I did not recognize that form and assumed it was not a word. I stand corrected.
I did not recognize that form and assumed it was not a word. I stand corrected.
but the encryption keys are not stored on the 1password cloud systems
1password user data is encrypted, right? so even if a hack had allowed a bad actor access to user pw databases, it’s not like they would’ve just scored everyone’s passwords… right?
We call this pose “the strong arm”
So atoms don’t have color because some photons have wavelengths outside of the visible range? That’s irrelevant and in no way justifies the claim
Why is the answer no?
Atoms have emmission spectra. That’s color. Average them if you want an aggregate.
Or the other way round. Xbox studios spins off BGS, which is then acquired by Sony as an independent studio. Literally the exact thing that happened to Bungie.
You mean Xbox mauve series XVX. Bethesda is a Microsoft property now. They’re an Xbox exclusive shop. Probably no more releases for PlayStation.
I don’t get it.
It was a joke, but you appear not to have gotten it. Hence the wooosh sound.
Is that a ps3 emulator?
US here. Never heard of swot, spod, or neek. So i definitely don’t think those are imports from here.
Isn’t “geek” originally a circus actor term? Like the strongman or bearded lady. The geek is the guy who bites the heads off birds and other gross stuff.
Did French circuses not include an act like that? What do they call him?
Of course even if they do have that act and there is a French word for it, that doesn’t mean that it evolved the same way in French to have the same anti-intellectual meaning
The central claim would be more persuasive if the evidence weren’t just “I typed it into google translate”. That is a very limited way to see what words a language has
can you recommend a good instance with a no defederation policy?
So how does a brand that is owned by LCG acquire another studio?
Here’s wiktionary:
So it’s a regional thing.
Although the claim that in US English the “normality” form is more common does not match my experience as a speaker of US English.