Well, in China, women generally do not change their name after marriage. And there are no hyphens. 1.3 billion Chinese can't be wrong now, right?
Well, in China, women generally do not change their name after marriage. And there are no hyphens. 1.3 billion Chinese can't be wrong now, right?
That wouldn't be a literal translation and it's not the only thing that is said in Japanese. Things like "taichou wa dou?" etc. are common to ask how someone is feeling.
For 40 years, the somewhat more well-to-do segments of the public in the US and UK have been told that they are not citizens who participate in a democratic system that tries to do the best for the most people, but rather that they are "TAXPAYERS" who have special privileges and are entitled to get everything back…
I've noticed that these same white people seem to ask everyone (even other white people) "what's your ethnicity?" and "where are you from?" though. I don't like answering these questions because they're complicated and mostly irrelevant, but some people just can't think of anything better to say, I guess.
Sprint. They made it extremely difficult just to find information on how to cancel my account, which I wanted to do because their reception was terrible. I don't know how that company is still in business.
I find being pseudonymous is the best way to use the internet. Nobody needs to know everything about me.
I'm not sure why anyone would do this, but the images make complete sense when you think about how an MRI works.