The whole article is just a description of these tweets: https://nitter.privacydev.net/Amina_io/status/1840759345354809414
The whole article is just a description of these tweets: https://nitter.privacydev.net/Amina_io/status/1840759345354809414
The cost to move to America is quite steep, though, and there are significant drawbacks.
The only real issue with OpenStreetMaps is that the quality varies significantly town-to-town depending on how much love it’s had by local, knowledgable contributors. Road directions are one of the more complex things to configure in OSM, especially with complex multi-lane junctions, and so densely-populated areas and major roads are likely to be quite good, whereas more rural areas can be hit-and-miss.
VS Code’s diff tools are killer. Comparison is smarter than most, and you can edit either file as you go.
I’m all for interesting side quests, but it does hurt immersion a little when High Priest Powervac impresses upon you how urgent it is that you stop The Great Finger Eater and save the galaxy, but you’ve also really got to gather nine forget-me-nots for Widow Stoop and honestly, they’re of equal importance.
I went up from the Jordan unto Bethel. And as I was going up by the way, there came forth little children out of the city, and mocked me and said unto me, “Go up, thou bald head! Go up, thou bald head!” And I turned back and looked on them, and cursed them in the name of the Lord. And there came forth Ganon out of the wood, and tore forty and two children of them.
Robert Molesworth in a session on 12th August 1720:
in his Opinion, they ought, on this Occasion, to follow the Example of the ancient Romans, who having no Law against Parricide […] adjudg’d the guilty Wretch to be thrown alive, sew’d up in a Sack, into the Tyber. […] As he look’d upon the Contrivers and Executors of the villainous South Sea Scheme, as the Parricides of their Country, he should be satisfy’d to see them undergo the same Punishment.
No specific mention of snakes, but that was part of the Roman “punishment of the sack”.
*IR light, in the interest of avoiding confusion.
Quis lautus ipsos lavat?
Also Œ, Ȝ, and arguably W and U.
I’ve never seen a convincing source for this factoid. As best I can tell, “killer whale” was never “whale killer” in recorded written text.
How was there a demon of misspelling before standardized spelling?