Bio et AOP : Pseudo, votre utilisateur français préféré !

  • 1 Post
  • 77 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: July 7th, 2023

help-circle





  • That’s definitely a bad idea to invite them to tea:

    1. They know you saw them
    2. They’ve got permission to enter you house
    3. You are giving them food!!

    It sound like a recipe to get your daughter stolen from you, or to have your house falling down on your head, or losing your mind or straight being skinned you and your family.

    Carefully go back so they don’t know you saw them.
    Do not ever speak to this to anyone, not to your parent, your neighbour, your child not to your SO, not on the internet or your diary and lets hope you don’t speak in your dream.






  • Last time I moved. Went to the mass transit agency and got maps of every neighbourghood I need it go or pass through. I was lucky to find one with my neighbourghood as well as my office. I keep it this me always in my pocket.
    It works offline, never bugs or slows down and the interface never have a glitch. And if I want to, I can still use the GPS that’s in my phone. It’s not like I lost the option bc I have a paper map.

    They are free though…









  • pseudo@jlai.lutomemes@lemmy.worldDislike it properly
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    2 months ago

    I don’t have any problem the way you might say “croissant” in english. I’m, however, in a feud with all those ignorants that like to point out how french prononciation is ridiculous using croissant as an example. “You should pronounce it k’r’o’ee’sssssssss’a’n’t nianiani niania nia” !
    Croissant is actually a great example about prononciation of a french word. Not exception or weird non written rule involved.