So when Gandalf said “fly, you fools” to the fellowship, he was ordering them to sprout wings and fly away?
So when Gandalf said “fly, you fools” to the fellowship, he was ordering them to sprout wings and fly away?
Flounders are born symmetrical; eye migration happens as they transition to the juvenile stage of growth.
That looks to be some type of velvet worm.
I’m so glad my favorite moth, the rosy maple moth (the pink and yellow one with a mullet) was in this picture.
At least link to the original video and author (Natural Habitat Shots) instead of a crappy aggregator account:
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The imperial system doesn’t have any electromagnetism units that I’m aware of, so they borrow from SI.
I think the semicolons are correct too (though the colon you mentioned would add a lot of clarity). This grammar rule comes up infrequently enough that it can be jarring to encounter a semicolon before reaching the end of a properly formed independent clause.
Yes he definitely was, but I guess studios weren’t ready for the implication of mice-like creatures bring birthed from human vaginas.
Either ambient instrumental music (lots of Brian Eno) or any music that I know all the words to (so that my brain doesn’t have to actively process the lyrics).
Looks like five mistakes to me. And two spelling errors.
You could, but should pick a different drive than c (this will likely break a ton of stuff)
I actually really like that fsutil case sensitivity can be set on a folder by folder basis so that I can have a safe space to deal with Linux files.
Oh, then I guess only emotionally then. Thanks for the clarification.
Man, that’s one fucked up looking guitar…
Much like Eiffel 65, I appear to be blue…
I’m not sure if this is sarcastic, since I have neighbors just like this. (I hope it is sarcastic)
I haven’t had to write in a news style too often, but headlines (from AP guidelines at least) are meant to stand entirely on their own and without context.
While I agree that language can and should change, the use of hyperbole, slang, or cliches in a headline can negatively impact the clarity of the headline, which is most important.
Does something like decimate or carnage have two widely accepted meanings now? Then as an editor, I would caution against their use in a headline. Something like “Hundreds sickened in suspected mass food poisoning at New Zealand university” seems fine and is without clickbait.