Your friend is probably just feeling the absence of showing something new to people - seems small but hey peoplez are weird.
I guess. What's weird is if I send this same friend links (which is not often), I get the "OMG, you must spend all your time checking out blogs and pop culture sites!" response.
There's no winning so I guess I should just pretend to be clueless.
Holy shit, what the fuck, English.
Ditto "orange" - formerly norange
Really? I thought "orange" was French, or at least I'm thinking of L'organge.
Since you're here, Fay, what is the British term for a driver going through a red light? Is it "running a red light," like here in America?
Somewhat relatedly, I share a TON of links with my boss, and she always says, "How do you find this stuff???" Just to be safe, so she doesn't guess how much time I spend on teh interwebs trolling for stuff, I always say "Oh a friend sent me the link". That's what b.org and Facebook and LJ really are...right? :)
Hah. I totally do that.
I had to do that with the awful ICCM and mime Web sites that were linked in Natter earlier this week. I mean, they were so bad that I couldn't NOT share, but I had to have a safe explanation of why I knew about them.
I now own a corset, but haven't worn it anywhere yet. Also, I'm pretty sure that when I do, I'll be wearing a camisole under it to add a bit more coverage.
I always wear something under my corset (of course, it's an underbust, so...yeah). But wearing something under it (even if it's an overbust, you can wear a tank top with the straps cut off) keeps the lining of the corset cleaner.
La naranja!
That's the French for orange? I should Babelfish this sort of thing.
Naranja is Spanish.
Without Googling, I'd guess that at the time of the Norman invasion (when English aquired most of its French), the French was "n'orange" as well.
edit: And Wikipedia tells me it actually comes from Sanskrit
nāraṅgaḥ,
which means it probably traces all the way back to Proto Indo-European. Way cool!
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That's the French for orange?
Spanish. But it would explain why it started out as norange. Romance languages!
And Wikipedia tells me it actually comes from Sanskrit nāraṅgaḥ, which means it probably traces all the way back to Proto Indo-European. Way cool!
Ah hah! So the French changed it first? Or the English changed it, and the French tagged along. Language is fun.
ION: The world's most patient cat.
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