My pet peeve is this but for signage in general. Workers put out a temporary flood or road narrows sign, but forget to remove it again, the net effect is just people learn to not notice signs as much, and works against safety.
Still regularly see signs about masks obligatory, keep 2 m distance, and one-way systems from covid. They're just part of the background now, people don't even see them. And next time they'll be that much less effective.
I didn't think I had one, but when I read yours I remembered mine.
If I see someone parked carelessly all the way over in the side of the space, I'll park nice and neatly right in the middle of the space next to them, not allowing any extra space for their selfishness. I'm OK with squeezing in and out, and my car is much older and less valuable than any of theirs if they damage it, so I feel like I'm doing society a small service by making my weird passive-aggressive point this way.
I've heard their wings can break your arm, so it might not be just as simple as that. Still probably a good first step. But if this happened when he's out swimming where he can't stand, that would be an advantage for the swan.
Why did you think crocs had holes that size?
Haricot are probably the most widely eaten bean in western (croc-wearing) food cultures, so it seems like an obvious design choice.
From what I heard, that flight did not go high enough to be in 'space' by the generally accepted definition, and also those passengers did not meet the criteria to be called astronauts (basically you need to do something while you're up there for it to count).
Yes, that 'void' would still have fields running through it - electric, magnetic. Whatever the fuck gravity actually is.
The universe apparently has an edge, so maybe on the other side of that is the absolute nothingness? But does it really exist in any meaningful sense? If spatial dimensions themselves are part of what ends at the edge, there kind of isn't an other side.
Maybe not really existing is part of the definition of absolute nothingness.
I'm so sure that this thing will happen, that I'm willing to make a bet whereby I'll pay you dollars if it doesn't happen, and you pay me donuts if it does.
I feel like I'm getting free donuts and my dollars are not at risk.
To clarify to your question, what's inexpensive largely depends on what is already in your cupboards, but hitting those 4 areas will usually work out well.
I've seen a lot of good suggestions, but I wanted to point out the common theme that a marinade should have oil, salt, acid, and unami (savory/ meatiness).
So for asian style maybe sesame oil, vinegar, Soy sauce (Soy sauce does salt + unami).
Or my mum's was orange juice, red wine, garlic, salt & pepper. I'd maybe add some Worcestershire sauce or olive brine for a bit extra unami, but smell it, taste it, go with your gut...
Interesting, what kind of jobs did you see that at in the uk?
In my experience manual/ trades would try to finish up early on a Friday to go to the pub, but not have a beer at lunch then go back to work. And in offices it would be frowned on.
It's always bottoms with you Americans.