I agree,
2009 and before have to be “two thousand and” style
2013 and after have to be “twenty-” style
The years between can be either, but I’d lean toward using “twenty-” style for those too.
I agree,
2009 and before have to be “two thousand and” style
2013 and after have to be “twenty-” style
The years between can be either, but I’d lean toward using “twenty-” style for those too.
I don’t really see value in doing any of these for myself
“I would never say this to her face, but she’s a wonderful person and a gifted artist.”
Just because we all know they’re unpopular doesn’t mean we don’t want to argue
I think it’s valid to feel this way. Even so, it’s impossible to stop the progress of time. You just have to find a way to balance this in your life. You don’t have to stay up to date in everything, either.
deleted by creator
You can’t truly trust any commercial service.
B R A Z I L
It’s implicit that the question is about a chicken egg, specifically.
I guess racism was solved. Pack it up, everyone.
deleted by creator
As someone who listened to a lot of this music back then, In general I agree with you that a lot of it has aged poorly… but not Hybrid Theory.
deleted by creator
No one’s telling anyone what to do, we’re just trying you it’s a slur.
deleted by creator
Xennial
You make good points, but I still think nothing good can come of playing ball with Facebook. I dont trust them
It is a monument to man’s arrogance
I was curious about the claims about Eno so I Googled a bit. Eno actually is responsible for a lot of these ideas being put in use, if not inventing them himself. He basically pioneered the concept of standardized traffic rules.
As for the stop sign, Eno proposed the idea in 1900:
Harry Jackson created his octagonal sign 14 years later, in 1914:
The invention of the roundabout is a bit more complicated. Circular intersections of some kind predated Eno, but they wouldn’t all be considered roundabouts by our definition today.
Nineteen oh one
But “two thousand and one” is different since it’s a millienium. I would also say “one thousand and one”, not “ten oh one”