They are the freaking same.

void linux user.
They are the freaking same.



that’s right, venusaur


Maybe are normal videos, and then the creator says “hey AI, enhance this with your magic” as a final touch before or after upload because they think that the AI it’s the panacea.


Finding Nemo. Dory yelling “fuck yea!” when she remember something
the tesla cybertruck chest
only flat earthers can think that we have reached technology 2 just to fool them


With Linux I can run all those apps that the article say plus whatever I’m playing and hardly enough I get close to 12 or 15 gb of ram.
That’s why “begins” is between double quotes.


We can do the structures now, and wait for them to match like legos by themselves
Resident Evil 1 Remake. If you first play one of the new games it’s going to be a lot harder go back to previous games, plus, is where the story “begins”.


the guy who didn’t wanted to shit like for 3 or 4 days straight
Calamardo Tentáculos in latin spanish.


Yeah, but that would be in active tense. “Apilas las sillas” would be “You stack the chairs”.


Yeah, something like “las sillas deben apilarse” is not a direct translation but the idea is there.


Sorry, but is not like that. I’ve responded already to its question.


In spanish there are two ways to refer to people, one is formal and another one is informal. When you want to talk to someone in a formal way you must use verbs in a special form with a special personal pronoun called “usted”.
Formal way: “Usted es muy guapo” (You are so handsome).
Informal way: “Eres muy guapo” (You are so handsome).
Look how in the first sentence we used “usted” and then we used the verb “ser” in third person and in present tense. In the second example we use directly the verb “ser” in imperfect tense. I could wrote “Por favor, usted apile las sillas al final del día. Gracias”, but that’s too much formal, to the point that can be felt like passive-agressive to some people, since people doesn’t use “usted” too often before the verb. Even you can say “Es muy guapo” too keep the formal but more in a casual way.
I’m a native speaker, not a teacher or something, so, please, refer to this site to get more information. https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usted
Fruit.