This is "I love you" in long term marriages.
![Big Grin :biggrin:](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
This is "I love you" in long term marriages.
True. I started enjoying splitting my infinitives when I learned why it was the rule. The Romans have been gone a long time.p0rtia wrote: ↑Sat Apr 03, 2021 6:50 amAs I always respond to my worthy sister, when she informs me that I've pronounced a word wrong, or used it in a wrong fashion (think "presently", or "wrong fashion"), there is no meaningful "wrong" in language use, there is only convention. Or I should say, "conventions". cf. "ideolect" and "sociolect".
Everybody gets pissed off at some usage that jars their sense of proper language use. Our pattern-sense is offended. I've learned to shrug and move on (but I had a lot of practice).
Never been married, but I do know that this is "Iove you" in any relationship, any communication, and in any job.
GREAT FALLS — After exhibiting mild symptoms on Sunday and out of an abundance of caution, Governor Greg Gianforte on Monday was tested for COVID-19 and received a positive result. The first lady, who has exhibited no symptoms, has been tested and is awaiting her results.
Following his doctor's instructions and public health guidance, the governor is isolating for 10 days, according to a news release from Gianforte's office. The governor has notified all individuals with whom he may have had close contact.
All of the governor's in-person events have been canceled until further notice, and the governor will continue to conduct his duties and manage the state's business from his home in Bozeman.
Irony is dead.The Republican National Committee is requiring attendees of the party's spring donor retreat in Florida to get tested for the coronavirus and submit proof of a negative result as a condition for gaining entry to the event.
Wealthy contributors to the RNC and other GOP causes are set to gather later this week in Palm Beach to hobnob with top party officials and hear from former President Donald Trump. Trump is set to host a portion of the retreat for a dinner speech at Mar-a-Lago, his private club and residence that has turned into a redoubt for ex-administration officials and Republican donors and businessmen.
But according to an email the RNC sent to people planning to attend the retreat obtained by the Washington Examiner, participants must first "take a COVID-19 PCR or Rapid Antigen test and receive a negative result." That information must be provided to the RNC in advance. Negative coronavirus tests are a prerequisite for attending the retreat, even for those who have been fully vaccinated against the coronavirus.
"Proof of a negative COVID-19 test result is required in order to receive your credentials for the weekend," the email stated. "If you or members in your party fail to fulfill this requirement, you will be denied entry to the 2021 RNC Spring Retreat."
In German, it's pronounced "getz". Americans butcher german names.
There are 2 more videos of this in the twitter thread.jemcanada2 wrote: ↑Sun Mar 28, 2021 10:16 pmI don’t hear any accents.![]()
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He can’t be Canadian. He said they owed him 2 bucks, instead of a toonie.![]()
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That’s why I just ask “How is your last name pronounced?” and go with it.LM K wrote: ↑Thu Apr 08, 2021 12:14 amIn German, it's pronounced "getz". Americans butcher german names.
OMG, I was right after all!
Uh-oh...
I pronounce it "asshole."LM K wrote: ↑Thu Apr 08, 2021 12:14 amIn German, it's pronounced "getz". Americans butcher german names.
When the pandemic hit in March 2020, Anna, a young woman from Bradford, was waiting for surgery for endometriosis. The surgery was cancelled, leaving her in excruciating pain. She was forced to close her business, a small tattoo studio that she had opened two years earlier, at the age of 24. She could no longer pay for the weekly counselling that had been helping her deal with her troubled childhood. Her partner lost his job. Anna was convinced that if she caught Covid, she would die. “I was in a terrified bubble, having the news on constantly, crying, worrying, panicking,” she told me. For weeks, she waited anxiously for news about support for shuttered businesses. The cash grant, when it finally came, fell far short. Other business expenses – insurance, bills – went on her credit card. She considered suicide.
Feeling abandoned by the government and frustrated by the daily press briefings, Anna and her partner researched the virus online. On Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, they came across theories about the origins of coronavirus that the mainstream media weren’t talking about – that it was engineered in a lab in China, say, or that it had been artificially spliced with HIV. Some of it seemed implausible to Anna, but it was enough to convince her that the media wasn’t telling the full story. “Loads of people were saying ‘even if you die from a heart attack, they’ll put it down as a Covid death’. I was looking into that, and how many people who died had pre-existing health conditions,” she said. “It was to make me feel better, so I wouldn’t be as scared.”
She read dense, seemingly scientific material which claimed that PCR testing – the throat and nasal swabs that are considered the gold standard of Covid tests – leads to enormous numbers of false positives. She read that the World Health Organization had said that Britain is testing at too high a sensitivity. She read about the cost of lockdowns, and Sweden’s more permissive approach. She read about the death rate; 1% didn’t sound that high at all. Looked at another way, 99% survived. By the end of the first lockdown, Anna was no longer afraid. She was angry. “I’d been sat in my house for four months, in absolute agony, no mental health support, no financial support, and it did an absolute number on me,” she said.
Anna was not the only one to respond this way. During the first few months of the pandemic, a broad movement coalesced online. At the most extreme end were outright Covid deniers, those who believed that the virus didn’t exist and the pandemic had been fabricated. At the other were Covid sceptics or anti-lockdowners, those who thought that the numbers were exaggerated or that the government had an ulterior motive for restricting freedoms. Over the past year, these views have attracted more and more adherents. Occasionally, the most extreme activists have taken direct action: setting fire to 5G masts which they suspected of spreading the virus, entering Covid wards and attempting to remove relatives, visiting hospitals to film empty corridors and posting them as “evidence” that the public is being lied to about the numbers of sick and dying. On New Year’s Eve, a doctor at St Thomas’ hospital in London filmed a crowd of protesters who had gathered outside holding placards and chanting “Covid is a hoax”.
Oh, yeah. A tour guide in Germany laughed and made fun of the way Americans pronounced Bamberg, rhyming it with hamberg (er). She didn't mean it unkindly, but that always stuck with me. I try when traveling (a distant memory, it seems) to learn correct pronunciations, but it can be hard. For a while, I could remember how to pronounce Copenhagen, which sounds nothing like that in Danish. It's easy for me to remember the correct way to pronounce Budapest, though, as I know more about the strange pronunciations in Hungarian.
As the late, great George Carlin once said, its a name. You can spell your name S-M-I-T-H and pronounce it Janofski. So "asshole" is an acceptable pronunciation of "Gaetz".northland10 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 08, 2021 9:59 amI pronounce it "asshole."
Well, when it preceded by Matthew Louis at least. Context is everything in diction.
To be even fairer, "Gaetz" is not a foreign name. It's correct pronunciation is the way Matt Gaetz pronounces it. This holds true everywhere on the planet: people move around, and the spelling and pronunciation of their names change. This has been going on since people have names.
Fuckwad, indeed. One could consider his ill behavior to be assault.Slim Cognito wrote: ↑Thu Apr 08, 2021 12:43 pm![]()
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Had my first anti-maskhole encounter last week. No biggie. I was wearing my mask and had to pass a restaurant door where some young people were standing maskless. As I usually do, I held my breath and looked in the opposite direction as I passed. One young man, a priviledged-looking sum-bitch with god knows what number beer in his hand, said "You don't need that mask, young lady," I put up my hand, palm to his face (talk to the hand style) and said, "Don't start with me," continuing on. I could hear the bastard coughing on me as I passed him.
Fuckwad.
Don't tell Wifehorn.
My original family name is Lithuanian: Krakoskaus