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00:06
I just learnt this Italian word: stoccafisso.
Hmm it doesn't sound very nice?
Can you guess its meaning?
00:19
@Cerberus Let me rephrase that. You can guess its meaning! :-)
Hah.
In Latin, fissus means cloven, fissured.
Stocca could be...a stick?
Cloven by inserting a stick?
Stick: almost, same root very likely.
Cloven, no.
Hmm.
I don't know any Italian.
What could fisso be?
You don't need to :-)
Unless it is afisso?
Or is it...stokvis?
00:24
Not Italian.
@Cerberus Bingo!
That is funny indeed.
I don't exactly know what the Dutch word means, and of course it is not used any more.
Must be a kind of fish.
Probably some preparation of it?
> Le terme originel néerlandais stokvis est construit à partir des mots stok, « bâton », et vis, « poisson », car ce dernier est souvent suspendu sur des treillages en bois.
Stockfish is unsalted fish, especially cod, dried by cold air and wind on wooden racks (which are called "hjell" in Norway) on the foreshore. The drying of food is the world's oldest known preservation method, and dried fish has a storage life of several years. The method is cheap and effective in suitable climates; the work can be done by the fisherman and family, and the resulting product is easily transported to market. Over the centuries, several variants of dried fish have evolved. The stockfish (fresh dried, not salted) category is often mistaken for the klippfisk, or salted cod, category...
Right, suspendu à sécher?
By the way, can you explain why the pronunciation of the root changes in the singular forms, je sèche?
@jlliagre Sounds like a chess enigne.
Stockfish is a free and open-source chess engine, available for various desktop and mobile platforms. It can be used in chess software through the Universal Chess Interface. Stockfish has been one of the best chess engines in the world for several years; it has won all main events of the Top Chess Engine Championship (TCEC) and the Chess.com Computer Chess Championship (CCC) since 2020 and, as of 16 November 2024, is the strongest CPU chess engine in the world with an estimated Elo rating of 3642, in a time control of 40/15 (15 minutes to make 40 moves), according to CCRL. The Stockfish engine...
@Cerberus That's because of the stressed syllable.
00:30
Why does the stress make us not want to have é?
Sèche has a single and closed syllable, sécher has two, the first one is open.
I believe there is never a é in a closed syllable.
Ah, I see.
Interesting.
And why is it appelle but appelons?
Is it because, in a closed syllable, it must always be è? (Is it a schwa in appelons?)
Yes to both.
OK makes sense.
@Cerberus People with a strong Corsican accent pronounce "apélle". That's very distinctive.
00:39
Also with a different a sound?
And does the double ll have a function, then?
Same /a/. The double ll has no function.
OK.
Funny.
Would that be Italian influence? But Italians can do the è sound just fine?
00:54
@jlliagre That hurts my head. Please be talking about some other contrastive pair than /e/ vs /ɛ/.
@Cerberus Some (other) Tuscan variant or other Italian languages might pronounce it the same way. What is sure is 'seven' (sette) is pronounced /'sette/ in Corsican but /ˈsɛtte/ in standard Italian.
@jlliagre Interesting!
@jlliagre OK and this /e/ is closer to é?
Yes, é is /e/.
OK.
And è is /ɛ/.
01:07
Right.
01:21
@Cerberus 14'41" Outside Central-Italy, the Italian vowel system is a casino :-)
@jlliagre I can understand that with the Italian subtitles.
I didn't know north/central/south was a major division.
@Cerberus The only difference I already knew was the one of casa.
You know a lot more about Italian that I do.
@Cerberus That depends on the millennium. We go back a couple of them and you win hands down :-)
@Cerberus casa is casa is casa in any number of tongues. :)
To provide your words over the computer, like here in chat, you're doing what?

1. writing them
2. saying them
3. typing them in
4. keying them in
5. keyboarding them
6. entering them
7. posting them
8. publishing them
9. punching them
10. (something else than any of these, and if so, what?)
01:36
@jlliagre We wouldn't call that Italian, though!
Is not any language spoken on the Italian peninsula by definition an Italian language? :)
Even 50,000 years ago? :)
We do such silly things with country names, as though they are aeternal.
@tchrist An, yes; the, no.
Though, in the linguistic sense, not any.
Henceforth rebranded "Languages of the Italian Peninsula".
@tchrist Dropping them?
It's hard to find something that works for people who are just waving at virtual keyboards instead of pushing physical keys on a tactile keyboard like I am.
01:47
I am pushing physical keys.
What I'm getting at is that our terminology for producing input is just as abstracted, if not more, into some extended metaphor as "printing" is in a programming language, per the ELU question.
@tchrist Any of these is valid.
@tchrist But programming languages are not as widely known.
Besides, not al use print.
Does Javascript use print?
Autohotkey certainly does not.
@Cerberus This is quite true.
A keypunch is a device for precisely punching holes into stiff paper cards at specific locations as determined by keys struck by a human operator. Other devices included here for that same function include the gang punch, the pantograph punch, and the stamp. The term was also used for similar machines used by humans to transcribe data onto punched tape media. For Jacquard looms, the resulting punched cards were joined together to form a paper tape, called a "chain", containing a program that, when read by a loom, directed its operation. For Hollerith machines and other unit record machines the...
That's why I thought of punching them in.
Late Pleistocene technology.
@Cerberus Well, there's window.print() but that's not the same as console.log() is.
Many languages use read and write as opposites.
Punching in letters in typing is not an uncommon expression?
agree
01:54
Do you really thing it came from punched cards?
No, but it's what made me think of the connection.
Ah, OK.
"Punch in the coördinates, Mr Sulu!"
Yeah, that suggests violent pressing!
Beethoven has a Hammer(clavier) sonata, or rather, the Große Sonate für das Hammerklavier. Always sounded violent to me!
01:58
Well, yes, a piano has hammers!
Yes, but look how it starts!
Bang bang bang. Fortissimo with extra hard accents!
Let me put it on.
> The work was perceived as almost unplayable but was nevertheless seen as the summit of piano literature since its very first publication. Completed in 1818, it is often considered to be Beethoven's most technically challenging piano composition[25] and one of the most demanding solo works in the classical piano repertoire.
It's complex and incredibly difficult.
> Structurally, it follows traditional Classical-era sonata form, but the recapitulation of the main theme is varied to include extensive figurations in the right hand that anticipate some of the techniques of Romantic piano music. NPR's Ted Libbey writes, "An entire line of development in Romantic music—passing through Schubert, Chopin, Schumann, Brahms, and even Liszt—springs from this music."[22]
02:15
Accents: They can differ in vowel sounds. 1'52"
02:30
@Cerberus I tried it, but I didn't get a single row.
@Robusto Oh, dear!
And I thought it would be easier than the NYT ones.
Do you have any suggestions on how it could be improved?
I have already realised that bone is not right.
@Cerberus I don't know. I just didn't see any full-row relationships.
I mean when you saw the solutions?
Replace "bone" with "piercing".
It didn't show me the solutions.
That's another thing I was going to mention.
Ah OK, you need to make four wrong guesses.
02:34
I did.
Then you can choose "Reveal".
But it doesn't happen automatically on that site, you could keep trying.
The NYT one does reveal the answers. I didn't realize it was manual in yours.
It's not my site.
@Cerberus I guess so. That's why I could also guess it as the first set.
02:36
@GratefulDisciple Right! I tried to hedge it with "something to do with".
@Cerberus Ah, OK. I thought it was. I was going to congratulate you on putting it together in such a short time.
@GratefulDisciple Right!
@Robusto Heh maybe I could do that with GPT...
But there already exist various sites for this.
Well, I wondered if you'd suddenly got serious about programming.
Stranger things have happened, I suppose.
Well, I guess I could do it myself in Javascript.
But it would be a ton of work.
@Cerberus Yup, quite easy for me too, 77% solve rate.
Archive July 30, 2024
Connections Puzzle #415
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02:39
Yay.
Once when I was ~20, with a fresh brain, brighter than most, I forgot how to spell train for a minute: Trane? No, not trane…bane, cane, dane, feign, gain, insane…am I having a stroke? What's happening? Where'e the dictionary? Are there tranes in the Lexicon Encyclopedia?
You know, like that
It happens to the finest people
What are those episodes called?
And I just remembered the Lexicon Encyclopedia set…
I can't believe I forgot the word lexicon last month. OMG.
I spent maybe $1000 for that word, to sit in my living room…
It had trans surgery in it, yeah
But I couldn't retain lexicon
Wow
02:57
@Robusto So let me know how it could be improved after revealing the categories.
@HippoSawrUs It does.
Anyway, so can somebody buy the Cross-whatever encyclopedia volume for this person…
Dressing? :)
Oh, they've never had encyclopedias or a library maybe
When I'm bonking — hitting the wall physically, usually due to needing to replenish calories or sometimes water, or rarely oxygen — it can feel like ALL words are hard.
Or just plain underslept.
I don't know who "this person" is.
But when I was 20 I also routinely did double-all-nighters. Crazy, I know.
03:08
@tchrist Probably someone who just needs electolytes or oxygen or something
I'm supposed to stop being mean this year
@HippoSawrUs Urgery is what urgers do. I don't know what this has to do with tranes, though.
And bake more cookies and muffin tops
@tchrist Yes, low blood sugar or sleep deprivation.
@HippoSawrUs Just muffin tops, eh? Are you one of those people who have discrimineaten the muffin bottoms?
I'm going to try to seem sweeter in my feebleness
03:11
You probably just need to hang out with my friend Stevia more. Sweetness incarnate.
@tchrist No, it's my husband
Him and his muffin tops
tsk tsk
Does he treat cupcakes the same way?
But he buys bananas all the time, and they make better muffin tops than whole muffins, I've found
Or the easy banana muffin recipe found online, that is
Oh, I know why I started that now
There's no emoji for 'emoji'.
All I had was the self-rising biscuit flour one time
White Lilly brand
And it's too soft for whole muffins
03:15
Has the new year already started or do we get a mulligan and it really starts tomorrow?
But makes great muffin tops
You keep saying muffin top over and over and soon it'll become a thing.
@Mitch 🯄
@Mitch �
My mother-in-laws muffin-top pans were getting rusty
@tchrist I just finished translating 'Finnegans Wake' into emojis and it never came up.
03:17
Crusty?
@tchrist well that's just cheating.
She was English. IDK if she actually made muffin tops in them.
@Mitch You should go to the next Emojicon and make them put out. Clearly there are missing emojika to be had.
Or some kind of tarts or whatever they do
Anyway, I threw away the pan and bought a new one
@Mitch ¿moi?
03:19
Like all those 18th c novels that redacted peoples names...look man we know you're writing about your mom and dad, just make up a name.
So I have to use it or regift it
To justify that
Amazon rewards are dangerous
Like crack and fenty probably
Somewhere up there
@tchrist there's a form to fill out. I'll propose an image and we'll see how far it goes.
But I've recovered now
No more Wilton pans
I wonder how Toki Pona does it...I'll copy them
Are those the moldy ones?
03:21
I would pay money to have my old aluminum jelly roll pan back
What befell it?
Wait, your mother in law was English?
@Mitch Are those actually real people? I always assumed those were fictional?
Or are you just Pennsylvania Dutch calling all the rest of us English? :)
From Ramsgate
I sea, I sea.
03:22
@Cerberus I'm going on the well founded assumption that all fiction is thinly veiled autobiography.
Jelly roll pans do not truly last forever, at least not these days.
Your friends will be upset if they don't find themselves in your latest novel
My husband had IDK how many pizza pans from the '70s, nice ones, and he used my jelly roll pan for pizza one time…
Also if they do find themselves, but in a different kind of anger.
@Mitch Oh, dear!
03:24
I would go on, but my best friend retrieved it from the trash, gave it a good home, and prevented a domestic abuse situation
That changes things.
She's a gem
@Cerberus I think it was Thomas Hardy how said that all these novelists who think they have to have lived experience to write a good story are just lacking imagination.
Or maybe Mark Twain.
I'm really good at measuring and following baking instructions
Try a cookie sheet? Or are you making bars?
03:26
And my husband is really good at cooking with secret ingredients
It takes all kinds
Secret ingredients will make you either oversleep or undersleep.
@Mitch Take that!
Like Anna Karenina... Tolstoy used his personal experience as a woman to inform his story. Also his lived experience in reading Madame Bovary.
I hope I got that right. Who wrote which one first?
Twain.
22 Twain?
03:28
@Mitch Hee was he a pseudonym or transsexual?
The Anna Karenina principle states that a deficiency in any one of a number of factors dooms an endeavor to failure. Consequently, a successful endeavor (subject to this principle) is one for which every possible deficiency has been avoided. The name of the principle derives from Leo Tolstoy's 1877 novel Anna Karenina, which begins: In other words: happy families share a common set of attributes which lead to happiness, while any of a variety of attributes can cause an unhappy family. This concept has been generalized to apply to several fields of study. In statistics, the term Anna Kareni...
@Cerberus yeah that was a bit much but people liked his books so I guess he could get away with being so catty.
Chekov's lingerie?
Do I need to read him?
Have I read anything by him?
Madame Bovary was a cow.
03:30
For 30 years, he was like, 'Here, here's a bowl of Mexican rice, no big deal, just thought you'd like some…how was it, BTW? Ah-ha! I added onion! Gotcha! I'm a genius! I just invented something…let me file that under Unexpected Onion…and never find that again…
Gotta love him, and food
I get so confused by the differences between what in American we call "Mexican rice" and what we call "Spanish rice".
@tchrist Happiness is the 'bottom' object in the Boolean algebra of family features. It is the intersection of all properties...there are many ways to miss being happy,you have to have all the properties to be happy and there's only one way to have them all.
@tchrist I hope he's had it washed
Rice-a-Roni has ruined me forever.
@tchrist snirkle
@tchrist In Mexico, they call Spanish Rice 'el arroz americano'.
His daughter is half Mexican-American. Her mom's family just called it the Mexican word for soup. Sounds like so-pah. I'm sure you know. I will look it up again.
03:36
@tchrist I don't think I've ever had that. We were all envious of the contestants on 'The Price Is Right' when they won a box.
Soh puh
Short for Sopa Aguada de Arroz, I think
In my best American accent
Puerto Ricans like yellow rice. Mexicans like red rice.
That's all I know
They can fight amongst themselves while I eat
I'm not the United Nations
03:42
And Cubans? I think there's an egg involved.
Just an old, sweet, feeble lady
That's the goal
This year
We'll see
Brown in Cuba. Whiter in Spain. Con huevo.
This is not a deliberately racist remark.
Arroz con frijoles ≠ Arroz a la cubana
Pondian issues.
In my hometown, all the ethnic food, Cuban whatever, was cooked by the Greeks
They owned all the restaurants
They really did
They mostly did in my town, too.
There was a greek restaurant set up in a mobile building with attached covered dining area by the main gate of Ft Sam Houston, TX 30 years ago. That was my favorite food and I've been disappointed in everything else ever since
I would go to the Greek festivals every year, just hoping…
But to no avail
They can't even do the green beans right
It's sad
03:52
Are green beans following the Anna Karenina principle?
You don't know what you got till it's gone…
Is there only one happy road for green beans, and all others lead to sadness?
PROTIP: Edamame are not the green beans you are looking for.
The green beans (string beans) were in a tomato-based sauce, so good. Maybe everything had lamb juice in it, IDK. But everything was fantastic; hold the olives. And no grape leaves or licorice whatever for me.
My granddaughter would eat a whole bag of edamame beans. Too much estrogen for a little person, they said.
Oh, it was 35 years ago…
What is happening?
I may have lost 5 years somewhere…
Time flies when you're napping
Babies understand that right off the bat
Happy 2025
Zzzz...
04:21
@tchrist My husband does make the best lemon bars, I forgot. Not for diabetics. But maybe for my birthday this year, a small batch.
I made him butterscotch bars once. The English are obsessed with gross stuff. Why does everything have to be like toffee? I don't understand…GN.
04:37
Connections #463
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From 15 September.
I like this purple.
04:55
@Mitch Never had Rice-a-Roni? How is that possible? Were you on a space station in the '80s? Because I know all the ships at sea and Siberia had Rice-a-Roni then.
The rice is browned first to give it a nutty flavor, like with sopa.
 
2 hours later…
07:01
> Fully electric vehicles accounted for 88.9% of new cars sold in 2024, up from 82.4% in 2023, data from the Norwegian Road Federation (OFV) showed.
 
4 hours later…
11:20
Lex Fridman has published an interview with Zelensky
12:03
> After his win, Usyk held aloft a sword that had once belonged to Ivan Mazepa, a 17th‑century Ukrainian Cossack warrior and leader. Usyk's promoter, Alex Krassyuk, said "This is the original sabre of the legendary Hetman who fought for Ukraine's freedom from Russian invaders over 300 years ago". It had been flown in from a museum in Ukraine.
12:19
> Russia considers Mazepa a traitor and an enemy of the state.
You know it when you see it.
12:48
🥱😴
13:06
#travle #754 +0 (Perfect)
✅✅✅✅
https://travle.earth
13:23
So is perfect the enemy of good.
13:44
Or is good the enemy of perfect?
Now, you boys stop fighting and play nice. Think of good as a younger perfect.
good, 🤔 enough
good enough
Not good enough.
#WhenTaken #314 (06.01.2025)

I scored 643/1000🎗️

1️⃣📍6.0K km - 🗓️4 yrs - 🥉112/200
2️⃣📍5.7K km - 🗓️1 yrs - 🥉116/200
3️⃣📍7.7K km - 🗓️17 yrs - 🥉73/200
4️⃣📍2.2K km - 🗓️4 yrs - 🥈144/200
5️⃣📍2.3 km - 🗓️2 yrs - 🥇198/200

https://whentaken.com
@handan_toddler When I was programming, I yearned for perfection but never had enough time except for my own projects. Most companies don't give you enough time for perfection. Or perhaps there are different notions of perfection?
13:59
Yup, time is money.
Wordle 1,297 4/6

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14:12
Strands #309
“In neutral”
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Connections
Puzzle #575
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Daily Octordle #1078
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Daily Sequence Octordle #1078
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Tightrope, a daily trivia game | Britannica

Jan. 6, 2025

T I G H T R O P E
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My Score: 2070
14:29
@Robusto that reminds me of a Lombardi quote: practice doesn't make perfect. A perfect practice makes perfect.
@handan_toddler There's an alternative to that in music: "Practice makes permanent." Which is a two-sided coin.
I coached when my boys were in Little League, and I used to tell them: "How you practice is how you play."
Now, that^ is how one shouldn't practice.
@HippoSawrUs I blame my mom. Also, no Frosted Flakes. Or rather it was discouraged highly. Also, she bought the groceries so we ate what she got.
How dare she.
@Mitch Some kids in grade school got chocolate milk with their lunch. I used to envy them mightily.
> When haters deny HTML’s status as a programming language, they’re showing they don’t understand what a language really is. Language is not instructing an interlocutor what to do in a way that leaves no room for other interpretations; it is better and richer than that. Like human language, HTML is conversational. It is remarkably adept at adapting to context.
Hmm, I'm not a hater, but I disagree.
14:44
@Robusto spoiled brats
Right?
@Robusto yeah, I was open to see what he would say, but he lost me at 'conversational'.
also at 'like human language'.
also his lack of use of 'the' really bothers me.
@Mitch Did he forget to put a close tag on it?
15:07
@Mitch More duplicate rereopopeningingses?
@tchrist I used to think that duplicates were easy close reasons, but now I kind of think it's OK to ask similar questions to those previous. People forget, new people are around, being stuck to exactly what was said before is stifling.
And so it was written.
And so "And so it was written" was written.
It's like a dictionary...people think because it was written, it must be the authoritative truth.
@Robusto nah I ws going to say I didn't like how he used 'the' just to be annoying, and then I checked and he didn't use it at all, and I thought that was odd, 'the' being the most common word in the universe.
@Mitch I thought that would be a, not the; an isn't even in the race.
> Etymology fact of the week: "calque" is a loanword, while "loanword" is a calque. #etymology #language #linguistics Calques VS Loanwords A calque is a word or phrase that was coined by translating the components of a word or phrase in another language. For example, the English word 'skyscraper has been calqued into Spanish by directly translating the words 'sky' and scraper, to give 'rascacielos
> A loanword is a word or phrase that was taken from one language to another. For example, the English word 'patio' is from the Spanish word 'patio, which means 'patio" Loanwords make up berween 70 and 80% of English vocabulary. Example of a calque: German Lehnwort (morphemes translated) English loanwordS loanword Example of a loanword: calque (word borrowed) English calque
15:25
Unfortunately, all that is correct.
Mostly.
> the 23135851162
of 13151942776
and 12997637966
to 12136980858
a 9081174698
in 8469404971
for 5933321709
is 4705743816
@Mitch so Bluesky is now the platform for nerds (read dem supporters) and X is for rednecks?
Or is there no comparison yet?
Nerds and Rednecks sounds like an arcade game
@M.A.R. That's all the do all day long on bluesky...compare themselves with Xitter
@M.A.R. but yeah, people seem to be saying something like that, though I'm not sure that's actually the case.
Wait, I just figured out American politics. You just jump and double jump and eat mushrooms until you win. Any connection to reality is coincidental
@M.A.R. Or actual candy you can get at a movie theater.
at least Nerds.
Rednecks should be... redhots?
or candy corn? I think of candy corn as redneck candy. It's free candy you get at Halloween that nobody wants.
15:32
With a picture of a chilli pepper smiling disturbingly
I say this with full transparency that I really like candy corn. especially the mixed yellow and brown kind.
If you're going to tell me that they all taste the same, that it is just food coloring, I'm going to swear at you and slam down the phone.
It mostly looks like sugar with added sugar
Even I have standards
@M.A.R. That is a gross oversimplification, almost to the point of having some small nits to pick about it like its not mushrooms.
@M.A.R. hands vs minds
@M.A.R. To be fair, there's no added sugar. It's just sugar by itself.
15:35
Mushrooms make reindeer fly?
Frosted Flakes is sugar added to sugar.
I knew some kids when I was a kid who would sprinkle sugar over their Frosted Flakes.
So I applaud them for their ability to recurse.
#WhenTaken #314 (06.01.2025)

I scored 803/1000🏅

1️⃣📍64.6 km - 🗓️10 yrs - 🥇182/200
2️⃣📍407 km - 🗓️2 yrs - 🥇185/200
3️⃣📍7.7K km - 🗓️15 yrs - 🥉79/200
4️⃣📍969 km - 🗓️5 yrs - 🥈166/200
5️⃣📍27.7 m - 🗓️7 yrs - 🥇191/200

https://whentaken.com
@Mitch And on their maple syrup.
@tchrist depends what the middle-aged women voter demographic think
15:40
Dems depend a lot on black voters but they usually don't show up
@M.A.R. 👆
@jlliagre I seriously messed up the geography on those. It didn't seem like there were a lot of clues.
so that helps me with another stopword ('X'). somehow the researchers who I follow there talk about 1) their research, and 2) how much X is bad.
@Mitch I don't have an account on either but I really doubt it's that bad
It's not the comment section on Infowars, is it?
Yup, purple is a good one (not farfetched but not easy either).
Connections #463
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15:46
@M.A.R. Yeah I don't see all the bad things that people talk about but then I don't have many followers and I don't post much so I don't get replies.
@M.A.R. I don't look at infowars.
I 'curate' my feeds: mute words that are associated with 'not in good faith' speech, remove things I don't like from my feed.
Every so often I'll look at the comment threads on Washington Post or NYT and I usually don't get anything meaningful out of it so why bother.
@Robusto "Most companies don't give you enough time for perfection." That's somewhat hard for me to adjust to, given the ideal inculcated in classical performers. Took me some time to adjust to the 80% / 20% pragmatic ethos in business IT programming (as opposed to product programming where there is more reason for perfection).
For example, many times I realized after finishing that a refactoring would be good for future improvement, but my manager (rightly) thinks that my time is better spent on another project that is more business time-sensitive.
@Robusto That IS so true. A successful conclusion of many weeks of practice sessions for a piece means you retain your muscle memory in such a way that the final state minimizes the likelihood to stray from what you intend to perform at a recital. And years later, you still retain at least 75%.
OK, going back I realize I *did* get one row, the yellow one. Upon examining the others, I take exception to "bone" in the green one; we say "stone-cold" and "common cold" and "bitter cold" but we don't say "bone cold," though we do say "chilled to the bone" or (adj) "bone-chilling". Blue is fine, though I thought it a bit opaque when doing the puzzle. But purple was flummoxing.
In the first place, to use "something" for "things in your eye" is to include the class name in the class you're looking for ("something" is not an element of "things", at least not in the same way that *iris*, *san
@Mitch No wonder it's one of my favorite cereal, along with Fruit Loops.
15:57
@GratefulDisciple Let's hope it's 75% ;-).
@jlliagre I would only note that any Spanish- or Portuguese-speaking can have a rio. Hell, there's a cycling club in my state that used to be named "Rio."
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