So there’s a complex math problem in allowing only ten customers (and two employees - 12 total) in a store at a time.
So there’s a complex math problem in allowing only ten customers (and two employees - 12 total) in a store at a time.
No, I don’t know why you made that presumption. It’s not true. ;)
Our store had a similar amount of flour but a lot of baguettes. Baguette pizza it is!
Do you have a source for what I missed here?
Of course. Some are though, especially those that have officers coming around to ask stores to shut down.
Those clever bastards.
I’ve seen that in three or four places. They have to make an attempt to try to keep this store open.
Are they seriously asking their on-the-ground employees to confront law enforcement and defy a lockdown order?
Again, why not both?
There’s your flaw. Google isn’t a good resource for literary criticism. As I said at the start, you’re getting the simplified high school answer, not the more general ones. Some people define alliteration as start-of-word-only. Others define it as the repetition of phonemes with stressed syllables (especially for Old…
Assonance is restricted to vowel sounds in American usage, so it’s not that. (Americans would use consonance.)
Turns out some people were smart enough to think of that simple rhyme. I don’t appreciate the personal attacks.
Technically it refers to the repetition of a phoneme between syllables, especially stressed syllables. You’re referring to a more restricted sense of alliteration.
That’s the high school explanation, but alliteration is broader than that in referring to the repetition of phonemes between words. In Old English poetry, alliteration happens on stressed syllables, and not just at the start of words.
Why not both? She failed in both satire and shock humor.
R alliterates for sure, and there’s also the repetition of M and V:
COVID-19 also hurts and kills people of other ages. I don’t see what’s funny in “the Boomer Remover virus,” save the alliteration.
Agreed, with the small caveat that I can’t think of a point in history when people didn’t have to be careful with satire. Satire generally rides a thin line. On one side is the risk that the satire become real; on the other is the risk that the satire earns quick disapproval. The sweet spot is somehow making fun of a…
There is no Persona 5 Royal for Switch.
I’m eagerly awaiting P5:R. Now, I didn’t expect to be on home lock-down for my third (!) playthrough, but otherwise you describe exactly what got me into Persona 5 both times. It’s the rhythm of dungeons, of going out, of hearing from friends, all wrapped up together in lavish design.