We'll have lots of English speakers here given the language the question was asked in, so I'll do Gàidhlig (Scottish Gaelic) instead: dìochuimhneachadh, at 17 letters. It means "forgetting", and it is pronounced /ˈd̥ʲĩə̃xənəxəɣ/. No, I can't say it smoothly.
Gàidhlig isn't one of those languages that can compound words like Finnish or German, this one is just a consequence of a few different things. Firstly, the language's spelling rules result in a lot of letters that do impart information but aren't directly pronounced. Consonants have two forms depending on which of two sets of vowels they are next to, so any consonant or consonant cluster must always have vowels from the same set on either side. For example, the "i" in the "imhne" bit in the middle is basically only there to match the "e" at the end, since u and e aren't in the same set of vowels and we need to know which version of the consonants between them to use. Every h is a modifier on the consonant preceding it as well. Second, the root of it is "un-remember", so it's already a shorter word with a prefix. Third, we're using the verbal noun version, so it's "the act of forgetting" rather than present-tense as in "currently forgetting something"
There are probably longer words in the language, but I don't know it very well yet and this was the longest one I could find on a word list. I think there's actually a version of dìochuimhnich that includes a suffix marking it as being a conditional first person plural doing the forgetting, so "we would forget", but I don't understand how that part of the language works. If I was to say that at the moment, I would use two words to do it, so I don't feel like I can give it as an answer here
You are absolutely right. On that basis I wish to register my sincere belief that Javier Milei is a Russian agent and FAdeA has used their former LockMart connections to supply American technology to the Russian 6th generation fighter project
Ahh but you see, you'd be there because you were interested in the place, not because you were trying to do some strategy game LARP where you paint your country's colour on the biggest part of the map you can get
I would guess that the polar bears are a good reason not to store food outside. I did actually find a short podcast about freezers in Greenlandic homes from the Ilulisat Icefjord Centre — apparently most homes actually have several indoor freezers to make sure there's enough space to store things for a long time
He doubled down enough to hire a PI to investigate Unsworth and to tell Buzzfeed that they were "defending a child rapist" when they approached him for a comment, which is doubling down enough for me. He did claim it was all jokes and insults when Unsworth (unsuccessfully) tried to sue him for defamation
I can't imagine you have much daily contact with the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem of th Catholic Church, but they use it. National flag of Georgia too
The Jerusalem cross has actual historical backing, such as coins from 1200s Jerusalem, unlike the Roman salute which was just invented by a French painter
But of course, it's obvious that Hegseth has it because of the association with the Crusades, not the Catholics of modern day Jerusalem or the country in the Caucasus. Anyone that genuinely wants to depict themselves as a crusader today is probably a white supremacist
The cave diver Vernon Unsworth lived in Thailand, so Musk just tried to spread the rumour that he was a paedophile instead. And unfortunately Musk now has a bigger following and platform than ever
To be clear I don't necessarily agree with the Society's decision. I just think there is a pretty obvious possible motive without the Society having skeletons in the closet, regardless of whether it actually does or not
To be honest I think we could just ditch the apostrophe in contractions altogether. I cant think of a situation in which itd make anything less clear. At worst there are perhaps uses of the fairly rare non-contraction verb "cant" that wouldn't be immediately clear
More likely they know that Musk has a well-documented habit of frivolous litigation and spreading lies about anyone that gets under his skin. They've decided it's not worth the fight
I'm not the person that you asked, but I do hold the same opinion. My biggest reasons are:
Civs are far more incentivised to expand in VI, resulting in more conflict
Districts make city placement a much more complicated question
The city state influence game is much more interesting than just a spending race and also has more game-changing rewards
The culture and science victories are much more interactive with other civs now, rather than just hiding away and waiting for a bar to fill
I don't think V is bad by any means. It was the one that got me into the series after bouncing off III and IV. I just think that most of the changes in VI were improvements
It's actually a Jerusalem cross, which is a separate thing but... equally suspect in this context. It's a symbol of the crusaders, so it goes right along with his "deus vult" one
We'll have lots of English speakers here given the language the question was asked in, so I'll do Gàidhlig (Scottish Gaelic) instead: dìochuimhneachadh, at 17 letters. It means "forgetting", and it is pronounced /ˈd̥ʲĩə̃xənəxəɣ/. No, I can't say it smoothly.
Gàidhlig isn't one of those languages that can compound words like Finnish or German, this one is just a consequence of a few different things. Firstly, the language's spelling rules result in a lot of letters that do impart information but aren't directly pronounced. Consonants have two forms depending on which of two sets of vowels they are next to, so any consonant or consonant cluster must always have vowels from the same set on either side. For example, the "i" in the "imhne" bit in the middle is basically only there to match the "e" at the end, since u and e aren't in the same set of vowels and we need to know which version of the consonants between them to use. Every h is a modifier on the consonant preceding it as well. Second, the root of it is "un-remember", so it's already a shorter word with a prefix. Third, we're using the verbal noun version, so it's "the act of forgetting" rather than present-tense as in "currently forgetting something"
There are probably longer words in the language, but I don't know it very well yet and this was the longest one I could find on a word list. I think there's actually a version of dìochuimhnich that includes a suffix marking it as being a conditional first person plural doing the forgetting, so "we would forget", but I don't understand how that part of the language works. If I was to say that at the moment, I would use two words to do it, so I don't feel like I can give it as an answer here