Ddinistrioll

joined 1 year ago
[–] Ddinistrioll 2 points 3 months ago

Investigator, probably? They even have a kind of "Objection" if I'm not mistaken

[–] Ddinistrioll 14 points 6 months ago

I understand why Caledonians don't like the bill, but to answer your questions: yes, they can vote for the French Government, as they are by law French Citizen (as well as Caledonian Citizen, in opposition to someone living in Marseille which only gets the French citizenship and no Provençal citizenship, for instance) They also have a higher autonomy than other French region or department (imo it's a good thing as they definitely have quite a different situation than metropolitan France regions)

I understand that this situation can look colonial-ish to outsiders, but according to the last referendum, a big majority of Caledonian people wishes to stay French. And they are full French citizens. This is a protest like those in Paris, against our (shitty?) gouvernement, not a protest for independence, afaik

[–] Ddinistrioll 8 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Obviously not dismissing your experience, just adding my own : I tried it recently on a big game that was installed on my SO desktop, and it worked great. Just had to activate the feature on both Steam instances, restart Steam, and then I enjoyed a superfast "download" speed, that was mainly bottlenecked by my drive speed and even sometimes by my computer's ethernet port limit!

[–] Ddinistrioll 3 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

I'm not from the US, but according to this source, only Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire, and Oregon don't have sale taxes. Which means, if I'm not mistaken, that at most only about 2.5% of the US population can realistically never pay taxes (percentage of us pop. per states from Wikipedia)

[–] Ddinistrioll 11 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (3 children)

Unless you're in a country/state with no VAT/sale taxe, the child will inevitably pay taxes.

[–] Ddinistrioll 1 points 11 months ago

It's true, at least in French. Because we "concord" (I'm not sure of the translation there) adjectives with the noun, it means that we can understand which adjectives is linked to which noun on complex sentences. Same with some determiners and articles.

A basic example: "Un abricot et des pommes juteuses" (An apricot and some juicy apples) Because in French adjectives comes after the noun, it could apply to either only the apples, or both fruits. But since apricot is masculine, apple is feminine, and "juteuses" is the feminine version of the adjective, we know it applies only to the apples.

But honestly? This feature is not THAT important imo. And it makes gendered languages so much more difficult to learn, even as a native speakers sometimes I misgender some words I'm not used to use.

And my example doesn't even work if both fruits are the same gender, so it's not like it is a critical feature of the language!

[–] Ddinistrioll 1 points 11 months ago

No, sorry, I'm actually French so I would not really have use for these

I know that for English, subscribing to various EN youtube channels helped me a lot, but obviously you need some base level to understand enough of it for it to be useful

Also, I think learning how to write French is wayyy harder than learning to listen, read or even speak French, so I'd advise against really trying to be able to write, and focusing more on the 3 other aspects.

If you have French-related questions, feel free to pm me :)

[–] Ddinistrioll 2 points 11 months ago (5 children)

Am French, can confirm, gendered languages (there are lots of these!) would probably be better without them... But eh, languages in general are not known to be logical and practical. And English is not an exception!

[–] Ddinistrioll 2 points 11 months ago

We can use "perche à selfie", perche being a very long baton, itself being a big stick!

[–] Ddinistrioll 15 points 11 months ago

I'd call it a "baton", because it's bigger

[–] Ddinistrioll 188 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (18 children)

In French, baguette means "long stick". The bread name comes from this meaning, as it is a long, thin kind of bread :) We also call drum sticks "baguette", as well as anything wooden, long and thin, like a conductor baton or a magic wand!

[–] Ddinistrioll 9 points 11 months ago (2 children)

Don't know about Germany, but in France, Dora teaches you English!

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