Cool, so far, I only heard about “dy”
Cool, so far, I only heard about “dy”
I very clearly remember “mortal wombat” as one of the insults in Tropic Thunder when I saw it in a cinema. But it was never there when I watched it later. Am I crazy or did they change the movie later?
Not everyone feels the need to read such articles. I’m glad for this summary. Provided it’s true, but it’s entirely believable.
A solution to this problem: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z9pD_UK6vGU
Yes. Behind the toilet.
I relatively often meet 4 of these:
no speed limit (use the normal limit for this type of road)
car tires may defy laws of nature (slippery road, usually followed by a sign saying it applies during rain)
speed camera ahead
no water polluting goods (not very common, but occasionally comes up. There is also no dangerous materials with an orange trapezoid instead of an ellipse)
I also saw don’t drive off the pier (around ferries), watch for skiers (in the mountains with cross-country skiing routes), and warning about planes, although in different design (around airports).
They are the same, just divided to 10 differently.
I very quickly checked wikipedia, because I couldn’t easily identify the extra one. It lists all 16 of the 10 commandments… The table looks like different branches of christianity bundle some of them together (mostly various coveting) or don’t even consider the first and last a commandment, so they always only count to ten. So it’s an easy mistake to make.
But the fact that they couldn’t even count the paragraphs is riddiculous.
If you want to be able to write practically anything on mobile, including ≠, ≈, ‰, ℝ etc., have a look at Unexpected keyboard. No spellcheck or autocomplete, though.
In a considerable part of the world. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_minimum_driving_ages
BTC? No way, that’s way too sane. It’s going to be DOGE.