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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)ES
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3
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3,226
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Oh yeah, similarly, I don't think I'm dyslexic, but sometimes I'm completely blind to distinguishing between two different characters (usually vowels).
    \ Like, I 100% know how the word is spelled but my mental spell check just fails even after someone points out which specific letter is amiss.

  • Lol, but those two never bothered me, I can 'just automatically tell' which to use (even if both can be verbs & nouns). Also stuff like which witch to use, it just never settled in the same association pool in my brain I guess :).

    Now, left vs right also gave me a lot of issues until I just forced myself to invest however much time of active learning it needed to get etched into my skull (in my late 20s or early 30s).

    Colours (in all languages) also aren't the easiest for me.

  • Oh, I def meant that!
    \ It's just what my keebler autocorrected to & I assumed that was the more usual/used of the two words (and was too lazy to look it up since I knew it could mean the same).

    My brainhole mixes the two a lot bcs I don't know how to English (I'm bad at all languages tbf), maybe now that I had a convo about it will be better.

    I started mixing the two after Dork Souls, where it's a starter class you can pick:

  • Oh, like of morals, the rejected one from society. I thought it was old English.

    deprived(adj.)

    1550s, "dispossessed," past-participle adjective from deprive. As a euphemism for the condition of children who lack a stable home life, by 1945.

    from

    deprive(v.)

    mid-14c., depriven, "to take away; to divest, strip, bereave; divest of office," from Old French depriver, from Medieval Latin deprivare, from de- "entirely" (see de-) + Latin privare "to deprive, rob, strip" of anything; "to deliver from" anything (see private (adj.) ). From late 14c. as "hinder from possessing." Replaced Old English bedælan. Related: Deprived; depriving.

  • Funny, but afaik/iirc the spine things are more like fins, a bit too thin & they lack big anchoring points for giant muscles (where tendons and ligaments attach to bone). Also they are positioned in the middle of the back, not behind the neck (above the shoulders).

    Perhaps they evolved for display, temperature management, or even for swimming maybe. Or a mixture of all.

    Or they were just walking ad billboards.

  • (The unironically correct answer imho, it's just labour/a service of someone, same as manufacturing, or art. Basically analogous how bees could sell/give/share honey surplus.)