• 4 Posts
  • 18 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 5th, 2023

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  • zaros@zaros.clubtoMemes@lemmy.mlIt all makes sense now
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    11 months ago

    I do this all the time, although admittedly not when speaking to others… It’s useful for problem-solving if one gets stuck, a little while of no thinking clears the board and allows thoughts to again wander new paths. It’s also useful for preventing headaches from muscle tension!





  • zaros@zaros.clubtoMemes@lemmy.mlskill
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    1 year ago

    Oh definitely! They didn’t really have any direction for story early on, but with Mahjarrat storylines that began to change. Then they began to weave all the different stories together into a coherent world with surprising success.

    I’d say in 2011-2013 the story really started to kick off. Gods for example were turned from simple good-evil entities into actually interesting characters representing different ideologies and philosophies.

    Unlike some other MMOs, RS doesn’t have voice acting (for the most part), which allows them to write a lot more dialogue. For example Azzanadra’s Quest alone has ~25 000 words of dialogue. You can probably imagine how much lore a 20-year-old game like that can contain!












  • zaros@zaros.clubtoMemes@lemmy.mlShe did her best ok?
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    1 year ago

    I’d say what’s intuitive is very subjective. Most of a language tends to be intuitive to its native speakers, no matter how unintuitive it seems to someone else.

    To me the intuitive genderless option for “he/she” would be “it”. Coming from Finnish, it seems much more natural to have “it” include people instead of using “they” for both singular and plural. Or if using “they”, it would feel intuitive to say “they is” instead of “they are”.


  • zaros@zaros.clubtoMemes@lemmy.mlShe did her best ok?
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    1 year ago

    I’m aware it’s a thing and not really a plural. What I was trying to say is that it looks plural and since I didn’t learn about this part of English until several years into my studies as a kid, it isn’t as well established in my mind as “you are” is (that also looks like a plural, but I’m used to it).

    “They are” for a single person catches my mental error filter the same way as “I are” or “you is” would, which is highly annoying.



  • zaros@zaros.clubtoMemes@lemmy.mlShe did her best ok?
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    1 year ago

    I very much agree. Learning English as a foreign language, it feels very wrong to use plural for a single person. I’m still not quite used to it! Although, had I been taught that early on, I doubt it would feel any weirder than using “you are” for a single person.