Ok, thanks. I studied linguistics for another language years ago, (a language without any 'th'), so it was a guess. Still no answer of what it is or why it's used.

Weird. Never thought it to be real. In Warhammer 40k, only a populace of a specific planet has those purple eyes. Kinda neat to know that this might have been a super-specific random event (first human settlers of that planet having purple eyes).

I get that point, but stainless steel also exists.

(Electric) kettle would be the "right" word for Wasserkocher.

Brits and their weird non-compound-words.

Older (pre 2000) diesel cars needed a few seconds, sometimes a minute to "warm-up" the starter. You had to turn the ignition half way before you actually start the car. That's the only "warming up" a car might need to function (normal circumstances).

Both, kinda. His point was (if O recall correctly) to promote a faster light rail track from Munich central station to the FJS Airport, also in Munich. The main benefit would be that you "start your flight on the train" because the transfer is seamless (in theory).

Not disagreeing with you, just want to add my flavour of "the image is stupid".

Also, unless it's the first move of the game, you need a word on the board to add your own with a shared letter.

The Wikipedia article linked on top states that most margarine has moved to lower trans-fats since the turn of the century. It's probably at least as healthy as butter, if not moreso.

When he was finally done, he approached us and I said “Hi how are you?” with a smile.

There's probably the problem. Don't ask a german "how are you", they will interpret it as the start of a conversation, not a greeting. You might either get weird looks or a detailled personal and medical history of that person. In food service, you get to the point. A "Excuse me" or "Can we order please" is a way better way to initiate an order.

Of course you have. The Draft has been active from 1954 to 2010.

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ElmarsonTheThird

joined 6 months ago