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Such weird. Much love.

Yes, the only requirement to drive these is to be over 16.

And doing that is much, much harder than it sounds. Unlike many cities like New York, London's streets don't entirely follow a numbered grid pattern. Navigating from Wembley Stadium to Tower Bridge is a different affair from getting someplace like 57th Street and 11th Avenue to 7th Street and 2nd Avenue.

What about Rubber, "The best killer tyre movie you'll ever see" ?

GIFs ruin watching the video in this article.

wow, no GIF ?

4WD, due to having a second engine in the back. Is this the only twin-engined car made available to the public (and not just the output of a fevered individual or prototyping division)? Note the fuel tank positioned under the front seats, with the filler cap poking through the driver's (suicide!) door.

only the middle one was tested, the vehicle is heavy to simulate a real loaded truck

The French built it to test truck tires, and so while one of the 350 cubic inch engines sent their power to the rear three axles, the other was rolling the mid-mounted test subject. The ten-ton laboratory could reach speeds up to 100 mph.

Note that public transportation was 100% free in all the region since last friday, people had alternatives.

As a foreign scout, both under WOSM and WAGGS, I feel ashamed to be in the same association as the BSA.

I'm french and trust me, we noticed.

And France is not really happy about Stephen Colbert being seated so close to François Hollande at the dinner after all he said about the president in his show.

Don't you have a proper video to show instead of a shitty GIF ?

hallo, ich heiße Maxime !

So, a pizza for a few letters ? (I'm serious about it).

P.S. : Did you study any other language other than English ?

Your answer is long, mine is not : no.

The SOUND doesn't exist in english, so no, not possible (even Wikipedia says so, check the link) and it takes training to pronounce a new sound.
It's like there is no equivalent in French for the 'th' ('the') sound, it's a shame how we pronounce it ('ze').

I meant it is like how "Russians" speaks english in American movies, when an English/American guy speaks French in a French movie he has a distinct accent, specially for 'eu'.