I got it by focusing on the left edge of the top rightmost plate
I got it by focusing on the left edge of the top rightmost plate
I’m not sure what reaction I’m supposed to have to this post. Can somebody add emojis?
Still better than not expressing them at all
Likely AI. What sticks out to me is the text thats too messy to be font and too clean to be handwriting. It does not come up in a Tineye search, which would be common if it was reposted from somewhere else, and if OP made it they could say so. Lack of credit is always suspicious
TIL that the word “line” originated from the use of linen cords by builders to make a straight line https://www.etymonline.com/word/line
And the words “lingerie” and “lint” are related to linen as well
Unless x=0 is on the left then it could be sine :p
Cosine starts at 1 and decreasing, sine starts at 0 and increasing
Does tapping on the shown part of the text expand it? I only discovered this recently but it works on both firefox and chrome for me
It eggs even states
It’s still not consistent… The $11 2024 10-piece nugget is less than double the $5 4-piece nugget of the same year. The 2014 mcdouble and 2014 oreo mcflurry are way too close to eachother 😢
Aww. Siblings, I presume? They are adorable
IMHO “males” is also dehumanising, but I digress. When used in the derogatory sense “females” is often beside “men,” implying that women are inferior to men. It’s become somewhat of a “dog-whistle,” which is a form of coded language that the speaker uses to imply a different message to a specific audience (usually some sort of bigotry) while maintaining plausable deniability. Someone may purposely use “females” to refer to women to indicate their own misogyny to people who share their beliefs, and it is intentially ambiguous to prevent women who pick up on it from calling it out. Tmk “males” isn’t commonly loaded in the same way
Subtle changes in diction can sometimes dramatically impact how your message is interpreted. Language evolves, and words can take on additional (perfecly valid) meaning over time that are only added to a dictionary after being well-established. This can cause misunderstandings, as demonstrated in this thread. I’m sure you have no negative intentions, but to many it does not seem that way. The takeaway is that a small change in phrasing or words can decide how effectively your meaning is communicated, even if you are unaware of it. Language is messy, and consists of mutual understandings of what a given “word” means. In this case, the hidden negative connotation in “females” is causing you to be misunderstood. I believe using “woman” instead would reflect what you meant without causing anybody to be uncomfortable. Best regards
Wait what
Edit: RIP