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648
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1 yr. ago

  • Most "ASMR" grosses me out TBH, I don't like that whisper stuff and I really hate those lip-smacking sounds - to me it's about as erotic as eating with your mouth open. Shame, since I am actually interested in the general concept.

  • I suppose we have pumpkins, too. At least this holiday is pretty fun, even if no one actually celebrates it here (there's little chance it gets adoption here, where I live we even have a hard time getting into carnival, even though that holiday has native tradition).

    Anyway, late August christmas sweets are way better than any Halloween-themed food or drink.

  • Yeah, it's going pretty damn hard. There's so many different things it fits on, like all the different kinds of bodyshaming (e.g. fat shaming, calling something "small dick energy", talking about Trump's small hands).

  • Good find! And yeah, the referral order sentence seems to be rather obviously aimed at rehabilitation instead of punishing, would be weird if that was combined with a lifelong criminal record that is visible to potential employers and the like.

  • "child, 13" - a 13yo is a teenager, not a child.

    That article was a pain in the ass to read, horribly structured.

    What she did: "The court heard the girl was taken to the protest outside the Potters International Hotel, which houses asylum seekers, by a parent of a friend. Police body-worn video showed the teenager briefly bang and kick at a door of the hotel while voices could be heard telling her to stop."

    Her sentence, a "12-month referral order": "A referral order means you are required to attend a youth offender panel. The panel, you, your parents/carers and the victim (where appropriate) agree a contract aimed at repairing the harm that has been caused and addressing the causes of the offending behaviours." (https://unlock.org.uk/advice/referral-order-18/)

    The conviction seems to be on permanent record, though, which does seem a bit much for this considering her age.

  • Take a look at the nutrition values of the various kinds of cheeses (where I live it usually lists the macros right on the package). Milk is about 3% carbohydrates/sugar (i.e. 3% lactose), while most cheeses that aren't white have about 0% sugar.

  • Why are you censoring "jerkoff"?

    Düsseldorf could be translated as “Idiots Village”

    It cannot. While "Dussel" is roughly "dumbass", "Düssel" is an entirely different word (apparently an outdated term for the 'roar' of water). "u" and "ü" are different vowels in German.

  • I don’t expect people even in border villages of Czechia, Slovakia or Hungary to speak German

    German is actually a fairly popular foreign language in countries east of Germany: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=Foreign_language_learning_statistics#Upper_secondary_education

    Though learning a second or third language in school is probably not quite what OP envisions here, and there's a big difference between getting language lessons in school and actually being able to speak that language (shoutout to my Spanish lessons in school, I should probably have picked French instead).

  • Or is it more if you lived even like 500 meters of a border do you learn the language of the country your in?

    That tends to be how it's done. States tend to be rather protective of their official language, and it's generally impractical to send your children to school in a different country. Being somewhat proficient in the other country's language is quite common, but to truly be bilingual you pretty much need to be some kind of ethnic or religious minority.

    Also depends a lot on the relationship between the countries and languages; some borders are easier to cross, and some languages easier to learn.