There’s a name for that.
There’s a name for that.
Oh, California. You keep doing you.
The last time I was at the DMV (two weeks ago, to get a disability parking placard), my entire visit took less than a half-hour (and I was hobbling around on crutches, the reason for the parking placard).
You brought up pretense. Or didn’t you know that the root of “pretend” and “pretense” is the same word?
Tell us you’re not a “Type-A” personality without saying you’re not a “Type-A” personality.
None of the alternatives in this article are another form of blurring. “Stop” is appropriate in this case; the headline didn’t need fixing.
My thoughts exactly. My grater has a purpose, and a food processor is only a messier replacement for that purpose.
My thoughts exactly. My grater has a purpose, and a food processor is only a messier replacement for that purpose.
Same
Ummmm, not clickbait at all. They literally linked to an article detailing how much of cat behaviour mirrors that of human psychopaths.
Go. The. F. Away.
Nothing should be BANNED. That’s an all-or-nothing click-bait headline that lacks the necessary nuance for this discussion.
Well you are just full of hot takes today, aren’t you?
A marshmallow manufacturer, almost certainly. And they likely paid to have the recipe published in Better Homes & Gardens.
“Idiotic” is a bit extreme, no? It’s just different, and you’re not used to it yet. Apple has always been comfortable doing things you wouldn’t expect. I bet we see this in a majority of laptops in 2 years.
Tell us you only read the headline without saying “I only read the headline.”
It’s obvious that this tone of headline (“You’re doing X wrong,” “X, you fools,” etc.) must be an editorial choice here at Lifehacker, but the more I see it, the more I’m put off by it.
No; dry ice is frozen carbon dioxide.
“Stop giving these lazy assholes a pass.”
At no point does the article suggest heating the pan to “piping hot.” The phrase used in the article is “a bit more.”
Why don’t you try that again, this time with just two ticks up on the politeness scale.