The "Complaints 'R' Us, complaint thread"
This discussion has been closed.
Adding to Cart…
Licensing Agreement | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | EULA
© 2026 Daz Productions Inc. All Rights Reserved.You currently have no notifications.
Licensing Agreement | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | EULA
© 2026 Daz Productions Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Comments
Complaints!
- Legs, thighs, hips and lower back all hurt
- Shoulders hurt from overloaded pack yesterday
- Out of vodka for the weekend
- Walk to the booze store is uphill - BOTH WAYS
- Feel lazy as heck
Non-complaints!
- Cheese quesadillas came out perfectly
- Fried tater wedges were excellent
- Huge chicken drumsticks marinating in lemon juice and hot sauce
- Remembered I bought ground pork sausage to put in the beans
- Beautiful sunny, cool weather perfect for a short walk
Now if I can just get over a bad case of the lazies.. rain Saturday/Sunday/Monday so if I want anything I better get it today! :-O
I no grok ancient Grek.
You telling me you've never heard of Greko-Roamin? Wass wrong wid yew? :-P
You must live in an Escher neighborhood.
Back to languages for a moment. I get a kick out of Russian "Stop" signs, It's easy to figure out what it says considering that the "C" is pronounced like an English "S" and the "П" at the end is essentialy the Greek "Pi" character and is pronounced like the English "P". All they have to do now is make it bigger and paint the background bright red. It's no wonder we see so many Russian auto accident clips on YouTube showing massive collisions at intersections. Who's going to pay attention to that little white sign at an intersection. It has all the intimidation of a street name sign.
Just have to say that sounds good... I have to try that!
Also, that leads to my complaint: March Madness means I'm not allowed to eat again, this month.
it's exactly what you don't see much of here in switzerland - at least not out of the "biggest" *cough* cities like zurich, geneva or basel, where i've been occasionally but not enough to judge - you don't have "sections" with specific ethnic groups. you might have high rises with a conglomerate of rather foreign citiens, but not so separated into nations, same for quarters where you'd have a certain demographic, but no ghettos.
yeah i realized, watching movies featuring amish, that i could petty much make sense of what they said. all those germanic dialects are similar..
for me it's so normal to understand different languages (as many people do here). i can't fathom how it is not being able to.. then again, many people are really surprised that i can't drive, nor swim.. *shrug* - i guess that's one eye missing, i don't think mobile, and the only place i feel safe is on the ground (nope, never jumped off a plane or bridge either) ^^
is this frequent where you live, or do we have a particularly harsh/weird winter? and is this a big urban area, or somehow isolated?
hiranaga is very easy, but i get stuck often with katakana, dunno why it's not even so different - and forget kanji.. german is hard for many people, even i speak/write it totally fluently, there are some tough nuts in the grammar, and i still make mistakes there, in those declinations. hebrew must be interesting.. i can recognize it is when i see a text, and have heard less than a handful people speak it, never tried to learn more. french has a lot of greek-originated words, so when you can decipher cyrillic AND speak french (with a bit of a sense for ethymology), you can hobble a bit through simple greek in print, like titles, signs etc. i wonder if learning aramaic today would help you with ancient scriptures.. does it? as to being exact, it's not like someone from back then can correct you.. generally, i find that languages that don't have clear separations are the hardest to decipher, those ligatures ones (even worse when you don't know how to interpret them due to time as you explained). german is pretty exact and practical - if it weren't for those declinations. and french.. urgh, it's my first language, and even i get annoyed by it. you need twice as much space/words to say the same thing you'd say in german/english, with all those prepositions in-between. hmm i guess it's apple of the earth, minuscule, lol. not so weird, in dutch they say aardappel, in swiss-german härdöpfel.. you should follow the path of the different words for "orange", it's quite interesting ^^
i only know html/css - WITH a reference book cuz i keep forgetting every time, and i could write simple scripts in lingo (kind of a simplified version of actionscript).. but i never tried, and probably would have no chance, with more complicated/higher computer languages. not with my focus/attention span the way it is ~ been ogling python in relation to renpy, but i think this is not gonna happen ~
Two-thirds of Americans don't even have passports. The average vacation time for American workers was only 12 days in 2012. Taking the time and money to have meaningful travel to Europe or Asia or Australia is not common for average income families. Until after the 9/11 event we didn't need a passport to go to Canada (a special type of driver's license will also suffice) But going to Canada is not really a foreign experience unless you go to Montreal. Actually though, that's where I had to first deal in real-time with a foreign language. In 1967 I was 18 and I went with my parents to Montreal for the 1967 World's Fair. The fair was held on an island in the middle of the river but the parking lots were on the mainland and you took the subway over to the island. I was sent back to the car to get something we'd forgotten and this was the first time I'd been in a subway (not following a huge group of tourists all headed to the fair from the parking lot ). I got lost on the subway and when I came above ground I found myself in downtown Montreal.
I eventually figured out the French signs and found my way back to the right subway line and then the car and then back to the fair. It was an eye opening experience that kindled my interest in languages despite having a year of Spanish in high school which had at that time mostly evaporated from my brain.
Not at all usual. We have a bad set of circumstances hitting the UK at the moment. What they are calling "the beast from the East" which is arctic type weather coming from Russia met head on with Storm Emma, coming the other way. Snow we are used to in this area, winds we are used to. But this particular thing is bad. The Artic blast is fuelling dry powder snow, not nice flaky moister snow which makes nice snowballs. The winds are howling around, picking up the light dry powder snow and causing the snow drifts, It is what a Swedish friend says they call snow smoke, like a sandstorm but with snow. I live in what they poetically call "the foot hills of the Brecon Beacon Mountain Range" or less poetically "the Heads of the Valleys" full of ups and downs and our street is around 1200 ft above sea level., As LeatherGryphon says, genuinely uphill both ways to the shops and our street is sort of West to East orientation, so the NorEaster drving the Artic weather is funnelling straight down the street driving snow before it. Emma is whirling the winds around making for beautifully sculpted snow drifts which look very impressive but really are a pain in the proverbial.
Chuckie's in love
didn't know he had it in him
woes, trying to use precious dragon in carrara, so he can party with the fairy berry dragon.
the geografts leave gaping holes in the base mesh, which mess up the uvs.
and without the verts welded, leaves light seepish, edges of the geograft dont blend perfectly
...well if after a few glasses of wodka they misread the "п" as "л" it effectively becomes "table" so I could understand the confusion as they continue to cruise into the intersection baffled by the fact there is no furniture ahead.
...very true, my last passport expired in the 80s and as I never had the funds to travel abroad at the time I never renewed it. yeah Canada was no issue made a number of trips there just showing my Washington or Oregon State ID. (pre 9-11 of course). Now there is talk about needing a passport or passport card to fly domestically from some states as their ID cards/drivers' licences don't meet some sort of TSA criteria.
is it time for flowers and flutterbys yet?
ahhh me eyes watering
heated up an enpanada for dinner, spicyyyyyy oscar m gulf
Soon, but not Daz Soon.
sounds harsh in a way, but getting lost in an unknown environment - as long as you find your way back soon and nothing happens to you in the meantime - is the kind of immersion you need to get motivated to learn languages, to realize not everyone understands you.. i learned a lot more with people (and consolidated it watching movies) than i did at school. only good thing about lessons is you get the bases and grammar, without which you often botch a language - otherwise, nothing better than real life experience...
and speaking about travel and budget limitations, i've never been out of europe either - a good part of the countries in a little square between ireland W, holland N, slowakia E and greece S...~
oh you're based in the UK ( i thought US). so yeah, looks like you guys are dealing with the same beast we had here - just a few days later. we had a little of this powder too a few days before the worst wind & cold sun-wed, but not much, just a fine layer, i was wondering what that weird snow was.. no drifts here, but maybe in other places higher up.. now the harsh cold is gone, normal snow has been falling again, all's back to white outside >_<
hmm.. i might even have spent 2 weeks "not too far" from where you live, not sure, but it was in wales, in a rented house near the hills with pals, near some town called kingston or something.. it was autumn tho, so no snow. anyways, this beast should be over soon i guess & hope for you.
Banksias are flowering here :)
I'm familiar with something like that in Florida. We called them "Bottle Brushes".
Or maybe I'm thinking of Melaleuca (aka: paper bark tree) or as I called them "Mashed Potato Trees" because the blossoms smell like hot buttered mashed potatoes. The image below is a green species but the ones I remember usually had white flowers.
Ah..., Wikipedia agrees with the bottle brush name but says they are different than Banksia/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melaleuca
Things can get pretty Dali-esque... :-/
Biskies!!! I just baked 5 buttermilk biscuits in the air fryer and they came out perfect!!! So happy munching flakey browned biscuits!!!
I was worried the dough would burn on the edges, but the convecion effect browned the entire outside, even the underside.. totally crispy outside and hot flakey inside. Why do people even use energy-inefficient huge stove any more??!?!?!?!?
I sound like an evangelist, sorry.... :-/ But whn I can turn corn tortillas into fresh, hot corn chips in 5 minutes I just don't understand people spending 5x as much for a bag of cold stale chips..
I feel sorry for folks that live on lame prefab food,.. :-|
I think you may mean Knighton, which is about 60 miles North of us.
i'd say..
... maybe it would help waiting to open the bottle until home? XDD
yes! that's the name! hmm kingston is a little bit more.. south i guess *embarrassed cough* XDD.
i loved it there. lots of green, beautiful and so quiet - i remember wandering (alone) to the top of a hill, a very "naked" hill with very scarce short vegetation, no trees, and no road/path anywhere in the vicinity. and i suddently noticed... nothing. complete utter silence. no birds, no insects, no human background - and no sheep right there, lol. and nothing much to be seen from this POV either, just the grass and the sky. i laid there on the ground for a while, so peaceful.. ^^
happy caturday
Ironically before we moved to Wales we lived in Richmond, which is the next biggest town downstream from Kingston on the Surrey bank along that stretch of the River. Kingston is actually Kingston upon Thames and Richmond is Richmond upon Thames. So yes further south and east, just under 200 miles away.
And yes There are some beautifully quiet spots to be found in Wales. Also some dark places, as The Brecon Beacons National Park has been awarded Dark Sky status
It is Caturday. I am on my new computer. Hard to see how fast it is as not much is installed and the wifi at the mall is so darn slow.
I was promised 16 GB of Ram but I got 15.9 GB of Ram according to the task manager.
I wandered lonely as a Cloud
That floats on high o’er Vales and Hills,
When all at once I saw a crowd,
A host of golden Daffodils;
Beside the Lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze. - Wordsworth