It might work. Sentences can be subjective, and it probably isn’t going to hurt. Why not try. Same reason people dress up for court: suit, tie—everything they wouldn’t normally wear
Mildly reclusive American living in Europe.
Tends to get truculent about movies, music, the Oxford comma, and politics
It might work. Sentences can be subjective, and it probably isn’t going to hurt. Why not try. Same reason people dress up for court: suit, tie—everything they wouldn’t normally wear
I’m not going to fault anyone for typos. I fight my phone’s autocorrect all the time, but it was odd that just those two letters were transposed
Did you switch the keycaps for your r’s and t’s?
Unfortunately, it probably would go like that. The snippet above just said “in public” so I assumed that would include just down the street
I can imagine some situations. I was at a party when we were cooking and the knives were shit. Went home and brought back over an 8 inch chef’s knife.
I did not have the original packaging to carry it. My cardboard and tape sheath would not have met the letter of this law
Wouldn’t authentic house music be from Chicago and European be derivative?
The Upper Peninsula of Michigan and up by Buffalo, NY get some serious snow
Then you should have contacted the authorities
I’ll let someone with more skin in the game take care of it. If people notice, they’ll go somewhere else, if they don’t, then I guess that shop gets away with it.
I thought the sizes were pretty big. It’d end up looking like a steak burrito
It may have been some sort of “style” but it was what they were putting on the spit to cut from and being sold as “döner” on the menu.
Actually the pizza definitions do specify the thickness of the crust
It didn’t have percentages, just a list of ingredients and, from what I know, they are listed in order of amount
I meant the info as support for the comment that it was just congealed meat. There were a lot of starches and binders as well
I’ve seen the ingredients on commercial döner meat in a German Döner shop. It’s mostly chicken skin
Edit: “meat”, and downvote all you like, it doesn’t make it untrue
I’m willing to bet prohibitively expensive insurance.
Possibly a dedicated lifeguard, meaning if it was just you, you wouldn’t be able to attend to anything else
I knew someone–American–who would affect some sort of British-ish accent. It was part of her identity because she had spent some summers in England or something. It was strongest at times, especially when she was meeting someone for the first time; no one with an accent themselves, so it wasn’t that she was absorbing some influence, more that it was an aspirational trait.
Just offering this as a possibility
I get all cooking, history, and movie reviews: Max Miller, Red Letter Media, Behind the Bastards, and four-hour history/archaeology documentaries
Ah, right. I completely overlooked that. Since it was such a low number, I thought it might be a numbered source
Question was answered, but I’m wondering about the citation. What is the number three in parenthesis? MLA is name of source and possibly page number.
I feel like “angst” has a competition of uncomfortableness. It’s maybe more specific than anxiety and not as oppressive. Like teenage angst, it’s temporary
The word “angst” was taken over as a part of the language. It’s a specific type of fear, sort of mixed with anxiety. Fear and angst aren’t interchangable
Probably referring to Microsoft. That’s the one of the two with all the cloud experience
My only question is, How often do these trucks overturn?