- talking to my european friends
- talking to my african friends
- talking to my asian friends
- talking to my south american friends
- talking to my north american friends (exceptions apply)
- talking to my oceanian friends
- talking to my antarctican friends
I personally find peanut butter and jelly don’t work together at all. But I love a good open top bread slice with butter and jelly/jam. My favourites are quince, plum, raspberry and black current jam.
Britain returning on legal grounds wasn’t on my bingo card xD
My idea for a quick fix would be
Some years ago I stumbled upon this Norwegian artist (I’m not Norwegian). This is a very beautiful song.
Getting hit by a star doesn’t sound that much better
And a whole parallel development via sumerian -> cuneiform -> Phoenician -> greek -> latin
And he doesn’t even get the bible right. He just uses it as an aesthetic front for his wacky ideas and all the right wing christians eat it up
The article clearly says that 8k people in a town of 30k took to the streets.
And I thought this was gonna be a critique on the American health care system and a guide how to pirate care
Recessive isn’t always bad. In fact, many (maybe all) genetic traits have a dominant and a recessive information.
For example peas. Let’s say there is a gene for colour. The dominant variation of the colour gene carries the information “green”. Let’s call this gene c for colour. Then there is a recessive variation with the information yellow.
We’ll write the dominant information as capital C and the recessive as lowercase c.
Now there is a pea with the genetic information CC (one from each parent). That’s a green pea.
Then there is one with Cc (father green, mother yellow). But you see the pea and it looks just like a green pea. Because the green gene C is dominant and the yellow c is recessive. You don’t know, that this is a mixed variety.
If two seemingly green peas pollinate each other, but under the hood, they are Cc, then they might produce a cc yellow pea.
For a lot of genetic information that’s not a problem, they are just different characteristics and not harmful.
But if you have B = your blood coagulates normally, and b = your blood doesn’t thicken, you just bleed out and die when you have a paper cut…
Then inheriting b from both of your parents is a terrible fate.
This happened in the House of Saxe-Cobourg and other nobility in the 19th century.
Edit: the last part is actually a bit more complicated, but the explanation of dominant and recessive still works.
Dulcis. Immutabilis. *Bepis
hypothetically