@Cerberus Guess I'm new to that "genre"; watching a few of his other satire, seems like the two you picked is par for the course. I don't like satires of Europeans that he makes either; feels rather flat and not very insightful. I guess I just don't like what ContentMachine is making.
Or I just don't like stereotyping in the first place, probably brainwashed by the Indonesian education system that discourages such activity under the heading of respecting being nationally united despite the variety of S.A.R.A. (suku=ethnicity, agama=religion, ras=race, adat-istiadat=cultural-norms) among the (now) 280 million people.
> Among adults presenting to primary care practices with acute sore throat, a single dose of oral dexamethasone did not increase the likelihood of symptom resolution at 24 hours but did increase the likelihood at 48 hours.
I read an article about people who sign up for drug trials as a way of earning money. I don't remember what magazine it was in, and not much on the rest of it, but I do remember that the writer said he had steered clear of brain drugs because he didn't want to become a "brain slut."
The Boring Billion, otherwise known as the Mid Proterozoic and Earth's Middle Ages, is an informal geological time period between 1.8 and 0.8 billion years ago (Ga) during the middle Proterozoic eon spanning from the Statherian to the Tonian periods, characterized by more or less tectonic stability, climatic stasis and slow biological evolution. Although it is bordered by two different oxygenation events (the Great Oxygenation Event and Neoproterozoic Oxygenation Event) and two global glacial events (the Huronian and Cryogenian glaciations), the Boring Billion period itself actually had very low...
I'm amazed at how better I've felt on methylfolate and folinic acid, and I tried it out just by chance, out of sheer curiosity.
@Robusto Yes, I can go and ask for a prescription. I'll take venlafaxine for 1-2 months more, at the total maximum, to see if it will do anything, and after that it's welcome back, escitaloparm :)
@Vikas It's mainly psychological not physiological: the beverages you customarily consume at temperatures higher than your own internal body temperature are not really all that very much hotter than you are, and their mass is negligible compared with your own. That said, they do help with hydration, but so would a cooler drink. Nonetheless a cool drink in summer or a warm drink in winter (which you do not have there, by the way) provide perceptual comforts.
The Indian Ocean Geoid Low (IOGL) is a gravity anomaly in the Indian Ocean. A circular region in the Earth's geoid, situated just south of the Indian peninsula, it is the Earth's largest gravity anomaly. It forms a depression in the sea level covering an area of about 3 million km2 (1.2 million sq mi), almost the size of India itself. Discovered in 1948 by Dutch geophysicist Felix Andries Vening Meinesz as a result of a ship's gravity survey, it remained largely a mystery until May 2023, when the weak local gravity was empirically explained using computer simulations and seismic data.
== ...
I don't get it. The gravity is lower, and so the sea level is lower?
> Maybe not in mainstream white America. But in the 1990s, rap and hip hop artists would use code (if you prefer slang) in their songs that was largely incomprehensible to white middle-class Americans.
@uFOcHAcHA I suggest editing the title of your question to be something like "Why do some Americans call guns biscuits?" or "What's the etymology of the American slang term 'biscuit' meaning 'gun'?" since that seems to be your intended meaning and would resolve some of the disputes in various threads on this page. — alphabet36 secs ago
> “Forty-two per cent of young people who were workless due to ill health stated that a mental health problem was their main problem — more than any other single category,” she said. This is up from 31 per cent a decade ago.
I am, ideally, looking for concise phrases and terms that are equivalent in meaning (i.e., synonyms) for an English idiom. The English idiom is "Shooting oneself in the foot."
To include information on how this word will be used in order to be answered, please see the following dialogue as an exa...
I understand the following 'slang' terms for guns :
Boxcutter / Burner / Hammer / Heavy Metal / Hold Heat / Steel / Street Sweeper / Truncheon.
But 'Biscuit' leaves me baffled.
Note : I'm British, so in our eyes you don't even call a biscuit a biscuit anyway!!
But even considering that, I don't k...
In the morning, I took 1 mg of dexamethasone to help with sore throat. This has been the second only time I took dexamethasone this year. The previous was in the summer, for the same reason. And, similarly to that case in the summer, after about 10 hours I felt suddenly a blissfull state of calm and lack of stress. It lasted about 2 hours.
What gives?
I think it's the dip in my cortisol levels, but who knows.
And what do I do next with this information, darned if I knew.
Local news. One of the criminal associations in the city, titled "400", illegally installed some booths in the streets for selling fireworks during the most profitable season. Authorities arrested and removed the booths 2 days ago. Today morning, the booths were back. e1.ru/text/business/2024/12/30/74946689
Such things, with mafia over-ruling local authorities, happened in the 1990s in the city, but grew less and less frequent by the end of the 1990s. So it's a bad sign.
> By the end of the decade, Uralmash Gang leaders in Yekaterinburg legitimised their business more and more, and eventually became a registered political party, the Social-Political Union Uralmash (abbreviated OPS, an intentional play on the Russian law enforcement term OPS, or Organised Crime Society).
@Cerberus Reading this news article about Taiwanese work ethic and their long hours workplace culture infiltrating the part of Arizona where TSMC is building their Fab on Biden's invitation (which I think is very smart) I feel that mainstream America sits perfectly in the middle between East Asia and Europe. There is communication style issues too; seems like GungHo 2.0 😀.
@alphabet Yeah, but that's a garden variety typo. The "box clever" demonstrates a prodigious talent for turning ordinary words into three letters: WTF.
@CowperKettle But it says "Alexandra Khabarova" ... why the feminine?
"A Boy Named Sue" is a song written by Shel Silverstein and made famous by Johnny Cash. Cash recorded the song live in concert on February 24, 1969, at California's San Quentin State Prison for his At San Quentin album. Cash also performed the song (with comical variations on the original performance) in December 1969 at Madison Square Garden. The live San Quentin version of the song became Cash's biggest hit on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and his only top ten single there, spending three weeks at No. 2 in 1969, held out of the top spot by "Honky Tonk Women" by The Rolling Stones. The track also...
OK, I'm getting really tired of Gmail search. Why can't we use GREP to find what we're looking for? Surely the geniuses at Google can figure out how to implement that in a mailbox search.
@Robusto I wasn't born yet in 1969. Just saw the San Quentin performance, he's saying the lyrics like rapping but set to I-IV-V-I chords, a lot nicer than Rap today, and the prisoners look a lot nicer and clean-cut too.