quortez@kbin.socialtoTechnology@beehaw.org•USB-C confirmed for the iPhone 15 in new leaked images - Macworld
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1 year agoProps for MacWorld’s editors for digging out the OG Blue Pixel for this device shot†
†(back when they originally took it)
Cruising the #threadiverse. Let’s seed more resilient communities
Props for MacWorld’s editors for digging out the OG Blue Pixel for this device shot†
†(back when they originally took it)
A fitting name for a beautiful outcome.
I wish them bountiful data transfers without Telco trashiness.
Hate to spoil the parade but this Twitter user is of a person mocking nftbros, not an actual NFTbro
Fuck, I really hope this doesn’t turn the tides for other Red Hat projects.
Not even my Linux distros can escape the enshittiness. WTF man.
Congratulations, you’ve sufficiently annoyed me enough to log in to my local instances to type this out.
There is no ”one” way to speak and write English — we don’t have an “”“official”“” institute of our language like Spanish or French does (and even if we did, they would not have a monopoly on English). We don’t speak in Received Pronunciation or keep the superfluous ‘u’ next to every ‘o.’
Like every language, English has multiple dialects with their own vocabulary, and even some with their own specific grammar. The sentence in the OP was likely written in one of them - African-American Vernacular English. This dialect codifies double negatives, the habitual be, and words like ‘finna.’ Many of its aspects are already integrated into ‘standard’ American English.
This is part of the process of language in general. Many of the rules in ‘proper form’ come from shorthand, slang, and and crude versions of other languages and forms. Being aware of the rules shifting and changing as people shift and change how they speak will probably get you further than turning your nose up at rules you don’t recognize.