Irish-Americans found an affinity for corned beef as they finally had access to meat and especially beef. They initially lived in and near Jewish neighborhoods, so, it became popular to boil up corned beef, cabbage, and root vegetables.
Mildly reclusive American living in Europe.
Tends to get truculent about movies, music, the Oxford comma, and politics
Irish-Americans found an affinity for corned beef as they finally had access to meat and especially beef. They initially lived in and near Jewish neighborhoods, so, it became popular to boil up corned beef, cabbage, and root vegetables.
Yeah, I did after I posted
Sort of like LPNs. Education is similar as well
An RN degree in the US is often a bachelor’s degree. They didn’t really have university degrees for nurses in Germany (there are nursing management degrees). There is obviously a licensing test, but that should be the only barrier.
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Meant to prevent misfires. The trigger doesn’t directly cause firing: there’s a hammer to strike the primer
I think that’s all phones
Suffering under more natural disasters than anywhere in Europe.
Florida’s heritage is to be a shitty place:
“On August 11, 1776, when news of the Declaration of Independence became known in St. Augustine, they became so incensed that they made effigies of John Hancock and Samuel Adams and hung them in the trees in St. Augustine Plaza and set them on fire." (Ben Brotemarkle. 2024. FLORIDA TODAY)
That’s what I meant in response to “ask parents to bring basic school supplies”. “Ask” could also be covered in a list of suggested supplies. But, anyway, parents are providing those things, which counters the original question
What is “basic school supplies” for you? In Europe, there is a list of basic supplies students need and the displays show up in stores around July: things like pencils, pens, erasers, paper, binders, folders, punches, staplers/staples, paper clips, correction fluid… There’s a lot
Sometimes more specific (sometimes. Verbs carry some widely different meaning and depend on propositions to differentiate), but not always more concise. If you’ve done or compared German-English translations, you see the English is always shorter, both in word and—especially in—character counts. My experience has been usually about 20, up to 30, percent.
Those are just esoteric or poetic uses. It’s perfectly fine to just say “it” in all those cases, but there is still a distinction for people. It’s worth considering the possibilities of that disappearing as well. In any case, we don’t conjugate differently for genders
That’s what I upgraded to a year or two ago. Handles switching input sources no problem; something the Sennheisers couldn’t do
I had a bad experience with the Bluetooth on Sennheiser and got so frustrated I broke them into little pieces and threw them away. I’ve since bought two pairs of Bang & Olufsen and have been happy. It seems they have a sort of light pink on at least one of the models
The one specific models I’m nostalgic for are the IBM ps/2 30 & 50.
I was thinking it would make more sense to change the x-axis to “materialism”
I don’t know what to tell you. If that’s his experience…
I believe 911 will work without even a provider. I’ve obviously never tried it. Maybe without a card even