The problem is: what else?
Musician and cat lover
The problem is: what else?
Oh trust me, it happens a lot even between native speakers, and it irks me too haha
From a quick search that didn’t provide anything really insightful, it seems that at least in Italian the term has been used since the XIV century, so it’s not photocopy related
Wait, the resemblance thing is also used in other languages: “spitting image” in English, for example, and “copia sputata” in Italian. I’m actually wondering for the first time where it comes from, so maybe there’s a reason for the Portuguese saying to be related to spit
That’s literally a spectrograph
Italian here
We give a lot of shit to our train system (and rightly so) but it actually works quite well, in comparison to our European neighbours.
Bologna to Milano is a very nice line indeed
I got that reference!
I agree with you, but why would you make a calla and listen to music at the same time?
I have the same surname as one of the most important composers in music history from the 1500-1600. It wouldn’t be so bad if I wasn’t a musician, and a composer specifically, myself.
Every people I’ve interacted with in my trade has made some remarks on it, and if someone searches “[name] composer” they obviously won’t get to my music!
Why are you on the reddit community, then?
Why are people using a language model for math problems?
Just curious, how old are you?
I’m just curious, do you not have an ad blocker on your browser? I’ve never paid anything, and I still haven’t seen any ads
It should be “enhancement”, like “Reddit Enhancement Suite” or RES for short
Max temperatures in Sicily (the hottest region in Italy) reaches 42°C (not 48) in August (not July), so it is quite a difference. It will really be miserable and outright dangerous for a lot of people, not only scary.
Where did you read that? The higest temperature recorded in Italy was 48.8°C in Sicily in 2021. Southern Italy is hot, yes, but whats is considered “farly common” is 40-42°C in August, not July, and not 48°C
Only for US and UK, unfortunately
What are you going on about?