Thank you! Here’s a rough guide to pronouncing these place names:
Ynys Lochtyn = “UNus LOKH-tun” Llangrannog = “shan-GRAN-og”
The double-l “ll” letter in Welsh is pronounced like a “sh” sound, but harsher and further back in the mouth.
Similarly, the “ch” letter is similar to the Scottish Gaelic “ch” sound they use for words like “loch”.
Ah, apologies. I should’ve specified: Preferably Chromium based. Thank you for your suggestion though, I appreciate it.
Is there an Android browser that has ad blocking but still allows you to sign into your Google account?
Thank you! I think about colour palettes and colour contrast a lot.
Thanks!
This might give you a better idea of pronunciation.
Today I learnt!
There’s casinos in Auckland, NZ?
Thanks! Yeah there were a lot of folk taking sneaky snaps of that Ferrari.
It’s about a 60-foot drop. All the plants are bracken, which turns a lovely rusty hue in the autumn.
Yeah it’s absolutely crackin’ anywhere up there!
The Great Ridge, towards Back Tor, in the Peak District, England.
GNUtrino is bag on. The village used to be recorded as Gherinstone, Garsington, or Gersington. It’s a mix of Old Norse and Old English, meaning something like “the town with the grassy ings” (an “ing” is a dialect term for a meadow near a river).
Ta! Aye, felt a bit weird seeing the leaves and fern change into their rusty hues, but then also being subject to 25ºC heat.
Essentially the boulders are reminiscent of actual cheese press stones, or tethering stones. Here’s one on eBay, as a reference.
This is the key point that a lot of people miss.
If you wholeheartedly, or at least performatively, believe that there is a “natural” hierarchy where some people are better than others, then what one might see as equality is seen as oppression by hardline conservatives.
This is why emotion is the key component of Trumpian messaging, regardless of veracity.
The key is to never play the game. Always proactivity act with questions, never “defend” and react with truth; they’re not interested in the truth.