tarsisurdi
Acadêmico de Medicina Veterinária 🇧🇷 | Capinzal - SC 🐧 Crente no desktop #Linux e software livre 🏳️🌈 Levanta Gay Bora Trabalhar
Mastodon: https://mastodon.social/@tarcisio_surdi
OMG nice build! I’m waiting on RDNA4 to finally upgrade my setup to AM5 and by then I hope we already have the X3D variants of the 9000 series from AMD too, but daily driving my RTX 2060 6GB in 2024 on both Windows and Linux has been quite the painful experience…
Well, that’s the article where this specific headline is used…
Anyway, here’s the same story without a paywall (that has been posted after I shared this): “Chama eterna” da democracia está apagada para manutenção
Doesn’t matter if you know what it means, but you can still pronounce it (for the most part)
That’s the beauty of the added gramatical complexity these languages have compared to English, although there are still cases where things get ambiguous. For example, the following words are written differently but pronounced the exact same, generally relying on their context to differentiate them:
- sela/cela;
- censo/senso;
- assento/acento;
- cozer/coser;
- concerto/conserto;
- tacha/taxa;
I’ve always been told that Portuguese is like “Spanish and French had a baby”.
Having studied Spanish, French and English I can confirm that those similarities are definitely present!
My wife and I were in a cab with a native Portuguese speaker who knew a bit of English and a bit of Romantic languages. My wife knows a bit of French; I know a bit of Spanish… and between the three of us, we were able to speak to each other in a kinda “creole type” delivery. It was really cool to experience.
What an interesting story! Where I live there are a lot of Haitian immigrants and communicating with them also involves that “creole type” language. In comparison talking to Cuban / Venezuelan immigrants is made much easier due to the similarities with Spanish. Regardless, the fact you can have a basic talk with an entire continent because of this is so cool.
Lastly, I have to ask… do you think “bradypneic” would be pronounced “BRAY-DIP” or “BRA-DIP” in English?
Definitely the second pronunciation (“BRA-DIP”) is the correct one!
English fails hard at conveying phonetics through written language. In Brazilian portuguese (my native language) those words would be written as:
- parenquimal (from “parênquima”);
- taquipnéico;
- bradipnéico;
The lack of diacritics (and several other characteristics) makes English really easy to learn but in contrast you get those kinds of problems. I’ve never seen anyone get those words wrong in my field (I’m a vet)
Over the last year I’ve been dating a potterhead and I never read/watched the whole series (due to generally disliking fictional books and not really watching movies). However, I love video games and feel like playing Hogwarts Legacy would allow me to know the universe of HP a little better while also being more connected with my boyfriend’s interests - we could also play it together!
Nothing major, just lots and lots of browser toolbars in the XP era and contact with some trojans (especially on torrents) that were thankfully caught by the antiviruses available back then.