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Cake day: July 1st, 2023
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This comment rivals My Immortal on grammar and spelling.
fartsparkles@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•the artemis program is a trainwreck
15·7 days agoAllegedly
fartsparkles@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Ubuntu Linux raises minimum system memory requirements by 50% — requirements bumped to 6GB of RAM, previously raised from 1GB to 4GB in 2018English
5·11 days agoThey’re raising it because of RAM needs of browsers and GNOME.
If you’re a shell nerd like me, you’ll still be fine running it on a potato.
fartsparkles@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•‘This feels fragile’: how a satellite-smashing chain reaction could spiral out of controlEnglish
0·13 days agoUntrackable shrapnel moving at up to 18,000 miles per hour…


All tortoises are turtles (but not all turtles are tortoises) from a biology point of view. Tortoises specifically being exclusively land-based members of the turtle (Testudines) order. So there is a difference.
And “spring” doesn’t really have different meanings - as per the root of the word, it always means some variant of “to burst forth”. There’s lots of different definitions for the word but they’re all rooted in the same place, from an etymology point of view.
The season bursting forth from the winter darkness and cold, the metal coil as it bursts forth when released from compression, the source of water as it bursts forth from the ground, bursting forth someone out of jail, etc.
Homographs are the real problem - when two different words, over time, become spelled the same.
Sow, lead, close, bear. All have multiple etymologies where different words eventually became spelled the same. Those are the worst!
English is a truly crazy mashup of Latin, Greek, French, German, Celtic, Norse and more.