Depends on your position on that. Special military operation to give Christmas back its rightful place in the year.
Depends on your position on that. Special military operation to give Christmas back its rightful place in the year.
It was the goto streaming site back then. We all learned out lesson once it was down. I looked it up and it was online from 2008 to 2011, feels longer for me but I was torrenting alot before that. German law is strict on torrenting so streaming is the way to go here.
Your analysis fits neatly into what the book Because Internet describes as different waves of “internet people”. First were geeks who went there before it was mainstream, second us millennials growing up as it is getting mainstream, alongside older folks forced to use it at work or voluntarily at home. Third wave are GenZ growing up when everything is easy already and, ironically, also even older folks now that it’s accessible for them.
Boy, I remember how desperate all of Germany was when kino.to went down. It took at least a week until everyone found an alternative!
I honestly didn’t know what I was implying but I like your interpretation
Don’t remind me of that… but you are right thought, I did fall victim to one of the classic blunders
For more information read Bullshit Jobs by David Graeber
Remindes me of when I, a fool, fell victim to one of the classic blunders
Communism is when you collect stones to build a bridge
Reminds me of the Lingthusiasm episode where the Canadian and the Australian hosts discuss a book about the differences between British and American English. Both fell somewhere in between
You got it all wrong! Babbel is an app to learn over languages, no punishment of any sort.
Just kidding, it’s an app to make monkey, not to help people.
it’s less that English simplified them and more that it never developed case marks for them.
Well, Old English baggs to differ. English lost its case markings on articles early on and kept them on nouns a while longer while German kept them on articles and simplified nouns much more early on.
In contrast, not only German repurposed the demonstrative “der” (that, which, who) into an article in a cleaner way
… as did English with “se”/“þē” which started as a demonstrative the same way der/die/das did.
but it’s also dumping most grammatical case info into the article
Again, German didn’t dump anything into articles but rather lost it everywhere else.
There is this idea that this fostered the process of using der/die/das much more often (which made it from a demonstrative to an article) but I disagree because it was a widespread process, not only in German but in huge parts of Europe, including beside Romance languages also English were this reasoning doesn’t work (as shown above).
c/nottheonion
painful
I see you speak Fr*nch
Hmmm, malt
Yes, grief has to have limits otherwise it’s not healthy. You have to get over your loss and continue your life after 30min.
But that’s the point. You don’t need a knife to cut baguette. Just break it. With a knife, the Fr*nch can eat real bread, or “Schwarzbrot” as we call it in Germany
So you stole it? How dare you! You wouldn’t kidnap a child!