Your bill is £30.5...
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@Yamikuronue said:
@Jaloopa said:
The sun literally never sets on the British Empire
It's after 5pm somewhere in the British Empire!
BTFY
ATFY
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Don't blame me for the atrocities the emojicon artists committed
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I think you're thinking of ;)
@Jaloopa said:Don't blame me for the atrocities the emojicon artists committed
I'm not ;)
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What would you call dumping two shots of Jack into a 6-oz mug of tea then? ;)
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So the USians don't have jokes about Mexicans or Canadians?
We mostly just kept the Polish / Irish jokes, IME.
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What would you call dumping two shots of Jack into a 6-oz mug of tea then? ;)
I guess; I've just never heard of anyone doing that before, s'all.
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My roommate will put rum in anything :)
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That means we can get some sleep any time of the day then
So...globe spanning empire...no curtains?
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What would you call dumping two shots of Jack into a 6-oz mug of tea then? ;)
Party foul?
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Have to keep an eye on the natives, you know.
So now they can't sleep whenever they want?
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Nobody ever built a global empire by letting other people get sufficient rest.
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if(3.5€ == US$3.4@Today) then sell() else buy();
Why do you put the € after the amount? In English, it should be written before the amount and without a separating space.
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Took you 8 months to figure out I'm not English native?
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No, it took me 8 months to stumble upon this particular topic ;)
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Is Superhero?
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I linked to it from a current topic to highlight some idiocy.
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Why do you put the € after the amount?
In many/most countries that now use the euro, the previous currency symbol used to be behind the amount, and people in those countries tend to do that with the euro symbol as well. This is accepted usage, even though it looks odd if you’re used to it being in front (and, I suspect, vice versa).Due to the low value of their previous currency, Belgians (and perhaps others) also still don’t seem to have gotten the hang of writing two decimals even when the second one is 0, so they write stuff like “3.5€” where
normal peopleothers would put “€3.50” instead. Hell, I’ve even heard people on Flemish TV say things like “three euro five” to mean “three euros and fifty cents."
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Obvious, it's part of Belgium!
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When writing checks (in the U.S.), I used to write the portions of the fraction of the dollar with the lowest accurate denominator, e.g. 13 4/25 dollars instead of the more common 13 16/100 dollars. To my shock, the banks didn't always handle it correctly.
The denominator isn't arbitrarily chosen; it's 100, because cents are 1/100ths of a dollar. You don't just go willy-nilly changing it because math and fractions.
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E_JOKE_NOT_FOUND: assert(funny) failed.
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Think we need some QA here..
Paging @Yamikuronue
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E_REQUlREMENTS_NOT_FOUND
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E_PAYCHECK_NOT_FOUND ;)