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12:35 AM
This is cool. I've never drank more than 7 liters a day.
You could die of 2 to 3 liters, if you drink them quickly.
 
@jlliagre Nooooooo ... QE2 was shite at football.
 
Cheerleading!
 
Maybe she preferred chinlone
 
@jlliagre That's American football, not the one England gave to the world.
 
Hi there. Is it correct to say "he is a moneybags"?
 
12:44 AM
Sure.
 
thank you
 
@Robusto Ah, je me disais bien que c'était étrange, des footballeurs avec des casques et des épaules disproportionnées!
 
@jlliagre You get used to it. Spend more time in the US.
 
hah
Everybody has big shoulders here.
 
Especially in Chicago.
Hog Butcher for the World,
   Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat,
   Player with Railroads and the Nation's Freight Handler;
   Stormy, husky, brawling,
   City of the Big Shoulders:
 
12:47 AM
I recognized the reference.
 
I knew you would. That was for the others.
 
Carl August Sandburg (January 6, 1878 – July 22, 1967) was an American poet, biographer, journalist, and editor. He won three Pulitzer Prizes: two for his poetry and one for his biography of Abraham Lincoln. During his lifetime, Sandburg was widely regarded as "a major figure in contemporary literature", especially for volumes of his collected verse, including Chicago Poems (1916), Cornhuskers (1918), and Smoke and Steel (1920). He enjoyed "unrivaled appeal as a poet in his day, perhaps because the breadth of his experiences connected him with so many strands of American life". When he died in...
 
What do Frenchmen and Russians know of Chicago? I ask you, what?
 
Since childhood I've been told that Sverdlovsk (Yekaterinburg) is "Russia's Chicago". But I am sure that Chicago is much more magnificent.
It stands on a great lake.
 
Chicago is a beautiful city.
 
12:53 AM
> Sandburg's popular multivolume biography Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years, 2 vols. (1926) and Abraham Lincoln: The War Years, 4 vols. (1939) are collectively "the best-selling, most widely read, and most influential book[s] about Lincoln."
 
As Chicagoans we were saddled with Sandburg. I didn't realize he wasn't all that great until I started to swim into the deep end of the poetry pool.
 
1:06 AM
@CowperKettle did they say why? Chicago is known in the US as 'the Second city' because it was always 2nd behind NYC (population)
The only thing that seems similar between Chitown and Yekburg is that both are railroad centers to open up the frontier beyond. Does the Trans Siberian railway go through Y'town?
 
No trans in Russia.
s/trans/trains/
 
It has s lot of skyscrapers/a very remarkable skyline.
But other than that it's just a place where a bunch of people live
 
What's remarkable about tall buildings?
 
I mean, tall buildings are the same around the world?
 
1:13 AM
@Cerberus you remark 'wow, tall building'
 
Wow, really?
 
@Cerberus with all those buildings designed with AutoCAD cut and paste, yes, floor after floor of cube farms
@Cerberus yes. You can tell how magnificent the building is by how much strain it puts on your neck to look at it
 
@Cerberus Chicago has the tallest building in the Occident.
 
@Mitch Why would 'tall' be 'magnificent'?
I just don't get it.
 
@Mitch They said that Sverdlovsk was an "industrial city" of the USSR, like Chicago :)
 
1:17 AM
@CowperKettle sure, that might be enough
I'm trying to think of comparable features and am coming up short
@Cerberus I don't know. What are magnificent things to you?
Chicago has its own hotdog
 
@Mitch Bryce Canyon.
 
Its own pizza
Its own river
 
@Robusto I have been a couple of times in Chicago in the eighties but didn't stay long (stopovers to the West Coast). I remember the Loop, the Lake (great!) and a very high skyscraper. The city was nice. I was slightly disappointed not to meet Al Capone and not to see bootleggers killing each other in submachine guns shootings, but I understand that was asking too much.
 
London has to share it with a Thame
 
@Cerberus Nope.
 
1:21 AM
@jlliagre Those are the three things I adjudge one most likely to remember. :)
 
It has its own subway (well, it shares a little with Evanston)
 
Check it out.
 
My only souvenir is a white Hard-Rock Café tee-shirt. I still have it.
 
The Port of Chicago is one of the world's greatest seaports.
 
@jlliagre I remember those.
@jlliagre Yes, and when I was in Paris I expected to see Robespierre giving the guillotine a workout.
 
1:26 AM
That would have been fun
 
@Cerberus I presume that's what you're looking for.
It's the Chicago Water Tower.
Everything else went up in the flames, and alas we had no Christopher Wren to rebuild it.
 
They had Mies van der Rohe
 
And Louis Sullivan.
And Frank Lloyd Wright
Sculptures by Picasso, Calder, outdoor mosaic by Chagall, many more
 
A Walking Tour of the Shambles (Little Walks For Sightseers #16) (2002), written by Neil Gaiman and Gene Wolfe, is a novel in the form of a tour guide concerning a fictional part of Chicago called 'The Shambles'. It guides the reader through such non-existent landmarks as The House of Clocks (see the official website), Cereal House (home of the Terribly Strange Bed), and Gavagan's Irish Saloon. A collaboration between Neil Gaiman and Gene Wolfe (cover by Gahan Wilson, with interior illustrations by Randy Broecker and Earl Geier), it was published with two different covers by the American Fantasy...
 
It's called "The Four Seasons"
 
1:36 AM
@Robusto Beautiful park areas along the embankment, a heaven for runners.
 
@CowperKettle Yes. I used to run along there a lot in my younger days.
 
@tchrist and I hate it. In my experience the copycats copy stuff anyway. What happens instead is I can't put in figures and such in mine
 
@M.A.R. What, are Arabic numbers forbidden there?
 
@Cerberus the ISS is 250 miles up. That's pretty magnificent
 
1:39 AM
Hunh?
 
Why can't you put figures in yours?
Hard to draw?
Or you have to use Indian numbers not Arabic numbers?
 
@Robusto My grandfather attended one of the last public guillotine executions in Provence, in the 1920s or 1930s. I don't know if it was fun.
 
Well yeah, plotting data and drawing mitochondria with details aren't exactly in my area of expertise
 
@jlliagre Somehow I doubt it.
I'm sure I wouldn't have fun at any execution.
 
Depends on if there's food
 
1:45 AM
@Mitch You could have head cheese.
 
What's the point of executions anyway? Here, we're killing this guy that killed two other people. Why should it be convincing that there's any justice in the world?
Maybe it's just cathartic for some "at least I'm not that guy" people
 
Goes back to the Hammurabi legal code.
Probably before that as well, but he gets the credit.
 
Okay so back then, people knew of and detested, I dunno, lords that plundered and killed, so why should killing a random nobody prove anything?
I'm overthinking it
 
@Robusto ugh
With little whiskers
@Robusto I heard that the Hammurabi code was really a satire
 
It's a bit different from the Da Vinci code.
 
1:58 AM
What is contagious is the Da Vinci cold
 
@Mitch I haven't caught that yet.
David did, prolly from going around naked all the time.
 
2:42 AM
 
@jlliagre You're not gonna give up on that, are you?
 
Give up on what?
It looks like a photo. AI is getting close to perfection.
 
@jlliagre The Queen plays football meme we've been discussing.
 
Okay, let's move on then.
 
3:08 AM
Hey, I don't care. I'm just giving you shit about it because that's what we do in here. ;-)
 
> This year, Russian courts sentenced over 40% more Jehovah’s Witnesses (45) to prison than last year (32). This resulted in a peak of 115 men and women in prison at one time—the most since the 2017 Supreme Court ruling that effectively banned the Witnesses’ activities.
 
To be fair, JWs are a highly damaging cult according to most definitions...
But prison is not the right solution.
 
Because they're against blood transfusion and stuff?
 
No, because they act like Scientologists by shunning their own family members if they don't believe.
And forcing their children to go door to door (actually forcing).
Basically they treat their own members like shit and manipulate each other into staying.
 
@Robusto I don't know what keeps me from flagging such an inappropriate attitude!
 
3:18 AM
> Biden administration is discussing sending Bradley Fighting Vehicles to Ukraine
The Bradley Fighting Vehicle (BFV) is a tracked armoured fighting vehicle platform of the United States developed by FMC Corporation and manufactured by BAE Systems Land & Armaments, formerly United Defense. It is named after U.S. General Omar Bradley. The Bradley is designed to transport infantry or scouts with armor protection, while providing covering fire to suppress enemy troops and armored vehicles. The several Bradley variants include the M2 Bradley infantry fighting vehicle and the M3 Bradley reconnaissance and infantry fighting vehicle. The M2 holds a crew of three (a commander, a gunner...
 
@Robusto Nobody so hot that he didn't need clothes could ever possibly be cold.
 
@jlliagre Maybe it would help me with Worldle flags? One can only hope.
 
@CowperKettle that's christian science (which proscribes medical attention because you will get better if God willed it and trying to intervene is doubting God (or something like that)
 
@Mitch No, JWs actually believe blood transfusions themselves are sinful.
Many, many JW children have died because the parents have control over them, medically.
 
@forest I didn't know that
 
3:24 AM
Many children who want to live but who are essentially "sacrificed" by their parents by refusal to allow blood transfusion, which causes many otherwise-typical surgical operations to result in fatality.
 
I thought JW doesn't believe in celebrations, like birthdays or Christmas because ... hm don't know the reason they give
 
And because parents have control over medical decisions, they can make the decision to let their child die.
And that's not to mention them literally disowning their own children for not spending hundreds of hours a week going door to door, or for being gay.
 
Different cultures favor different things
Murder is pretty universally frowned upon
 
It's a cult (by definition), not just a religious culture.
In that it uses specific cult techniques to force compliance.
Like Scientology.
 
Christianity was a cult when it started
 
3:32 AM
I'm no fan of Christianity either. :P
 
And culte is a faux-ami.
7
Q: Does the word 'culte' have the same negative connotations in French as in English?

mikeI was quite shocked when in Strasbourg I read a plaque that said that something had been built by the 'culte catholique', but from the dictionary definition I cannot tell whether it is a polite synonym for religion. I'd appreciate an informed opinion.

 
When asked what kind of music it liked, one wind turbine said to the other "I'm a big metal fan"
snortle
Because... snork... It's a fan made our of... snirt ... metal. pffpffpfff
I mean Switzerland is a great court but it's flag is a big plus
Ok now you...
@jlliagre but is it at least cognate?
 
Sure, they just slightly diverged
but diverged enough to shock the OP.
 
3:51 AM
Same in the RAE.
 
QE2, KP, next one in a tight spot is the EPBXVI.
 
 
1 hour later…
4:57 AM
> Andrej Mashkovtsev "Two Tickets to Dublin"
To Dublin sounds in Russian like туда, блин (to there, blin), with blin being a very mild cuss, often used as a filler in speech, literaly meaning "pancake", an euphemism for a stronger swearword.
Hence "two tickets туда, блин" = "two tickets over there, damn"
There was an ancient TV ad in which a guy says this phrase, and another asks "куда, блин?" (kuda, blin?) = "where, blin?", and the first one replies "туда, блин"
 
 
3 hours later…
8:06 AM
Wordle 559 4/6

🟨🟨🟨⬜⬜
⬜🟨⬜⬜⬜
⬜⬜🟨🟨⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
 
 
1 hour later…
9:15 AM
@CowperKettle "kuda"? Interesting. In Farsi 'where' is کجا; Koja
 
10:03 AM
@M.A.R. Farsi probably is a Slavic language. You should join Russia as a new Oblast.
Iranian People's Republic of the Russian Federation. Sounds great.
Together we will kick the USA's butt.
Or maybe Russia should join Iran.
We'll have to create a joint religion. Abolish Orthodox Christianity and Shia Islam, and write the Orange Catholic Bible based on Quran and Bible.
18
Q: Why is it called the Orange Catholic Bible?

Donatello SwansinoA frequently mentioned and important text in the Dune series is the Orange Catholic Bible. Having read the appendices for the first Dune, I understand why this book exists. However, I do not understand the naming of it. I would think that its name would reflect the combination of religions rather...

It's strange, but under Elon Musk my complaints have been almost always fulfilled.
A user has just been suspended on Twitter due to my complaint.
Before Musk, my complaints often were rejected.
 
 
1 hour later…
11:29 AM
@CowperKettle How do you check response of complains? Is there any page or you get notification or mail?
 
 
1 hour later…
12:40 PM
#Worldle #343 1/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
 
#Worldle #343 X/6 (94%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩⬜↙️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟨↘️
🟩🟩🟩🟩⬜↖️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟨↖️
🟩🟩🟩🟩⬜↙️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟨⬅️
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
 
@jlliagre I just read a book about that part of the world. The Last Train to Zona Verde
🌎 Dec 30, 2022 🌍
🔥 121 | Avg. Guesses: 5.2
🟨🟨🟧🟩 = 4

globle-game.com
#globle
Wordle 559 5/6

🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜
⬜⬜🟨🟨⬜
⬜🟨🟨🟨🟨
⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
 
 
1 hour later…
2:13 PM
Wordle 559 5/6

⬜🟩⬜⬜⬜
🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜
⬜🟨⬜🟩⬜
🟩🟩🟨🟩🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
Daily Quordle 340
4️⃣6️⃣
7️⃣8️⃣
quordle.com
Daily Octordle #340
6️⃣7️⃣
8️⃣9️⃣
🔟🕚
4️⃣🕛
Score: 67
🌎 Dec 30, 2022 🌍
🔥 1 | Avg. Guesses: 6.63
🟧🟨🟩 = 3

globle-game.com
#globle
 
Daily Quordle 340
7️⃣6️⃣
8️⃣🟥
quordle.com
Not my day.
Daily Octordle #340
8️⃣6️⃣
🔟4️⃣
🕚🕛
9️⃣5️⃣
Score: 65
Better.
 
3:04 PM
@Vikas Yes, a direct message appears on the left (in the PC browser version)
 
3:20 PM
Someone posted this on Twitter and wrote that the female audience was shocked to learn that the singer was black, hence their deadpan expressions.
I wonder if this is true.
 
@jlliagre I was thinking the very same thing.
 
4:16 PM
@CowperKettle Poor kid, died a junkie.
 
Yes. Looks like once you have tasted a drug, the craving will always be there, to some extent. So it's like catching a virus that is impossible to completely get rid of.
Like the HIV virus, which finds a niche to hide from the strongest anti-retrovirals.
Maybe if there was a way to avoid overdosage.
> “I didn't just have a problem with beer and cocaine,” he said. “I was an addictive personality, period. I was smoking two packs of cigarettes a day; I loved Listerine; I loved NyQuil; you name it. If it would change your consciousness, I was all for it.”
(Stephen King)
> By 1985, alcohol wasn't enough, and King began taking drugs. He remembered writing The Tommyknockers in 1986 with his heart sprinting and “cotton swabs stuck up [his] nose to stem the coke-induced bleeding.”
 
@CowperKettle Funny that the girls in the audience seem so self-consciously bored with the performance.
 
What we should be seeking is equilibrium, not excess.
There is no ultimate high at the end of the rainbow. What lies there is death.
 
4:32 PM
> Writing is necessary for my sanity. As a writer, I can externalize my fears and insecurities and night terrors on paper, which is what people pay shrinks a small fortune to do. In my case, they pay me for psychoanalyzing myself in print. And in the process, I’m able to “write myself sane,” as that fine poet Anne Sexton put it. . . .
Anne Sexton (born Anne Gray Harvey; November 9, 1928 – October 4, 1974) was an American poet known for her highly personal, confessional verse. She won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1967 for her book Live or Die. Her poetry details her long battle with bipolar disorder, suicidal tendencies, and intimate details from her private life, including relationships with her husband and children, whom it was later alleged she physically and sexually assaulted. == Early life and family == Anne Sexton was born Anne Gray Harvey in Newton, Massachusetts to Mary Gray (Staples) Harvey (1901–1959) and Ralph...
I should look up her poems then. I hope they rhyme.
> Within 12 years of writing her first sonnet, she was among the most honored poets in the U.S.: a Pulitzer Prize winner, a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the first female member of the Harvard chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.
 
@CowperKettle Another female poet suicide. Contemporary of Sylvia Plath.
@CowperKettle Why is that so important to you?
 
Because Russians consider this important.
 
Hmm.
 
Mother Russia commands poems to rhyme. And, partus sequitur ventrem, I should comply.
 
Does the Russian language lend itself to rhyme, or does it, like English, have to stumble along looking for illuminating rhymes and having to settle for the usual suspects?
@CowperKettle That's maybe the only thing Russia commands that you don't rebel against.
 
4:41 PM
LOL
@Robusto I think it's much easier to rhyme in Russian, because you can add suffixes and prefixes etc.
> Раз на пляже у города Поти
Ветер сдул все одежды на тёте.
Мимо шел рыболов.. И я спорить готов:
В этой строчке вы гадостей ждёте.
A limerick in Russian.
 
On a beach a great wind blew my auntie
And stripped her right down to her panties
A seaman walked by
And he said, "My oh my!
Today I'll be singing no shanties!"
 
4:59 PM
@CowperKettle That's a new latin phrase for me. It seems to have some connotations in the US that are related more literally to those words.
@CowperKettle Does 'строчке' mean a fishing line? The thing you pull in a fish on a hook at the end?
@CowperKettle 'Confessional verse' sounds like Adele or Taylor Swift
 
5:15 PM
@Robusto honestly it's important to me too, but I read literature once in a blue moon (aside from my regular novel)
 
I rhyme just fine
Since time out of mind
But it seems to me rules
Are only for fools
And obligatory rhyming
May spoil my timing.
@M.A.R. What is your "regular" novel?
 
@Robusto oh I just mean the odd novel that I read
You know, like
I infrequently pick up and read some English novel
 
Just make sure it's not by Rushdie.
 
I could always read Rushdie and nod in disappointment and say out loud "What an uncouth heretic!"
 
Hahaha.
You could look at porn in a similar fashion: "Oh this is awful ... oh ... how awful ... oh oh oh oh oh! Oooooooohhhhhh!"
 
5:26 PM
I've said it before, I find most porn to be disgusting, or just plain sad
It's hard to say 'all porn' because there's like a jillion categories out there
 
Yes. Tawdry and sordid is how it seems to me, in the main.
 
But it always stands out as fake. I can't shake the feeling. The excessive makeup, the sad smile
Very undignified no matter how many centuries pass or how enlightened humanity becomes
 
I'm not saying porn is all bad, just the vast majority of it that I have ever seen. I imagine it could be done well, though.
@M.A.R. Does the government ban pornography?
Or is it all right if the female models wear the hijab?
 
6:12 PM
@Robusto of course
@Robusto they're not that tone-deaf
Some illicit prostitution is inevitable in any society of course. But I wouldn't know about that
 
7:10 PM
So long as you’ve
rhymed all your vers-
es well timed to
follow the rules
of fusty old
schools you need no
expansion to reach
perfect scansion.
 
You're all so pure at heart.
 
Give me a rhyme to bat singer and I bet I can fix that for you.
To go with the one to then addict.
 
7:26 PM
@tchrist Which brings up a question: is the Ratzinger Pope Benedict dead yet?
 
Cardinal Ratzinger?
 
Pope Benedict XVI (Ret.), if I'm not mistaken. He was certainly a cardinal before he became a pope.
 
Ohh I posted that before seeing you had posted the same!
The only rhyme I could think of.
Or maybe I subconsciously glimpsed it from the corner of an eye and thought it was my own idea?
 
@Cerberus hey I never said that! Just . . . not porn.
I get euphoric thinking about joining my lord and savior. It's all the pleasure I need
 
Same thing.
 
7:32 PM
Sitting around in your jam-
mies you wrote that for the slam-
ming of poetry. If that is your jam
I conclude that you have an enjamb-
mentality
@M.A.R. Is your lord and savior into three-ways?
 
@Robusto Many-nicked has he been in life.
 
@Robusto no, only reverse mitosis
 
@Robusto It only takes one more if you already have a lord and a saviour.
 
@tchrist As is seen on T-shirts and bumperstickers: "Let's FCK! The only thing missing is U!"
 
Art.
 
7:35 PM
Let's fart?
Wellll I won't kink-shame
 
Who, all the men she dicked?
 
@CowperKettle isn't Farsi a PIE language?
Eh probably some weird amalgam
Labels. I'm not sure what I speak everyday is sufficiently Farsi
 
@M.A.R. Learning Farsi is easy as PIE, I'm told.
 
Enjamb dictator and you're golden.
 
@Robusto I was young and I don't remember
Also pies are apparently another fetish.
 
7:43 PM
@M.A.R. Yes. That's the Aryan bit.
 
Apr 18, 2011 at 16:32, by Robusto
"If when you die you get a choice between pie heaven and regular heaven, choose pie heaven. It might be a trick, but if not ... mmmboy!" — Jack Handey
 
@M.A.R. Better than ankle biters.
 
Essentially anything that evokes an emotional response can be a fetish
 
Origami.
 
Picture frames, air conditioners
@tchrist that's just like 3D hentai
 
7:46 PM
@M.A.R. It's that just the word for pervert?
Since white meat and dark meat are now considered too racist for civil discourse, does this mean we get to go back to breasts and thighs again?
Red meat is even worse, all those Indian cannibals.
Like how nutmeats are offensive to the crazies.
 
Meat is too climatist for civil discourse
You fossil fuel tycoon
 
You just cooned me!
 
Sue me
In Hague
 
Sue me at the Hague sounds like pigflesh.
 
> German Catholic leaders have shown new willingness to reconsider stances on hot-button issues such as homosexuality and celibacy — areas where Benedict sees church teaching as immutable.
But wait: I thought Jesus said "Whatsoever ye may bind on earth shall be bound in heaven." Meaning Popes can do whatever they want.
 
7:53 PM
@tchrist highly haram
 
@tchrist You're not living very high on the Hague, are you?
@tchrist It may surprise you very little to learn that origami (折り紙) simply means "paper folding" ... who knew!
 
@Robusto Priestly celibacy was introduced by the Catholic Church after a thousand years or so mostly to help preserve the wealth of the church. They didn't want married priests to attempt to pass on church property to the priest's children. Even so there are many married priests today.
It certainly never did anything to stop nepotism, though. See the papal nephew, etc.
 
8:09 PM
@tchrist I'm aware of that.
 
Protestantism was attractive to some because it didn't forbid marriage. Easier to become an Anglican than a Russian Catholic.
Or Eastern Orthodox.
To roll back the doctrine that Catholic priests must not marry would be both next to trivial and next to impossible all at once. All it takes is the Pope making the decree to go back to how it used to be. But this would almost certainly create a terrible schism and he doesn't want that to happen.
 
@tchrist Corruption in the Roman Catholic Church has been copiously noted over the millennia. Look at the selling of indulgences, for example. That was probably the main driving force in the Protestant reformation—except in the case of the Anglican church, which was due to Henry VIII not getting what he wanted from the Pope.
@tchrist You mean like the schism from Vatican II, which got rid of Latin? That has not been a deal-breaker. What is putting paid to Catholicism these days is pedophile priests.
 
I'm thinking of the recent schism in the Anglican Communion.
The Anglican realignment is a movement among some Anglicans to align themselves under new or alternative oversight within or outside the Anglican Communion. This movement is primarily active in parts of the Episcopal Church in the United States and the Anglican Church of Canada. Two of the major events that contributed to the movement were the 2002 decision of the Diocese of New Westminster in Canada to authorise a rite of blessing for same-sex unions, and the nomination of two openly gay priests in 2003 to become bishops. Jeffrey John, an openly gay priest with a long-time partner, was appointed...
Or the east-vs-west schism that produced a separate Eastern Orthodox branch.
Henry didn't accept that he must be "underneath" any other ruler.
He didn't like anybody being able to tell him what to do, especially some furriner.
He also wanted their riches.
He got rid of all the monasteries and took all that wealth.
 
8:26 PM
He just took the lead from their roofs, and the gold from the their coffers.
 
 
3 hours later…
11:17 PM
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Link at beginning of answer, potentially bad keyword in answer (36): Meaning of "tint your wing" in the song Burning of Auchindoun‭ by Maurkov‭ on english.SE
 
11:39 PM
Wordle (Andalûh) #46 5/6

🟨⬜🟨⬜🟩
⬜🟨⬜🟨🟩
🟨🟨🟩⬜🟩
⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

https://wordle.andaluh.es
Tricky!
 

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