrible, lol.
 
5 hours later…
11:47
@CowperKettle I guess that would be the poem of the day.
 
1 hour later…
12:49
@CowperKettle Oh, notice that weird character in the word Blessed and season, ſ; it's the long s.
13:12
@userr2684291 Do you need to queue today?
 
2 hours later…
14:48
Nope.
 
4 hours later…
19:01
Very quiet room today.
Anonymous
19:40
Time to make some noise!
20:07
HAHAHA
20:19
@snailplane Did you catch any snails yesterday?
Anonymous
No, they were too clever for me. I couldn't find any.
20:44
Can appeal be used in a mathematical context in this manner: an appeal to the [proposition] S will be enough to prove...?
Really not sure what else to use without sounding informal.
21:13
@userr2684291 I don't know about that, but why not just say 'Using this, we can prove that'?
21:27
@snailplane Maybe wait till it rains, then they will all come to the surface.
21:40
@Jasper I didn't know snails bury themselves.
21:54
@userr2684291 I didn't know that either, Iol. Don't know why I said that, lol.
@Jasper Maybe slugs do; they're shell-less.
@userr2684291 What are you trying to write? Sometimes, we forget that the simplest words are the best, lol.
@Jasper I didn't want to say use but consult.
But I managed to find a book in which appeal was employed in the above manner.
@userr2684291 I think use is the best word there, lol.
@Jasper I've shipped it already, haha.
22:01
@userr2684291 Oh I see, you shipped my Christmas present to me, lol.
@Jasper Yeah, nah.
Oh, Christmas is soon.
Yes, perhaps my miracle will come soon.
@Jasper What's that?
@userr2684291 I was just referring to getting well. =D
Mhm.
I really enjoy Christmas songs.
22:08
Maybe I will sing some for you, lol.
I want to sing Ama Credi E Vai as well, but it sounds terrible without any music accompanying.
@userr2684291 Did you watch Good Will Hunting?
@Jasper No.
@userr2684291 At least you watched A Beautiful Mind, lol.
@Jasper Heh, yeah.
Now I'm looking for those old Christmas choir songs.
22:24
@userr2684291 Ave Maria is not a Christmas song, but I like both the Bach and Schubert versions.
Anonymous
@userr2684291 Slugs certainly do. So do snails.
Anonymous
Depends on the particular gastropod, though. Some snails live all their lives in trees, or in underwater caves. The ground snails around here love to dig, though.
Anonymous
The ground in some places might be a bit too hard for them to do it, but if they can, they love to dig little holes.
@snailplane You sound like an expert on snails!
Anonymous
Most ground snails dig holes to lay their eggs, and sometimes they dig for other reasons. I've had some snails that don't like digging unless they're going to lay eggs, and others that dig all the time.
Anonymous
22:28
@Jasper I know a bit about snails :-)
@snailplane After all, you are a snail, LOL
Anonymous
Most people probably just don't find snails as fascinating as I do, so they don't spend as much time watching them or reading about them. I have pet snails I take care of, too.
Anonymous
But I wouldn't say I'm a snail expert. Just that I spend more time on snail-related stuff than most people.
Expert is not well-defined, lol.
Interesting. Well, they just hadn't struck me as the digging sort, I suppose.
@Jasper I didn't know there were two versions in the first place. I mostly listen to Chopin, Debussy, and Strauss, but sometimes also the artists from the Wiener Klassik period.
22:44
@userr2684291 Do you play any instruments, and do you sing?
@userr2684291 There are actually many more versions, I am afraid, LOL.
@Jasper No.
I am going to sleep, good night!
I tried it (the clavier) and just didn't really like it.
I was in a choir when I was a kid, but when my voice began to mutate I stopped going.
23:07
@Jasper This is what I was looking for: youtube.com/watch?v=d1lUmBNLa2k; it's called God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen.
> The transitive use of the verb rest in the sense "to keep, cause to continue to remain" is typical of 16th to 17th century language (the phrase rest you merry is recorded in the 1540s). Etymonline.com notes that the first line "often is mis-punctuated" as "God rest you, merry gentlemen" because in contemporary language, rest has lost its use "with a predicate adjective following and qualifying the object" (Century Dictionary). This is the case already in the 1775 variant, and is also reflected by Dickens' replacement of the verb rest by bless in his 1843 quote of the incipit as "God bless
Rest merry, everyone.
I forgot to ask – how do I punctuate questions which don't end on a question-like note? Can I put a question mark where I think the actual question ends and continue writing in lowercase, then terminate the sentence with a period?

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