You could also pronounce it like Exitter and it still works.
webadict
The biggest mistake a lot of people make is being born poor.
If he's so smart, why is he dead?
Is it actually incorrect? I don't think it's necessarily wrong, but it just sounds bizarre or Shakespearean if you use it when it's not an auxiliary verb.
"I've no need for that." is a perfectly cromulent sentence.
Why does it matter if you're not a Republican if you espouse their talking points? Does it make you special that you're not a Republican?
Sorry that you're either too angry or too dumb to have gleamed that insight. It offered commentary on your logic, that being that you don't know or don't care about the inconsistencies, both of which mean debating you is pointless because you're either an idiot or a bad actor, so why bother?
Lol you all find yourselves special because you are not a "Republican"
Ohh p.s. I'm not Republican
The irony is lost on you.
Yeah, I suppose those would. I wouldn't have thought it, but definitionally, it would be! I mean, heck, some of those are listed by Meriam-Webster! Isn't language neat? You learn something new every day.
Users create and/or share content, check. Users discuss content, check.
Unless you think something is missing from that definition, Lemmy is social media. It is pseudonymous, but it is still social because of the users.
Oh we can ___, we're just required to pay massive amounts of money to a corporate middleman to do it.
Basically America.
True. Happy holidays was accidentally inclusive, as opposed to it being designed that way. It was just used as another way to say Merry Christmas.
Definitionally, you argued.
Here in America, calling the cops very often gets you more Nazis.