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In the image he isn’t using his thumb to count, so 2 would be the middle finger.
„Their“ is already neutral, including all gendered pronouns just makes your comment hard to read
I’ve been happy with Sayonara but don’t know if it can do #2
belluck@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto
Linux@programming.dev•[SOLVED] Teams on Linux on old Thinkpad (Debian Stable, pulseaudio)?
3·3 months agoFirefox worked for me a few months ago
belluck@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•A decentralized end-to-end encrypted chat app
7·4 months agoWhy not?
belluck@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto
Programmer Humor@lemmy.ml•I'm new to using Ruby and this tickled me pink
3·4 months agoThat is mentioned in the Wikipedia article, but given the fact that þ also hasn’t been used for hundreds of years, I think it would make sense to re-adopt both letters to distinguish between the sounds (though accents will probably make things confusing)
belluck@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto
Programmer Humor@lemmy.ml•I'm new to using Ruby and this tickled me pink
4·4 months agoBtw, þ is supposed to be used for the “hard” th (Wikipedia article for the corresponding phoneme with audio sample).
The “soft” th has another letter, ð (Wikipedia).
Wikipedia about the usage of ð (and a bit of þ) in old English
deleted by creator


I think it’s because in the UK they start counting (regularly) with the index finger, so the regular binary two would look unnatural in context