Apparently y’all got lucky. The ones used on me had a plastic roach attached to the end of it. Made it look and feel like one of the bastards had jumped on my finger.
DaGeek247 of https://dageek247.com/
Apparently y’all got lucky. The ones used on me had a plastic roach attached to the end of it. Made it look and feel like one of the bastards had jumped on my finger.
They’re also there for wind resistance management. Removing it will basically do nothing bad though.
https://labs.alxvtoronto.com/collections/byte-90
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNvJFb2xNOM
They’re 60$ each. I literally almost bought two without even thinking about if i even should.
I’m at two as well. Finasteride for hair, and vitamin D because my doctor recommended it.
I had thought the vitamin D pill was actually kinda useless when i first started taking it. I was fine before i started taking the pill, right? Due to me being lazy and prescription address changes lagging behind a move, I ended up skipping out on that pill for two months. Turns out, vitamin D is like, a minor anti depressant or some shit because I was exhausted all the time near the end there before I started retaking the pill.
It’s not the “native” defines how or when you learned to speak a language. It’s that how and when you learned a language that makes it “native”.
As a bonus, since this is English, “native language” also changes definition based on context. If you are filling out a form and they are asking demographical information, your native language is Cantonese. If you are filling out a resume and want to describe how well you speak English, then you can read/write English at the native level.
If you are in a casual conversation and someone asks what your native language is, then your answer will likely include a whole or part of the above story, to avoid confusion and to encourage more discussion. Essentially, both Cantonese and English fit your “native language” definition in that context.
/t/fuckcars maybe? Our public project trains can’t be too far out now, right? Right!?