I think the reason they focus on it is because it's really popular. I really enjoy all the stories where they have to fight each other but can't finish it forever or where the joker gives up because he thinks that batman is gone. I think there's a lot of room to explore what makes batman different from criminals using the joker and the strong parallels.
Most of genz get it pretty intuitively because they grow up with Google searching. I didn't realise until recently how much more important it is you understand the answers than find them especially if you're getting a niche error.
Yeah it's weird to see butterknives on public sites being confiscated as they're clearly a dangerous weapon. But surprisingly knife crime is really low compared to most of the world (yes I mean America)
What annoys me more is that they're British (/j). But nah they're hardly foreign it's just like their grandad or great grandad, you could make an equal claim that trump is German I think (off the top of my head).
For a maths essay I'm doing a solution on the position of arms to reach a specific point which I personally think is going quite well and my brother has a toy robot arm that can be programmed, my world domination is all but assured.
Interestingly heat spreads better than cold (I'm not an entirely reliable source for this so take it with a big grain of salt) but essentially since hot things are more energetic they have a tendency to spread but since cold things are more static, cooling is more difficult. Also radiators use blackbody radiation to emit heat via light the same way metal heats up when hot whereas there's no cold equivalent to this.
I'm really curious what the process for it forming was like too but just gonna put it out there that gender in language generally has more to do with tracking what the word is than literally thinking stuff has gender. Originally there was a proposal to call it left and right to make it clear that it's just a split.
If they don't want to be called either, which I think is reasonable. Or if you're talking about someone who you don't know, we don't have this problem because they is just so general
I'm really sorry to hear you have that experience that sounds awful, the concept of poor clothes doesn't exist everywhere though so I'm not really sure what to say, I really wish I could've worn whatever I liked at school since I had to wear coats in summer at the cost of my health (my skin kinda sucks ngl) and the uniform they asked us to buy was so expensive and ill fitting. Again, you've got a different experience and I respect that.
Not having to hide who you are is a human right, I get where stuff like this is coming from but if there was a rule to hide all symbols of sexualities to protect people it'd become pretty obvious that it's homophobic. Being able to exist in public shouldn't require making changes to yourself.
Honestly I thought the distinction was just American but you're right, I think English uses slight intonation for context on nouns/verbs/prefixes but in a way we don't always write down or care about.
It explodes yeah but it's more like a radioactive flashbang than a nuclear bomb, there's a great video online explaining how they had to coordinate chemical explosives and concave lenses to properly aggravate the uranium.
I think the reason they focus on it is because it's really popular. I really enjoy all the stories where they have to fight each other but can't finish it forever or where the joker gives up because he thinks that batman is gone. I think there's a lot of room to explore what makes batman different from criminals using the joker and the strong parallels.