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12:00 AM
So better just move on, right?
 
@tchrist Not really, that means this information is circulating but is not confirmed by a reliable source.
 
@jlliagre Oh then that is something else then!
 
Yes, that's not like Será José.
 
@jlliagre You could answer the question authoritatively.
I can't think of any time that would be used that way in Spanish or Portuguese. Curious.
Clearly I don't read enough French.
By which I mean I am not in the habit of doing so with sufficient frequency.
 
You can prepend an implicit part that would help understanding the sentence: D'après des informations non confirmées, les pirates de l'air seraient des partisants [...]
 
12:09 AM
That makes sense to me that way, thanks.
 
@jlliagre Dutch does this, too.
 
I have a joke
 
It implies reportedness.
We use the auxiliary verb zouden.
Which is the normal translation of the conditionnel.
 
Nope. Not anymore
The joke is gone
Automatic expiration
I mean ... I forgot it already
 
Math is fun
 
12:15 AM
There's spaced repetition
 
\n
 
And then there's just forgetting
 
\f
 
I'm an American
Why isn't everything in YouTube?
I mean all the tiktok
Just auto copy it over to yourube
 
\t
 
12:17 AM
For my personal convenience
 
Because Tiktok allows only shorter videos, d'oh.
 
Haha youRube
 
\r
 
Therefore people use Tiktok.
 
That's what it is ain't it
@Cerberus well
That's inconvenient
For me
Probably you too
@Cerberus that's not stopping it from being on YouTube
They have 'shorts'
 
12:19 AM
\s
 
Also 1 second clips
@tchrist oh?
 
@Mitch No, but people are silly.
They flock to Tiktok, especially Internet addicts.
 
@Mitch Wide's base is imbizible.
 
TikTok has become a synonym for ...
Flippancy!
Not serious
 
In Dutch, tik tok might indicate crazy.
As in tapping one's head.
 
12:22 AM
@tchrist \s is any whitespace?
 
’Tis.
 
And \b is ... A word boundary?
 
== Français == === Étymologie === (Siècle à préciser) Redoublement de toc. === Adjectif === toc-toc \tɔk.tɔk\ masculin et féminin identiques (Familier) Fou, toqué, maboul, zinzin. « En voilà un qui insinue que je veux fonder une école comme Loïe Fuller ! Il est toc-toc !... » — (Maurice Dekobra, La Madone des sleepings, 1925, réédition Le Livre de Poche, page 48) Il murmurait propos abscons, mots sans signification, radiotis contus. Il nous alarmait. On l’aurait cru toc-toc. — (Georges Perec, La Disparition, Gallimard, Paris, 1969) Ta mamie est un peu toc-toc, tu sais. — (David Wallia...
 
Yes, like that.
 
Zinzin
In the US tapping the side of your forehead could be you're crazy -or- you're clever
Non?
 
12:24 AM
@Mitch Backspace in a string "\b", word boundary in a regex /\b/, but again backspace in a regex character class /[\b]/.
 
Nicht wahr?
 
Only crazy here
 
Never heard of clever.
 
@tchrist I suspected. Do I will refrain from using it in one of the American ways.
@tchrist hm .. maybe that's my mistake
 
Tapping your temple is not the same as putting your finger flatly upon it.
 
12:26 AM
I wonder how backspace can or should be a character.
 
Which would sort of make it truthful
By mistake
 
I agree that it should be done with the tip of the finger.
 
@Cerberus These were "control" characters in days of old.
 
@Cerberus well
 
You could also tap the forehead.
 
12:26 AM
@Goku It's an exacting discipline, because it's so unlike what you already know. You really have to woodshed it, more than other languages.
 
Not a character exactly
Or at all
More of an...operator
 
^H
 
@Robusto which discipline are you referring to? Mathematics?
 
Japanese.
I.e., learning Japanese.
 
It's a calling
 
12:29 AM
@jlliagre If you do a bitwise xor of the @ character with the H character, so '@'^'H', then you get a Control-H. That's why we use that notation.
Which is why DEL is written ^?. Because if you xor ? with @, you get a del, char 127 / octal 177 / hex 7f,
 
@Robusto oh, right. I really want to learn it. At least to the point where I don't need to rely on subtitles when, watching an anime for example. I know achieving native-like fluency will be very difficult
 
Almost nobody alive today remembers that the control character notation is tied to the bitwise xor operator. It's all about the caret.
 
I never knew that
 
@Goku Just what you describe there will be difficult. More than other languages, even, Japanese language is an expression of the entire culture. It's very interesting, though, and I sure am glad I gave it all the hours I did ... and still do.
 
I can't remember the bit pattern
 
12:34 AM
But you don't need to remember it! That's the magic. Just @ ^H.
Or @^X etc.
 
@Robusto I know it'll be difficult. Anime voice actors are very fluent in the language themselves and, most of the dialogue that goes into anime is also pretty sophisticated and not easily understood by any beginner that's wanting to learn the language
 
You should start with Manga to get reading fluency.
 
Is there any good anime coming out of Korea?
 
But you really have to woodshed the written language.
 
Woodshed?
 
12:37 AM
@Mitch Are you asking me? I don't know, I have enough on my plate to watch Japanese anime.
 
I'm asking anybody
 
@Mitch It's where you carve out the characters in your woodshed from blocks of balsam and then paint them to press upon the page.
 
@Mitch v. t. To study or practice very hard, in a punishing manner.
 
@Robusto taking yourself out to behind the woodshed?
 
@Robusto isn't reading kanji going to be even harder? I do own manga but they're all translated
 
12:38 AM
Basically you are taking yourself to the woodshed (i.e., as for a beating).
jinx
 
@CowperKettle Is that a helix, or is it a spiral?
 
I was wondering if it was about making a big protracted argument about something inconsequential
 
Looks like a spiral
 
Ie a bike shed
 
12:40 AM
A bike woodshed
 
@Goku When I was studying there was a Manga magazine that was entirely in Japanese, but it had helpful glosses and notes on the facing pages. I think it was called Manga Journal or something like that.
 
You really have to woodshed your bike to save it from being gullywashed.
 
It does, but that might just be because it's a 2D flattening of looking at a helix from a particular distance right about it. :)
 
@CowperKettle a wooden bikeshed
 
Gullywash-proof woodsheds rule.
 
12:40 AM
@tchrist I used to just add 64 to the control character to get its representation (7 bit ASCII). That's equivalent.
 
@Mitch Yes, even better ))
 
@CowperKettle I'm guessing this is concentric circles.
 
@jlliagre Yes, but it fails for delete. :)
 
A trick of the eye.
 
I did too. Just add a space and you get the letter. But not for delete.
 
But xor with @ always works.
 
@Robusto I mean, I did spend an entire year in Japan and even attended high school there. But it was really difficult for me to communicate with natives there, especially my classmates and our homeroom teacher
 
@tchrist It doesn't fail as long as you are using 7 bit unsigned integers. 127+64=63
 
@Goku Well, it sounds like you weren't prepared for that kind of immersion.
 
@jlliagre That's deep.
 
12:43 AM
@Goku you already have a big headstart then
 
I'm in awe.
 
@Robusto it was frustrating, really. Because everyone was really hyped to have a foreigner attending the class too, which is how I even made any friends in the first place otherwise I'm pretty much a loner. Its just that the language barrier really hindered my ability to communicate there.
 
The divinity of the integers never ceases to amaze me.
 
Well, did you study the language while you were there?
 
@Robusto somewhat, yes. I mean, we had a Japanese class to attend at high school. An English class too
 
12:45 AM
How old were you at the time?
 
The only good base is base 2
 
@Robusto I was 17
 
So you had no prep for this?
 
I knew I would be going to Japan but since I had never been there I really didn't know what to expect. I can't even begin to count the number of cultural shocks I experienced there
 
I read about advanced toilet bowls in Japan
Some toilets in Japan are more elaborate than toilets commonly found in other developed nations. European countries often have a toilet and a bidet separate whilst Japan combines an electronic bidet with the toilet. The current state of the art for Western-style toilets in Japan is the bidet toilet, which, as of March 2016, is installed in 81% of Japanese households. In Japan, these bidets are commonly called washlets, a brand name of Toto Ltd., and include many advanced features rarely seen outside of Asia. The feature set commonly found on washlets are anal hygiene, bidet washing, seat warming...
 
12:48 AM
@CowperKettle When were you in Japan?
 
The variety of KitKat flavors!
 
@tchrist Never, I just read about it
 
@CowperKettle they do exist but they aren't everywhere. You aren't finding any advanced toilets in some random village
I did enjoy hot springs a lot, though
 
I read about advanced toilet bowls in my shorts.
 
No broken glass in the street
 
12:50 AM
@Mitch I never want them there, that's for sure.
 
Like at all? Not a single small shard of glass?
 
@Mitch Base 20 is a supercharged base 2, it allows Quatre-vingt-douze
 
@tchrist how it got in them I have no idea!
@jlliagre mdr
I suppose there's worse
 
@jlliagre Four score and twelve ... and you call that a number system! ;-)
 
Two things fill the mind with ever new and increasing admiration: the divinity of the integers and the integrity of the divines.
 
12:52 AM
I like the base ' 1,2,many'
 
I'm partial to duodecimal.
 
Oh I know one that is worse
Well
I don't exactly -know- it
 
@Mitch You won too menny?
 
Let's say I'm aware it is worse
 
I was somewhat fluent in base 64 a while ago.
 
12:54 AM
Irish does this thing where you infix the thing counted in the teens
Three things ten
Is thirteen things
 
@Robusto I didn't know driving to your school wasn't very normal in Japan. But since I'm used to cycling, I could just bicycle my way there instead
 
@Goku A better way to travel.
 
@Robusto to be honest it was nice cycling to school early morning. Mostly quiet streets and a slightly cool breeze, a really nice environment.
 
Also a different set of numbers for people and things, and the pronunciation rules change at different numbers
@Goku that's a really great experience
 
@Goku This is great
 
12:57 AM
@Goku Cycling is great, and not just for quotidian transportation.
 
@Goku Did they have a safe parking to avoid bike stealing?
Cycling is great anodyne for quotidian travelling travails.
 
I also noticed that, at least in my high school, students were more eager to "compete" on tests. That's not something very common back in states. I was happy to indulge in it, too. I was able to consistently get the best scores at mathematics
@CowperKettle yes, they did
 
There's a culture of anti intellectualism in American schools
 
No doubt. The amount of times I have been labeled a nerd or whatever just for not sucking at school like them is amazing
 
There's a flip side to the competition, though. It is not unknown for Japanese kids who fail in school to commit suicide.
 
1:00 AM
I heard the same of South Korea (children committing suicide)
 
Lot of pressure
 
Compare that to Japan where I received actual respect and admiration for my abilities, I felt much more at home than my own home country. Sure being a foreigner guest probably contributed to some of that but still
 
@Robusto Karoshi would have been more honorable.
 
Wow, I didn't know it was the leading cause.
 
1:01 AM
Because modern science has conquered the other causes (infectious disease)
 
How was the school cafeteria food?
 
@Robusto oh I definitely learned about it. Many also commit suicide after failing the Collete entrance exam which is probably the only shot they get at it. My classmate's older brother committed suicide because of that, as he told me
 
I'm very sorry!
 
@Mitch I brought my own bento, but I did try cafeteria food and I actually liked it.
 
@Goku Yes, the entrance exam pressures are brutal.
 
1:03 AM
@Robusto that's probably why they were all so surprisingly dedicated to studying, and being the nerd I am, I was more than happy to join in
 
@Goku what was in it?
 
@Mitch you mean the food?
 
Yeah
 
@Robusto That's what Hermann Hesse said.
 
They were served in these strangely cut carbon-fiber platters or whatever you'd call them
I usually ate in my class so I didn't hang out in the cafeteria much
 
1:05 AM
That's interesting. But what food was in your lunch provided by the school?
 
@Mitch like I said, I brought my own bento, but the school provided a lot. There was a lot or rice, gravy, fruits and veggies (lots of them) and I think I even saw some Takoyaki
 
@Goku school cafeteria culture is difficult to navigate even when you're fluent
@Goku what's takoyaki?
 
Hard to describe. Its kind of like this ball made of bread but it has squid in it, and it can even have wasabi in it which will make it pretty hot
 
Nice
 
I just spend the lunch time eating in my class and looking at emails, texts on my phone
 
1:09 AM
I can't remember what American highschool lunch was like.
 
And talking to my classmates, in English, as best as they could
 
So much so that I can't remember if I ate the cafeteria food or brought my own
I remember standing in line?
But I can't imagine eating any of the stuff they served
 
@Mitch I brought my own here too. But I think our cafeteria has a lot of beef, some pizza, lots of junkfood to be honest
 
@Goku right. That's my impression. Not good.
 
@Mitch ???
 
1:12 AM
@Mitch when you serve food like that daily I don't think you can expect your students to be at the best of their academic ability
 
@tchrist I'm just telling you about my state of memory of some things. I ca remember sitting there, where exactly in the room in different years, but I can't remember what I ate
Subconsciously forgotten bad memories?
 
@Mitch Johnny Marzetti, Turkey Tetrazzini, Tuna-Noodle Hotdish, "Hungarian" Goulash.
 
For my next novel, the detective will be called Johnny Marzetti
 
You know, my biggest cultural shocks in Japan was just how much taller I was compared to everyone, especially at my school.
I was sometimes jokingly referred to as a giraffe by my classmates
 
All this food talk calls for a snack
 
1:15 AM
@Mitch README.
 
@tchrist sounds like a prison menu
 
Sloppy Joes.
 
I'm not eatin' that
 
Salisbury Steak.
Mock Chicken Leg.
 
Mock mock turtle soup
 
1:19 AM
Salisbury steak is a dish originating in the United States and made from a blend of ground beef and other ingredients and usually served with gravy or brown sauce. It is a version of Hamburg steak. == Background == Hamburg was a common embarkation point for transatlantic voyages during the first half of the 19th century and New York City was the most common destination. Various New York restaurants offered Hamburg-style American fillet, or even beefsteak à Hambourgeoise. Early American preparations of ground beef were therefore made to fit the tastes of European immigrants. === Origin of the... ===
 
@CowperKettle I didn't mean to imply it was tasty, just that it was served.
 
So many of my classmates had the perception that all I did was eat hamburgers, steak, shoot AR-15s and yell "F Yeah! America!"
 
"Seafood" Patty with Catsup.
Fish Stick with Catsup.
 
Really, no school lunch lacked catsup.
 
1:22 AM
Catecholamines up (Catsup) is a dopamine regulatory membrane protein that functions as a zinc ion transmembrane transporter (orthologous to ZIP7), and a negative regulator of rate-limiting enzymes involved in dopamine synthesis and transport: Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), GTP Cyclohydrolase I (GTPCH), and Vesicular Monoamine Transporter (VMAT) in Drosophila melanogaster.Catsup plays a significant role in zinc ion transmembrane transport, and the mutations in Catsup gene can lead to abnormal accumulation of membrane proteins, such as Notch, decreased Notch signalling, increase in levels of apoptosis...
 
Meat Loaf with Catsup.
 
A what being cooked?
 
Faggots are meatballs made from minced off-cuts and offal, especially pork (traditionally pig's heart, liver, and fatty belly meat or bacon) together with herbs for flavouring and sometimes added bread crumbs. It is a traditional dish in the United Kingdom, especially South and Mid Wales and the English Midlands.Faggots originated as a traditional cheap food consumed by ordinary country people in Western England, particularly west Wiltshire and the West Midlands. Their popularity spread from there, especially to South Wales in the mid-nineteenth century, when many agricultural workers left the...
> In dopamine synthesis, Catsup functions to inhibit Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), GTP Cyclohydrolase I (GTPCH), and Vesicular Monoamine Transporter (VMAT) enzyme activity.
Interesting. Excessive inhibition of GTP cyclohydrolase may decrease BH4 and cause depression.
 
I swear the spaghetti sauce and the pizza sauce and the tomato soup were really all catsup based.
 
I prefer beef
 
1:25 AM
With catsup.
Hotdogs with catsup.
 
I miss eating ramen in Japan
 
inhales
 
I remember this ad from the 1990s, in Russian though
In English it's even better
Ukrainian Xmas carol by blind singers/players
There's been a long tradition of traveling blind singers
 
1:42 AM
> 2008 G. Carunungan in E. B. Maranan & L. S. Maranan-Goldstein Taste of Home 188 I remember how it took such great effort for our two boys..to have to eat Tony's spaghetti which had no sugar and no catsup.
See, I told you the spaghetti sauce was really a catsup-based product, at least if you wanted kids to eat it. :)
Actually in Ukrainian for a change.
 
Yes, this is the most famous one))
 
Until 1956, alcohol was served in school canteens in France. (wine, beer, or hard cider depending on the region).
 
Wild!
 
I remember an interview with Pierre Richard in which he said that he drank red wine after school O_O
That was a shocker.
Not a lot, half a glass, but still.
 
Children were often given mixed water and red wine at breakfast.
At school, the were allowed to drink up to half a liter.
 
1:50 AM
I don't know that even the Bavarians did that.
 
We were told as children (in the 60s, maybe 70s) that the French children drank wine at school, but we didn't believe them.
 
Another drinking song.
> Crystal cup with a silver bottom
Whether you drink or not, it's no matter
Crystal cup with a silver top
Whether you drink or not, you'll die all the same
(A refrain)
 
@CowperKettle Funny how often drinking songs are all-men choirs.
 
1:55 AM
@Goku and?
 
@CowperKettle Is that a drinking song though?
 
@tchrist Ah! Maybe not
Aren't all Irish song drinking ones?
 
Yes.
And the singers are certainly drinking.
The lyrics just don't seem alcholic.
 
Another drinking song
> Raise your cups, my brothers,
Make the crystal clatter!
Here's to riding bravely
Here's to coming safely
Through the thick of battle
My translation still hangs in there, in the comments
 
@Goku I mean at least two out of 4
 
2:04 AM
That's odd. I'm counting calories.
Helps keep the weight stable.
I'll see what she means.
 
@jlliagre No wonder they're smiling.
 
2:30 AM
 
Held together by jam, no doubt.
 
@tchrist Sarsenberry, no doubt.
 
> Petite fille avec ses deux baguettes, remontant une rue pavée
TIL that petite is a feminine adjective, pronounced with the final t
 
It is.
 
While petit is masculine, and pronounced as pti
 
2:40 AM
Pretty much.
You can say "mon petit" by itself as a term of affection.
 
I always thought that fille (Fr. a daughter) and filly (Eng. a young female horse) were related, but apparently that is not the case.
 
It's not really necessary to use "ma petite" just because it's a little girl, although you could. "Mon petit" is kind of a thing of its own.
 
"remontant" probably means "going back", while Google just says "going"
 
A remontant is like a quick nip of something you quaff for energy. :)
But that's a noun.
 
In Russian, remont is the refurbishing of a flat. When you strip the old wallpaper, dismantle all things, and then make everything new.
 
2:49 AM
That does make sense to me. Which I find surprising in and of itself.
She might just be travelling on it, she might just be returning along that route. Not sure.
 
Google Images for remontnik (ремонтник)
 
So there they translate it that way.
I read it as coming back the same way she'd gone.
These are shorter, linked from Wiktionary:
> I. − Adjectif
A. − Qui suit un mouvement qui va vers le haut. Le lacis des allées sablées et remontantes, la perspective des immenses charmilles terminées par quelque statue blanche qui se découpe dans le bleu comme sur le fond lumineux d'un vitrail (A. Daudet, Nabab, 1877, p. 202).
B. − Au propre et au fig. Qui parvient à la surface. Je vois bien cette lutte, cette riche barbarie perpétuellement remontante, et qui veut, avec une obstination effroyable, détruire la mince civilisation dont est recouverte notre animalité (Barrès, Maîtres, 1923, p. 278).
The Larousse is better, but that's its job. :)
Oh I think the gardening sense may be used in English, within such circles as who deal with such things do move.
Heh, yeah.
> A. adj.

Of or relating to a flowering plant (esp. a hybrid perpetual rose) that flowers recurrently, or more or less continuously in a season. Also of a strawberry plant: bearing fruit for a prolonged period. Cf. perpetual adj. 2c.
> B. n.

A perpetually or recurrently flowering or fruiting plant; esp. a remontant rose.
If you want to use a Germanic term instead of a Romance one for that, everbearing is common.
More people would recognize it without having to know other languages. :)
That's for things that bear fruit. You can use everblooming just for things with blossoms, but I feeling like it's less common.
We talked about œillets here already.
About whether they were really more carnations or really more marigolds, or even whether marigolds were carnations.
French doesn't exactly have "present progressive" the way English and Spanish and Portuguese and Italian all do using be plus a gerund, but they do have an en + PARTICIPLE construction that carries a progressive sense.
 
3:56 AM
Again very similar to Dutch.
We have aan het + inf.
It is not super common: you use it when you truly wish you emphasise you're busy a-doing something.
 
4:43 AM
Srinivasa Ramanujan (; born Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar, IPA: [sriːniʋaːsa ɾaːmaːnud͡ʑan ajːaŋgar]; 22 December 1887 – 26 April 1920) was an Indian mathematician. Though he had almost no formal training in pure mathematics, he made substantial contributions to mathematical analysis, number theory, infinite series, and continued fractions, including solutions to mathematical problems then considered unsolvable. Ramanujan initially developed his own mathematical research in isolation: according to Hans Eysenck: "He tried to interest the leading professional mathematicians in his work, but failed...
> Though he had almost no formal training in pure mathematics, he made substantial contributions to mathematical analysis, number theory, infinite series, and continued fractions, including solutions to mathematical problems then considered unsolvable.
> The gene therapy Upstaza (eladocagene exuparvovec) has been approved in the U.K. to treat adults and children, 18 months and older, with aromatic l-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) deficiency.
Finally approved - the first gene therapy for direct infusion into the brain.
2022 is a historical year.
Eladocagene exuparvovec is an experimental gene therapy product for the treatment of aromatic L‑amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) deficiency. It infuses the gene encoding for the human AADC enzyme into the putamen region of the brain. The subsequent expression of AADC results in dopamine production and, as a result, development of motor function in patients with AADC deficiency.The most common side effects include initial insomnia, irritability and dyskinesia.As of May 2022, eladocagene exuparvovec is recommended for approval by the European Commission. == Society and culture == Eladocagene...
 
5:33 AM
The Tiguex War was the first named war between Europeans and Native Americans in what is now part of the United States. The war took place in New Spain, during the exploration of Nuevo México prior to settlement. It was fought in the winter of 1540-41 by the expedition of Francisco Vázquez de Coronado against the twelve or thirteen Pueblos of what would become the Tiguex Province of Nuevo México. These villages were along both sides of the Rio Grande, north and south of present-day Bernalillo, New Mexico. == Background == Estevanico had arrived as a scout for Spanish expedition, but he went missing...
The first war on the territory of the current USA with participation of Europeans.
 
6:10 AM
> In the late 1650s, Governor Bernardo Lopez de Mendizabal and his subordinate Nicolas de Aguilar forbade the Franciscans to punish Indians or employ them without pay. They granted the Pueblo permission to practice their traditional dances and religious ceremonies. After the Franciscans protested, Lopez and Aguilar were arrested, turned over to the Inquisition, and tried in Mexico City. Thereafter, the Franciscans reigned supreme in the province.
Curious. I would have thought that the Church protected natives, but here it was the other way around.
 
Why?
Religions are often pretty evil.
 
Dunno, I remember listening to a history book where some friars were trying to help out natives.
In South America.
Seems that in New Mexico it was the other way.
Curious that Wikipedia says that horses were widely adopted by Indians only around 1700, despite the first incursions by the Spanish in 1540, with some 1300 horses.
The Spanish had only two mares though, and they probably died.
 
7:03 AM
@CowperKettle I'm sure that happened, but the Church also repressed and terrorised people all over the world, including the colonies.
The same applies to other religions.
 
7:55 AM
By GPT-2, the AI version before GPT-3
The currently popular chat replies are generated by GPT-3.5
 
8:26 AM
Oleg Sokolov, a Russian history professor specializing on the Napoleonic Era.
His scientific and social activities were acknowledged by the Legion of Honour (Chevalier) in 2003.
> In November 2019, he murdered, then subsequently dismembered and decapitated his 24-year-old mistress and former student Anastasia Yeshchenko.
Oleg Sokolov is the author of five monographs and over 300 articles on the history of the Napoleonic Wars. Most of Sokolov's works have been translated into English.
 
@CowperKettle There's a movie about him. The man who knew infinity.
 
@Vikas Ah! I downloaded it, I should watch at least a bit of it))
I downloaded some 180 movies, but watched only about 10.
I've just finished downloading this:
Margarita with a Straw is a 2014 Indian Hindi-language drama film directed by Shonali Bose. It stars Kalki Koechlin as an Indian teenager with cerebral palsy who relocates to America for her undergraduate education and comes of age following her complex relationship with a blind girl, played by Sayani Gupta. Revathi, Kuljeet Singh, and William Moseley play supporting roles. Produced by Bose in partnership with Viacom18 Motion Pictures, Margarita with a Straw was co-written by Bose and Nilesh Maniyar. The film deals with the challenging concepts of sexuality, inclusion, self-love, and self-acceptance...
 
8:42 AM
 
@CowperKettle Here remontant is special as its re- prefix doesn't imply a repetition, a return, so going back isn't a perfect translation. It might be the first time she walks in the street. The verb just means she is moving upward.
 
Steven Seagal and Edward Snowden have been mobilized finally. Since both are Russian citizens
@jlliagre Ah! Just like in English we say "walking down the street"
Even though there's no incline in the street.
 
8:54 AM
@CowperKettle Nice
 
9:29 AM
@CowperKettle Reminds me of my college training period of two months. I downloaded over 250 movies. Training was successful 😂
 
9:39 AM
@CowperKettle Hah I call Photoshop.
@jlliagre Even in Latin, re(d)- does not always mean "back".
 
 
1 hour later…
11:07 AM
Gray langurs, also called Hanuman langurs and Hanuman monkeys, are Old World monkeys native to the Indian subcontinent constituting the genus Semnopithecus. Traditionally only one species Semnopithecus entellus was recognized, but since about 2001, additional species have been recognized. The taxonomy has been in flux, but currently eight species are recognized. Gray langurs are fairly terrestrial, inhabiting forest, open lightly wooded habitats, and urban areas on the Indian subcontinent. Most species are found at low to moderate altitudes, but the Nepal gray langur and Kashmir gray langur occur...
So a languar came in our neighbourhood and everyone started looking at it with excitement.
 
11:35 AM
@Cerberus Yes but with remonter, the meaning depends on the context. L'avion remonte means it's going up after going down but L'auto remonte les Champs--Élysées just means it's going toward the Arc-de-Triomphe.
 
12:02 PM
@CowperKettle What kind of uniform is that? A Cossack uniform?
 
12:30 PM
Anti-Dutch sentiment, also known as Dutchphobia, is a spectrum of negative feelings, fears and dislikes towards Netherlands, the Dutch people and the Dutch culture. It historically arose from the colonization that was undertaken by the Netherlands and the roles played by the Dutch in European wars. The sentiment is reflected in various expressions that have entered the English language, one of which is the pejorative Kaaskop. == Dutch colonies == === Southeast Asia === Most of present-day Indonesia was a Dutch colony, the Dutch East Indies, from 1800 to the 1942 Japanese invasion during...
For some reason this article exists only in the English Wikipedia, and the Indonesian one.
@FaheemMitha No, just the usual one
 
 
1 hour later…
1:44 PM
> › Dutch, Nottingham, stoneless medlar ← medlar
Dutch [adj.]
dutch [n.2]
dutch [v.]
› Dutch agrimony, beech, clover, elm, honeysuckle, medlar, mezereon, myrtle, violet, willow ← Dutch
› Dutch auction, auctioneer, bargain, concert, courage, gleek, nightingale, uncle, Dutch comfort, consolation, defence, feast, palate, reckoning, widow, Dutch act, Dutch lunch, party, supper, treat, Dutch wife ← Dutch
Dutch barn ← Dutch
† Dutch beech ← beech
› Dutch-bellied, -built, -buttocked, Dutch-cut ← Dutch
@CowperKettle So many "Dutch-" words in English.
 
1:58 PM
Time for Special Dedutchification Operation.
After all, Dutch is just a dialect of English, and the rights of English-speaking Dutchmen must be protected.
 
00:00 - 14:0014:00 - 00:00

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