I love it when I'm in a tech meeting and I hear the words coming out of my mouth and it sounds like I actually know useful stuff.
"How do you track changes though?" "Well, I use a repository."
"So what do you mean when you say the build is the same on testing and production?" "Um, I write a script to deploy the changes from development to testing. If testing checks out, I use the same script to deploy to production."
Right straight from the Jeff Foxworthy Concordiance: ;-D
DULY -- one o' them big trucks with four tires on the rear.
"Johnny n' I went with Grampa in the ol' duly-truck fer a ride ta feed the horses."
Not an answer? I'm not sure as I can't tell what the hell it's about.
Olsen Brothers (Danish: Brødrene Olsen) are a Danish rock/pop music duo, and are brothers Jørgen (born 15 March 1950) and "Noller" (Niels, born 13 April 1954) Olsen. They formed their first band, The Kids, in 1965. The Kids warmed up for The Kinks in the K.B. Hallen in 1965 and released their first single in 1967.
Both Jørgen and Niels Olsen participated in the musical Hair in the Cirkusbygningen in Copenhagen March 1971, and went on tour afterwards through Denmark, Norway and Sweden.
The Olsen Brothers' first album came out in 1972. To date they have released 12 albums.
Their big hit ...
@KitFox which correspond to the planets in distance from the sun and for the days of the week it is that list mod 24 (so the first hour of the day if you cycle through all the planets.
But I want coke, just a different kind I want coke, won't break me down Won't brick me up, won't fence me in I want a coke that don't mean a thing, That's the coke I want, I want coke.
I always fear my conversation sounds like this:
— What would you like to drink, sir?
— I will take some cock, thanks.
— ROFL.
Any tips on how to pronounce Coke so it is not mistaken for anything? :)
We often use cool water.But can we use "cool water" or "cold water"? Which is correct.
Example: I drink cool water only.
people always like cool water.
In the above examples, instead of the word "cool", can we use "cold".
The decline of/in his morale was caused by a lot of factors that were once
fascinating to him.
I know decline of an emperor is commonly used, but I am confused between the idiomatic expression decline in and decline of. Which is more apt to use here?
I always heard cats and dogs hid in the ceilings and roofs of houses and when it rained all of the animals fell out onto the inside of the house... but since when have dogs gotten onto the roof?
How do they fall off the roof “onto the inside of the house”?
Yes many a times 't' becomes 'd' in American English. Example: t in computer. I am an Indian and English is not our native language but it's a borrowed language. I personally, follow British English in terms of language usage, pronunciation, accent, & sentence construction, since I consider it t...
> the made up beauty of American accent is no match to the natural and original beauty of southern British accent. To my ears it's music, whereas American accent is an intolerable noise..
There’s something annoyingly self-fulfilling about the way the likelihood of rep=1 first-answer being utter crap goes up proportionately with the number of views the question has.
Then again, it’s already pretty high to begin with.
That's the whole point of rep though. If you only have 1 point you probably don't know what you're doing. Especially since we've long outgrown the initial SO crowd who came here from the podcasts
Mick Jagger is mocking you. So, apparently, is someone named Andy Glass.
Oh, sorry, I didn't realize it was actual depictions of women hurting themselves. Bad. I just picked the first version of that Stones song I found on YouTube.
@KitFox Yeah, I know, right? There are a lot of bands that I forget I really like. And then suddenly you hear them in some other context and you think, "Fuck, why don't I listen to these guys more?"