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Doc is a cool dude. He never goes hard r
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he has a southern drawl. It’s not gonna be scientifically articulate
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this is a mikey-tier take meow
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Meow, this is an intervention.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revival_o ... ly_mammoth
there’s belief in the scientific community that the woolly mammoth can be revived using genetic material found in their remains (they lived up to 4,000 years ago in some areas). A company called Colossal Biosciences, which was founded last year, believes it’ll produce the first clones in 2027
there’s belief in the scientific community that the woolly mammoth can be revived using genetic material found in their remains (they lived up to 4,000 years ago in some areas). A company called Colossal Biosciences, which was founded last year, believes it’ll produce the first clones in 2027
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They've been talking about this for 20 years since that tv program "Raising the Mammoth" was on when my oldest was 7. It should interesting what they come up with.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revival_o ... ly_mammoth
there’s belief in the scientific community that the woolly mammoth can be revived using genetic material found in their remains (they lived up to 4,000 years ago in some areas). A company called Colossal Biosciences, which was founded last year, believes it’ll produce the first clones in 2027
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard_v._Pepsico,_Inc.
Dude tried to sue Pepsi for a Harrier jet. Netflix documentary coming out next month lol
Dude tried to sue Pepsi for a Harrier jet. Netflix documentary coming out next month lol
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That's nuts, and probably one of the reasons there are so many disclaimers on ads.
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“Jabroni” is originally a wrestling term (Italiazation of “jobber”). I had always assumed it was a “real” italian-American word, like gabagool.
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there have been suggestions of an “irony punctuation mark” for text since the 1580s
No agreed-upon method for indicating irony in written text exists, though many ideas have been suggested. For instance, an irony punctuation mark was proposed in the 1580s, when Henry Denham introduced a rhetorical question mark or percontation point, which resembles a reversed question mark. This mark was also advocated by the French poet Marcel Bernhardt at the end of the 19th century, to indicate irony or sarcasm. French writer Hervé Bazin suggested another pointe d'ironie: the Greek letter psi Ψ with a dot below it, while Tom Driberg recommended that ironic statements should be printed in italics that lean the other way from conventional italics.[80]
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That was interesting.
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