That French guy was just trying to butter them up.
That French guy was just trying to butter them up.
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Oh, I know this one, Estonia is that country next to Italy, right?
Running With the Bagpipes: A Kevin Costner Saga.
TIL. Also, the blog post claims that donkeys can be seen “picking them [coyote] up by the neck and shaking them wildly: possibly causing trauma that can disable or injure”. Woah.
According to English Wikipedia, they are also known as wapitis and that’s what European languages seem to call them (including mine).
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But maybe the virus is in the image file? /j
Yes, there have been bows that are long, but not like the longbow. As you say, the longbow was used to shoot volleys, while the yumi could also be used on horseback. The longbow had a very heavy draw weight, around 90-120 lbs. That’s the weight you have to pull to get it at full draw. The yumi possibly had a a lower draw weight (although Korean and Mongolian and Turkish composite bows had draw weights of around 100 lbs as well, and they were mainly used on horseback). Again, the yumi has a shorter lower limb which meant it could be used on horseback (and it was) while there is no way a longbow could have. So the longbow and the yumi are very different technically.
In Finland, even former presidents are addressed as President so and so.
If we’re talking about English, there were different kinds of English which were spoken (Old English, Middle English, Early Modern English, and Modern English. And no, Old English doesn’t just mean English that sounds ‘old’. It was an early variety of English that was spoken from the 5th/7th century to 1066). All of them had their own phonology, morphology and syntax. In short, they followed their own linguistic rules and conventions. The way they sounded wasn’t just randomly made up. To find out more, look up the varieties of English I mentioned or take a look at this Wikipedia article about Historical linguistics.
FreeTube? Or are you watching on your phone?
Technically, you’re looking at art.
Thanks for reminding me that beauty really is skin deep because underneath you’ve got THIS. Shudder
Lately, Nosaj Thing - Aquarium.
I can’t write much today, but I just want to thank everyone for their input. I know that AI means different things for different professions and different people. In cording, it can be quite helpful. But in a language-based profession, it can be problematic, because it can output fluent and convincing language, while getting all the facts wrong. Or it can sound very artistic, but if you look at it closer, it’s not all that original, or the language might become impoverished, and so on and so forth. In tedious and repetitive jobs people are perhaps more willing to give over to AI. Which is what robots are doing.
I’ll read your replies more closely tomorrow and reply to each one, if I can. Thanks for the discussion!
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No prob! 😊 👍️
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