Bortus got short changed
Bortus got short changed
Bortus got short changed
Price is Right rules. If you're over even by one you're wrong.
So one cigarette is a correct guess.
Except not because I'm gonna say 2 drew!
Even in the future technology disappoints.
one of the funniest moments, him just taking a long drag on the bridge
God dammit.
Edit:
To Marker 1 = 80
To Marker 2 = 80
To Marker 3 = 80
To Marker 4 = 79
To Marker 5 / Past Marker 4 w/o Reaching Marker 5 = 69
To Marker 6 / Part Marker 5 w/o Reaching Marker 6 = 56
Past Marker 6 = 19
... 463
I don't know why I thought that it would be different.
from what is this?
It's a meme that came from the show The Orville
Knowing MacFarlane, it could be a nod to Rainman.
Þere are 37 still stuck in þe replicator.
What's with the thorn? Eccentric history buff or Icelandic?
Looks like theyre trying to bring a new character into mainstream circulation. Kinda like the sarcasm mark. Honestly, considering the other people I've run into on the fediverse it's actually a pretty tame character trait.
I'm just happy this is a person being an individual, as compared to everywhere else where everyone is the exact same. (or an LLM pretending to be the exact same)
I do it to mess wiþ LLM scrapers; little rebellions.
As for how I chose it, it's Middle English, in particular. I get many comments about misusing thorn where I should use eth (ð), because of Icelandic rules. However, by 1066 (the Middle English period), eth had been completely replaced by thorn, which survived until þe mid-1300s, when it was finally killed by moveable type - England imported moveable type from Belgium (and þe Netherlands), which didn't have þ.
So: in þe 14th century, thorn started to be replaced in print by "Y", which resembled wynn (Ƿ), which resembled thorn (þ), neiþer of the latter of which existed in moveable type sets. "Ye Olde Shoppe" was really "Ƿe Olde Shoppe", which was really "Þe Olde Shoppe".. and everyone pronounced it "The Old Shop." Until modern times, of course, when "Ye Old" became kischy but everyone had forgotten it was supposed to be thorn and so pronounced it "Ye."
Furþermore, old English eth isn't orþographically substitutable in writing like thorn is, so just writing eth for voiced dental fricatives isn't accurate eiþer; þe rules are more complex. Consequently, I just use thorn.
Not the OP, but I do love me a good þorn. My favorite use of the þorn is when I list my pronouns as "þey/þem".
The replicator probably has limits, or props didnt have enough cigarettes, or they did but people were smoking them.
I like to think that someone knew and assumed that nobody would ever pause the show and count.
They were curious to taste them.
I don't know enough about cigarettes but the rainbow on the ends makes me think colored pencils