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12:07 AM
He had a fake diploma but was nevertheless trained before actually flying passenger planes:
> Determined not to give up on aviation, in 2008, Taras Shelest got a job as a steward at a small private airline. A year later, after learning that the company was hiring pilots, he went to management and applied for a job. He apparently managed to get his hands on a fake aviation university diploma, and after passing all the company’s tests, he enrolled in a training program for Yak airplanes.
He eventually got a job as a co-pilot for the small airline, but he wanted more. After hearing that a larg
 
Apparently piloting is not extremely difficult.
 
12:42 AM
@CowperKettle I think that is much like various similar problems: people answer based on what they feel is suggested, not just the more explicit content.
Option A can be read as, "she is a bank teller and not active in the feminist movement".
And there are other possible readings.
Which would be reasonable in a normal linguistic context.
So the question presupposes an unusual linguistic context.
 
 
1 hour later…
We all know the only correct way.
First by colour then height.
 
I'm using a special tone of voice when speaking with cats. A kind of baby talk.
I only talk to them seriously when I'm leaving the apartment, and they remain there alone. I pick one and tell him seriously that he will be the senior cat for the duration, and he must be in charge, and keep things in order.
 
Does he?
 
2:37 AM
You guys sort your books?
 
3:14 AM
> Me: I'm not saying a word without my lawyer present.
Cop: You ARE the lawyer.
Lawyer: So where’s my present?
@Cerberus Yes
@M.A.R. No
 
3:42 AM
@M.A.R. I don't, not really.
The way I organise my books is, some parts of some shelves have some books that are vaguely similar.
 
 
1 hour later…
4:55 AM
 
5:15 AM
Nice.
 
5:54 AM
@Mitch I never bothered to think difference between them. I speak Darwin and Kevin same.
> /v/ is pronounced with the top teeth biting the bottom lip. /w/ is produced with rounded lips.
So this is the difference?
When I used it for Darwin, I feel like I'm native speaker. Now I know the difference.
 
 
2 hours later…
7:49 AM
 
8:09 AM
> Russia may be preparing to leave Zaporizhzhia plant, nuclear chief says
 
#Worldle #311 1/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐⭐
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
Met twee vingers in de neus!
 
Nice expression.
Niece of Iran's supreme leader recorded a video statement and was arrested for it.
 
8:53 AM
A deep learning system trained on thousands of images of 'normal' brains saw more 'male' features in autistic brains.
Of course, the accuracy of this research could be judged only by a super-learned specialist.
 
9:34 AM
Daily Octordle #308
9️⃣🔟
🕚5️⃣
7️⃣6️⃣
🕛8️⃣
Score: 68
octordle.com
 
10:02 AM
Daily Octordle #308
🔟5️⃣
6️⃣7️⃣
8️⃣9️⃣
🕚3️⃣
Score: 59
octordle.com
 
10:26 AM
Fun facts: "To win hands down" translates to Gagner haut la main (to win high-the-hand) while "To win with one hand tied behind the back" translates to Gagner les doigts dans le nez (To win with the fingers in the nose).
 
 
2 hours later…
12:35 PM
In five Russian cities, authorities ordered the placement of street signs with directions to the nearest air raid shelters.
 
1:32 PM
 
1:44 PM
@jlliagre The French Wiktionary says that it's due to a rider holding the reigns high when wishing to stop a horse. Interesting. fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/haut_la_main
Thanks to Google Translate, of course.
I wonder if gagner is cognate with English gain
> to gain a battle; to gain a case at law
 
1:57 PM
A nice movie
 
2:11 PM
> Diane Keaton: "I guess you could say, I'm half saint, half whore..." -- Woody Allen: "Here's hoping I get the half that eats."
A bit cryptic.
> The term brandy is a shortening of the archaic English brandewine or brandywine, which was derived from the Dutch word brandewijn, itself derived from gebrande wijn, which literally means "burned wine".
 
@CowperKettle Brandywine is a river in LOTR.
 
@CowperKettle In French gain (noun: profit, success, victory) comes from gagner (verb: to win, to earn). Both gave the English "gain" which can be either a verb or a noun.
 
2:34 PM
@FaheemMitha Yes, I also thought that I heard the name somehwere in LOTR ))
@jlliagre Oh, great! This makes it understandable.
> For while the tired waves, vainly breaking
Seem here no painful inch to gain,
Far back through creeks and inlets making,
Comes silent, flooding in, the main.
(Churchill's favorite poem)
LOL. And the Russian translation is superb, too.
 
Wordle 527 4/6

🟨🟩⬜⬜⬜
⬜🟨⬜⬜⬜
🟩⬜⬜🟩⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

I didn't know that word.
 
#Worldle #311 1/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐⭐
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
Got lucky with the flag.
🌎 Nov 28, 2022 🌍
🔥 89 | Avg. Guesses: 5.49
🟨🟨🟧🟩 = 4

#globle
Daily Quordle 308
4️⃣7️⃣
8️⃣5️⃣
quordle.com
 
3:01 PM
#Worldle #311 4/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟨➡️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟨⬇️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟨⬅️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐⭐
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
I knew the flag, from the motto of that guy who was overthrown.
The motto announced by him repeated the colors of the flag.
And it rhymes both in their language and in English.
But that did not help him. He was deposed.
 
Another murder happened in India where a son and mother cut the husband into 22 pieces and put in fridge.
 
Horrible.
 
@CowperKettle I failed.
 
There was a Chinese concubine who became Empress of China. She murdered the previous Chief Wife of Emperor, and ordered her body to be cut into pieces and put into a barrel with wine.
 
Flag? Do you guys see flag of that country on the page? 🤔
I never noticed.
 
3:05 PM
@Vikas You need to do the bonus rounds.
 
Wu Zetian (17 February 624 – 16 December 705), also known as Wu Zhao or Wu Hou, and during the later Tang dynasty as Tian Hou, was the de facto ruler of China from 665 to 705, ruling first through others and then (from 690) in her own right. From 665 to 690, she was first empress consort of the Tang dynasty (as wife of the Emperor Gaozong) and then, after his death, empress dowager (ruling through her sons Emperors Zhongzong and Ruizong), which had occurred before in China. Unprecedented in Chinese history, she subsequently ruled as empress regnant of the Wu Zhou dynasty of China from 690 to 705...
 
@Robusto How?
 
She afterwards moved the Chinese capital to a different city, in order to avoid seeing the ghosts of the people she killed.
 
@Vikas When you locate the country in question you'll get a "Share" button and also a bonus button. Go back and look.
 
Russia did not even exist, and there was an ancient empire in China. The first emperor ruled exactly 1000 years before her.
 
3:07 PM
Daily Quordle 308
6️⃣7️⃣
8️⃣4️⃣
quordle.com
🌎 Nov 28, 2022 🌍
🔥 1 | Avg. Guesses: 6.69
🟥🟥🟧🟥🟩 = 5

#globle
 
What if humanity spreads to several planets. Nobody will be able to remember even a very abridged history of humanity. Too many events.
 
@Robusto I think I couldn't guess it today so it's not visible to me. I see only SHARE button. I'll see tomorrow.
 
Yeah, you have to solve the first puzzle to get subsequent ones.
 
@CowperKettle Then we'll have a Special Mercury Operation.
From Earth.
@Robusto Oh. So flag is not for hint but rather a bonus puzzle? I thought it is hint for current puzzle.
 
Pebble in the Sky is a science fiction novel by American writer Isaac Asimov, published in 1950. This work is his first novel — parts of the Foundation series had appeared from 1942 onwards in magazines, but Foundation was not published in book form until 1951. The original Foundation books are also a string of linked episodes, whereas this is a complete story involving a single group of characters. == Publication history == Pebble in the Sky was originally written in the summer of 1947 under the title "Grow Old with Me" for Startling Stories, whose editor Sam Merwin, Jr. had approached Asimov...
Azimov has this book in which Earth is a forgotten world in a huge multiplanetary empire.
I liked it as a kid.
 
3:14 PM
@CowperKettle Enemy country could partition it into two parts.
 
@Vikas YEs, but the eastern part was almost empty and barren
They built outposts there, and trading stations.
Once a detachment of Roman soldiers got lost there, and remained to live in a settlement.
Probably the only time an actual ancient Roman met an ancient Chinaman
Or maybe it was only a rumor.
> There is a myth that some of the modern-day residents of Zhelaizhai (now Liqian village,[3] in Jiaojiazhuang township)[4] are descendants of a group of Roman soldiers that were never accounted for after being captured in the Battle of Carrhae.
Liqian (simplified Chinese: 骊靬; traditional Chinese: 驪靬; pinyin: Líqián; Wade–Giles: Li-ch'ien) was a county established during the Western Han dynasty and located in the south of modern Yongchang County, Jinchang, in Gansu province of Northwest China. The Western Han inhabitants of the county had migrated to the area from western regions. The county was renamed Liqian (力乾) during the Northern Wei dynasty and disestablished during the Sui dynasty, becoming part of Fanhe County. There is a myth that some of the modern-day residents of Zhelaizhai (now Liqian village, in Jiaojiazhuang township) are...
> However, eminent Chinese authorities, modern genetic studies, and archaeologists have debunked this theory.
 
3:28 PM
Today's front page story
> We've learned why the Yekaterinburg woman killed her newborn and threw it into a dumpster
> The family had nowhere to house the baby.
> The family of four lives in a single room.
She has been given a lenient sentence and remained free.
Russia's top 1% richest people own more than half of everything.
 
3:57 PM
@jlliagre I'm having trouble with #7 in Octordle. I have three letters placed correctly, but I can't figure out what single letter is going to solve it.
 
@Vikas That's one big difference. The other difference is that /v/ is a fricative and /w/ is a glide or semivowel. Or to say it another way, /w/ is not a fricative at all. ('/' is the delimiter for IPA, but that happens to match the usual pronunciation of English letters for 'w' and 'v').
See also a synonym of semivowel:approximant. TLDR Approximants/semivowels are sort of halfway between fricatives and vowels.
@CowperKettle Which one was that? I don't recognize it.
 
@Mitch Love and Death (1975)
 
@Vikas 'wet' and 'vet' are very different in US English
@CowperKettle I've never even heard of that one!
 
@Mitch I previously only came across a short piece on Youtube
 
I used to think that Woody Allen was great. He did things that no one else was doing. But so much bad stuff has come out about him that it is difficult to say that.
 
4:04 PM
@Mitch Seriously? How did that one escape you?
 
@Mitch Sexual abuse?
 
@Robusto It's hard to explain why someone doesn't know something.
 
@Mitch - I saw this excerpt, and long wanted to see the whole movie
 
@CowperKettle Yes. He already had a questionable history because he married his step-daughter (which one could explain away by saying the step-daughter was consenting adult when it happened and it only is a problem with the infidelity to the mother (Mia Farrow), but the child abuse of some of the other children is pretty damning.
@CowperKettle Oh... -that's- where the 'jejune' thing come from.
 
If you were alive
In '75
You saw with no joy
Woody Allen's Tolstoy
 
4:10 PM
@Mitch I'm not sure there was abuse.
When such big money are at stake. I downloaded a movie about Michael Jackson, but then deleted it. I was not sure that he was molesting them either.
 
Daily Octordle #308
🔟4️⃣
5️⃣7️⃣
9️⃣6️⃣
🕛8️⃣
Score: 61
octordle.com
Finally. I fooled myself into thinking a single letter solved the puzzle.
 
Because so many Jackson fans are adamantly pro-Jackson still. They must have scrupulously researched everything.
Or maybe it's not fans, but the companies that inherit his rights to music.
 
@CowperKettle It's hard to know for certain.
@CowperKettle There were numerous law suits and investigations against Michael Jackson all starting from accusations by parents, but none of them held up in court (none of the evidence was verified I think?). But then after the last court case finished, two of the (former) children made a movie, bringing up new accusations.
 
@Mitch Yes, I saw the beginning of the movie, and started being doubtful. Started googling. Then I thought that I don't have months that I would need to research the story.
And without scrupulously researching the story, I don't believe the movies.
There is too much money involved, and too many crazy fans.
So it's totally unclear to a non-fan person.
 
4:20 PM
Actually this is a better version of the video:
 
@CowperKettle Knowledge is hard to get out of these gossipy things.
 
Michael Jackson seemed a bit odd to me, and I never especially listened to him. I loved his videoclip "Black or White" when it came up on the TV.
It's great.
 
"Michael Jackson seemed a bit odd to me": I think that's it in a nutshell of why he was accused so often.
 
And I did not understand the lyrics much, but "black and white" I understood.
 
@CowperKettle famous in computer graphics for its use of the 'morphing' technique.
 
4:28 PM
Yes
 
@Robusto Yes, the seventh word was the trickiest for me too. I didn't know it. I tried everything that sounded plausible English until that one was accepted. I discovered later that it comes from French but a change prevents it to be identifiable. Etymonline: The terminal letter in the English word is not explained.
 
@Robusto I'll try to understand what he says ))
Some phrases are hard to get.
 
@CowperKettle I can barely understand song lyrics even when they're written out.
but it's about race
the video makes that clear
 
@CowperKettle Yeah, he has an AAVA (African-American Vernacular Accent).
 
4:44 PM
> Soldier : This is Vichinsky! He was from my village. He was the village idiot.
Boris : Yeah, what did you do, place?
I don't get it.
 
@CowperKettle You need more context, but "place" means coming in second in a horse race: win, place, and show equate to first, second, and third.
 
@Robusto Ah! That might be it.
 
@Mitch Watched. Moral?
 
@Cerberus splutters
 
Yes, thank you! I would never have guessed. I thought it was some typo in the subtitles.
Never knew that "place" meant "second prize".
 
4:53 PM
Um...extremely broad vague genre first, then by size, then something about color (though similar color isn't always the rule, you can just have pleasing colors next to each other, or a rainbow, or sometimes books have boring cover art or you've lost the dust cover and the actual cover is dull red or brown).
And of course, I don't follow any of this. maybe a very vague genre
but now that I look at them and try to extract what the rule is it is most likely just size (height)
 
Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles, more commonly known simply as Jeanne Dielman (French pronunciation: ​[ʒan dilman vɛ̃ntʁwɑ ke dy kɔmeʁs milkatʁəvɛ̃ bʁysɛl], "Jeanne Dielman, 23 Commerce Quay, 1080 Brussels") is a 1975 drama film by Belgian filmmaker Chantal Akerman. It is a slice of life portrayal of the life of a housewife.Upon its release, critic Louis Marcorelles called it the "first masterpiece of the feminine in the history of the cinema". It has become a cult classic and was the 19th-greatest film of the 20th century in a critics poll conducted by The Village Voice. In...
I once tried to watch this.
It might be a great historical document, but there's only a woman living her life in an apartment. That's all.
 
@CowperKettle Reading that image, it's not a natural use of 'place' (it took me a few moments to figure out what was intended and even then it didn't really make total sense comparing to the village idiot... you'd expect some invocation of comparison over a dimension and 'village idiot' is usually just a stand alone 'that one guy', rather than just the dumbest along a continuum of dumb.
 
@Mitch It does seem awkward there, but what else could it mean?
 
But yes, 'win place show' is 1st 2bd 3rd in horse races. (which doesn't pop into your mind so quickly in that strange syntax 'What did you do, place?'
@Robusto Sure, but those are all infelicities that I trip over into extracting the intention. Even when it can't be something else... there's so much more doubt.
 
That's why I thought it needed more context, but there was none.
You need to set up the horse-race metaphor somehow.
 
5:02 PM
@CowperKettle Was it just boring or what?
 
@Mitch I scrolled it, then deleted.
 
@Vikas Moral for who? Different opinions (no one mentioned size!) ... I think they could all agree that it's a personal decision if it is your own set of books.
For a bookstore or library, you definitely need a system (essentially a refined genre/hierarchical based one (like Library of Congress or Dewey Decimal).
@CowperKettle They say it's top 20 of the 20th c. I'm just wondering if it is worthwhile bothering to try to watch.
 
For 99.99999% of people, it's not worth bothering. For historians, maybe.
Maybe if you meditate for a month in the woods, alone, and then take some hallucinogen, and watch it in the middle of the night, it might lead to some thoughts.
Otherwise, it's boring.
 
5:22 PM
@Mitch Awkhay!
 
@CowperKettle 3 1/2 hours... I started to nod off just typing that
oh... also 'the genre is ... slow cinema'
Why don't they just say outright 'This movie will bore you to tears.'
@CowperKettle Maybe just do that and not even bother with the movie
It kinda sounds like 'Belle de Jour'?
 
5:42 PM
Nice actors.
Bullets Over Broadway is a 1994 American black comedy crime film directed by Woody Allen, written by Allen and Douglas McGrath and starring an ensemble cast including John Cusack, Dianne Wiest, Chazz Palminteri and Jennifer Tilly. The film was nominated for seven Academy Awards, including Allen and co-writer Douglas McGrath for Original Screenplay, Allen for Director, Wiest & Tilly for Supporting Actress and Palminteri for Supporting Actor. Wiest won Best Supporting Actress for her performance, the second time Allen directed her to an Academy Award. It is considered one of Allen's best works....
I wonder if it's good.
> His daily writing routine could last as long as 15 hours, and he could focus and write anywhere necessary. Dick Cavett was amazed at Allen's capacity to write: "He can go to a typewriter after breakfast and sit there until the sun sets and his head is pounding, interrupting work only for coffee and a brief walk, and then spend the whole evening working."
 
6:06 PM
Word of the day: mieskeit (ugly person)
Noun: mieskeit (plural mieskeits)
  1. (chiefly Jewish, slang) An ugly person.
 
@CowperKettle A river in the Shire, I think.
@CowperKettle Where is this quote from?
 
@FaheemMitha Wikipedia article about Randolph Churchill
 
@CowperKettle Oh.
 
6:37 PM
@Mitch Hehe. Then what's your ordering?
 
Word of the hour: to keep someone on the hop
> "Having six kids definitely keeps you on the hop, but I wouldn't have it any other way."
 
I've seen that.
Especially in that context...
People tell themselves that, whatever they got, it is the best thing despite x y z.
 
6:52 PM
@CowperKettle Cf. to keep someone hopping, to keep someone jumping/on the jump.
 
> The ploughman hears its humming rage begin,
And hies for shelter from his naked toil;
Buttoning his doublet closer to his chin,
He bends and scampers o'er the elting soil
Elting soil probably means "begriming soil", "soil which makes him dirty"
@Robusto I loved to prepare Hopping John some 12 years ago
Hoppin' John, also known as Carolina peas and rice, is a peas and rice dish served in the Southern United States. It is made with cowpeas (mainly, Black-eyed peas, Sea Island red peas in the Sea Islands and Iron and clay peas in the Southeast US) and rice, chopped onion, and sliced bacon, seasoned with salt. Some recipes use ham hock, fatback, country sausage, or smoked turkey parts instead of bacon. A few use green peppers or vinegar and spices. Smaller than black-eyed peas, field peas are used in the South Carolina Lowcountry and coastal Georgia; black-eyed peas are the norm elsewhere. In the...
 
 
1 hour later…
8:33 PM
@Cerberus Looking at my own set it's a mix of chaos and temporality and genre. eg what's right next to me is the latest books I've gotten plus some older ones that I definitely open up for reference (the latest = < 5 years, up to ... a couple weeks ago). then a book shelf a little further away is a mix of older textbooks and recent ones. And then in the basement, a mix of old textbooks and novels I read when younger. And then in the bedroom, mostly fiction, paperbacks and random things.
which makes me think of my bookcase when I was a kid which is long gone, which just went away when my mom moved to a more manageable apartment.
So if I have to blame anything for my missing knowledge of Tolkien it is my mother's relocation... those books are all in some landfill.
You may reasonably ask where my 2nd and third copies of the Silmarillion and LotR and The Dispossessed and Dead Souls are.
sigh
I don't know where those are.
There are several classes of mutually exclusive book titles:
- books at the public library (books at your school's library are a subset)
- books at a university library
- books at a university bookstore (ie not just textbooks)
- books at a commercial bookstore (that thing that existed before Amazon? where you walk in and have actual physical books that you can touch?)
- books at a rare/used bookstore
- books in my pocket
- books in a foreign language
These are for the most part entirely mutually exclusive...you will not find the books in any of the others.
There are some very minor exceptions for extreme outliers
Like Harry Potter, you might find a copy at the public library and at a commercial bookstore. or a 5 inch thick manual for Dreamweaver 8 for Websites at the used bookstore and a commercial bookstore.
But both of those might as well be in the trash. So I don't count them.
@Cerberus You should be grateful. It could be a lot worse. It could be x,y,z, -and- w.
 
9:49 PM
If angina can kill your heart, can engina kill your car?
 
10:07 PM
@robusto I don't get it :-( Something to do with engine?
Engina turbinella is a species of small sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pisaniidae. == Description == == Distribution == == References ==
A turbo engine.
 
@jlliagre Yes. A joke. Like your engine has angina -> engina.
 
10:20 PM
@Robusto Thanks.
 
What is another word for allowing [a professional] to take some sort of [privileges, leniencies, risks, allowances, decision making] ? (asking here before making a full Q&A for it)
Something along the lines of "artistic privileges" or "artistic leanings". Specifically I'm asking for a work of art to be produced, providing some constraints but allowing the artist to stretch as needed for the purpose of the artistic endeaver
 
10:37 PM
@Eddie Professional discretion, perhaps?
 
@Robusto That could work! Could you post it as an answer here: english.stackexchange.com/questions/599102
 
@Mitch How odd.
Your libraries and shops have only books in English?
Ours have books in tons of languages.
I won't comment on Harry Potter.
@Eddie Or artistic licence? Artistic freedom?
 
@Cerberus In a big-box store (Barnes and Noble?), there will always be a section on language learning, but as far as my imagination goes, I don't think there are -any- actual non-teaching language books that are in a foreign language.
 
That's absurd.
 
@Cerberus You've said enough already.
 
10:45 PM
And I do not believe it.
 
@Cerberus And yet, there it is.
 
@Cerberus Also great options. Maybe I posted too soon =). Thanks for your help.
 
I'm if I consulted any catalogue of a major university library, it would have tons of books in languages other than the native language, anywhere in the world.
 
@Eddie There, done.
 
@Cerberus I'm trying to think hard (yes yes I know I might hurt myself that way) but I can't imagine -any- foreign texts.
 
10:47 PM
@Robusto Thank you =). I'm going to let it ride for a bit to see what comes up. But definitely have given you an upvote =) Thank you!
 
Maybe @Robusto or @tchrist can give counterexamples or refute me entirely, but in my experience foreign language books just don't get sold in US book stores.
I'm thinking that maybe at the Harvard Coop bookstore (on Harvard square, therefore a bastion of US intellectualtude) there might be on level 3, in the back, a shelf of Loeb classics, that small library of classics with the original Greek or Latin on one page and the English translation on the other. Maybe some are interlinear?
 
@Mitch Not in regular bookstores, but when I was studying Japanese there were some Japanese culture bookstores in Manhattan and Chicago and San Francisco and L.A. that had learning paraphernalia, including books. There were also university bookstores, of course. But I got my kanji flash cards at a shop in Manhattan.
 
The Loeb is hardly small.
 
@Cerberus Oh sure, university libraries in the US are multilingual. I thought you were concerned about commercial bookstores.
 
> - books at a university library
 
10:52 PM
@Cerberus "Your libraries and shops have only books in English?" I interpreted 'shops' to be relating to commercial bookstores, not university ones.
 
It's your list.
 
@Cerberus Individual volumes are small. and the series fills two bookshelves at most.
 
At any rate, I have learned to distrust statements like, "x is never seen in y".
2
And you are far from excepted.
@Mitch Hardly small for a series of books.
It defeats Tolkien or Harry Potter.
 
@Cerberus you've obviously never heard or experienced hyperbole from me before.
 
That I'll give you.
Provided that you pronounce it hyperbo-lee.
 
10:54 PM
@Cerberus "that small library of classics" is a similar trope to "the smallest giant"
 
This match is being played at the Hyper Bowl.
 
What library of classics is much larger?
The Teubner?
I don't know, but I'd expect them to be of similar size?
And the French one, I forget its name.
 
@Cerberus Many things defeat both Harry Potter and Tolkien, but may I controversially suggest -not- in editorial intervention, which both needed.
@Robusto That's the epi tome of sports ball
 
Nascite in le Regno Unite in le seculo 18, le football es un sport collective que se joca con un balla. On joca in un campo de herba con un goal in cata latere curte e cata equipa (de 11 jocatores) debe mandar le balla in le goal del adversario. Le tracto distinguente de isto joco es que le jocatores (excepte le goalkeeper) non pote usar su manos o bracios. Le partito se joca in duo "medie tempores" de 45 minutas. Le football es le sport le plus popular del mundo, e le maxime evento mundial del football es le Cuppa del mundo, le evento sportive le plus viste del mundo. == Le natura del joco... ==
 
I praesume there will be several copies of some books?
 
10:58 PM
@Cerberus nice. -three- very full shelves.
 
Three shelves?
 
I see three bookshelves... are there more
 
Book cases.
 
Cripes...I knew that there was another word.
 
Each having 6+ shelves.
And there is the table with lots of books in and on it.
@Mitch Don't worry, this is the English room, where you may be advised by non-native speakers.
 
11:00 PM
oh...there's the obvious other bookshelving strategy... a hidden row of books behind another row.
 
Each shelf in that picture might have two rows, who knows!
 
@Cerberus That's not a viable book shelving strategy.
 
Tell that to the shop!
Burn it.
Or burn their strategy.
 
That's like cutting your bagels vertically. It's just not considered sane.
 
If you can find the shelf on which the volumes of their strategy are kept.
 
11:02 PM
@Cerberus I think with Loeb I have seen exactly that. The books, being pocket book sized, could easily fit two deep on those shelves.
Unfortunately removing a sleeping place for the bookstore cats.
 
They could pull out the books.
 
@Cerberus If there's a big enough store, I go to the section of bibliographies, and check to see if they mention themselves.
@Cerberus That's a bit too much physical labor to expect of a cat. They would totally push off some of those books on the table, just to see them fall.
 
Comme ça.
@Mitch And in a library?
@Mitch That, too!
 
@Cerberus What idiot put those scarves there?
 
He knows to leave one.
 
11:07 PM
@Cerberus A big university library will have the book of all books that don't list themselves. I'm fine with that.
 
Is that possible?
 
@Cerberus It's all about comfort.
 
Where is God's knowledge of the entire universe stored?
 
@Cerberus It just -is- man. It just is.
 
Is where?
 
11:10 PM
@Cerberus Of course it's possible.
As long as you don't mind if it has a few typos.
@Cerberus OK cripes. It's over there, behind the ... yeah just go a little further... yep yep just a couple steps more...
 
<you fall off>
 
🎉 haha surprise party! 🎉
 
Noooo...
 
You weren't expecting that.
Happy Birthday!
So how old are you now?
 
I don't want to turn 40 yet!
It's still months off.
 
11:13 PM
Don't answer that!
@Cerberus Oh. See! It really was a surprise for you then.
 
I think I'll go cut my hair to look younger now.
 
Now if it had been your actually birthday within this week or last, you'd be really impressed.
 
Quite.
Then you'd have been close to God.
 
@Cerberus I think what the kids do these days is -not- get it cut.
 
Eavesdropping on her boudoir.
 
11:15 PM
@Cerberus What? I thought he was everywhere.
It's kind of a relief, now I can get away.
 
He??
 
@Cerberus Yeah. He.
It's a 'he' in all the pictures.
it's pretty patriarchal
it's like Santa Claus. Or Harry Potter. The rules are what the author made up.
 
What pictures?
 

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