Perhaps I'm missing something, but this does not seem to be a good design for most people confined to wheelchairs. They don't have the lower body strength to support themselves in it or to control it.
I can't imagine what would be necessary to keep a person in a vertical "standing" position, but it wouldn't be pleasant or comfortable or healthy without a lot of expensive effort.
Takuro, your resume gets you to the interview stage. It's not supposed to carry you through it. If the man interviewing you couldn't get past your resume during the interview, you should have been providing him a conversation of some substance to overcome that.
Jones or Jonesy is pointless. The cat would undoubtedly call itself by a completely different name of its own choice, not a name assigned to it by a human overlord.
Cute, but it's like a joke. If you have to explain it, it isn't funny.
There's something really funny in this picture - do you see it? Well, look closer. See it yet? No? Okay, look over his shoulder. See it now? Kinda ruins the joke.
Technically, to say "deader" is an incorrect use of the comparative in two ways. The nature of death is that one cannot be partially dead or "more dead" than something else. It is either dead or not. Death is an absolute. And of course, the correct term would be "more dead", if it could even be used, which, as I have just pointed out, couldn't be anyway. Yes, colloquially, "deader than a doornail" is in use, but it's like the term "ain't": the intention is slang.
Latin is really moribund, not dead. So you could say, Latin just got more moribund. Or, if you must, "moribunder"...?
Maybe I've played too many video games, where the special effects actually had some sort of purpose. This was just too random.
I usually just say, "That'll do, pig."
Perhaps I'm missing something, but this does not seem to be a good design for most people confined to wheelchairs. They don't have the lower body strength to support themselves in it or to control it.
I can't imagine what would be necessary to keep a person in a vertical "standing" position, but it wouldn't be pleasant or comfortable or healthy without a lot of expensive effort.
Shakespeare actually lifted a lot of his material from the pages of Ovid.
There's something really funny in this picture - do you see it? Well, look closer. See it yet? No? Okay, look over his shoulder. See it now? Kinda ruins the joke.
Yes, colloquially, "deader than a doornail" is in use, but it's like the term "ain't": the intention is slang.
Latin is really moribund, not dead. So you could say, Latin just got more moribund. Or, if you must, "moribunder"...?