Yourself isit wrote: » The plural is cul de sac is culs de sac
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Everyone knows that computers are based on logic values '1' and '0' and it's one or the other. VHDL is a programming language and it's "binary" values can be one of these nine, in order of precedence , 'U','X','1','0','Z','W','H','L','-' 'U' = uninitialized - hasn't settled to 1 or 0 , well not yet anyway 'X' = unknown , could be 1 , could be 0 , but probably the one you don't want '1'/'0'= OK I recognise these , what's with the rest ? 'Z' = floating , high impedance , will be overridden by a 1 or 0 'W' = weak 'X' - a weak unknown , vaguely 1 ish or maybe 0 ish 'H'/'L' = weak '1'/'0' '-' = don't care , and by now you probably don't
Anders Shy Aircraft wrote: » In fairness, you were not both right, technically or otherwise. The USA in on a different continent to the correct origin.
73Cat wrote: » Mike the Headless Chicken or Miracle Mike was a chicken that survived for 18 months after having it's head chopped off. He was born in Fruita,Colorado, America in 1945, somehow survived beheading, and was then fed by his owner using a dropper down his neck. He gained fame touring sideshows, but eventually choked on tour. Fruita hosts a Mike the Headless Chicken Day every year so the legacy lives on
Junkyard Tom wrote: » There is a small population of Lions in India.
Red Kev wrote: » ...He picked the Merc solely because he could get in and out of it without removing his hat...
New Home wrote: » Doesn't 'cul de sac' literally mean 'bottom of bag'? It seems to be quite apt to a road that, like the bottom of a bag, has no way out except for the way you came in.https://fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/cul-de-sac
Wossack wrote: » if you were to lay all your blood vessels out end to end, you'd likely die
Kat1170 wrote: » Likely ????? :eek::eek:
New Home wrote: » Doesn't 'cul de sac' literally mean 'bottom of bag'? It seems to be quite apt to apply it to a road that, like the bottom of a bag, has no way out except for the way you came in.https://fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/cul-de-sac
jimgoose wrote: » Ah well now, VHDL is VHSIC Hardware Description Language, the low-level of low-level of microcode.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Except it's not bottom, the opposite of top, it's the thing you sit upon.
(Figuré) Le dessous d’un objet, sur lequel généralement il repose, ou, sa partie arrière. Un cul de bouteille. Le cul d’un chariot.
alchemist33 wrote: » The imported rabbits killed off our wolves and bears? Jaysus!
dexter_morgan wrote: » The word "boycott" originated in Ireland, after the town of Ballinrobe, Co. Mayo started a campaign of isolation against Charles Cunningham Boycott, a land agent who worked for the 3rd Lord Erne. History tells it that in 1880 all local shops refused to serve him, and the boy who delivered his mail was threatened.
New Home wrote: » Like Bottom was an ass? Not only that - see point 5 (there's an actual image of a backside that refers to the other meanings, so it's NSFW) Very rough translation: 'The bottom of an object, on which it usually rests, or its back. The bottom of a bottle. The back of a carriage.'
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » And VHSIC is ...
The new continent could have economic and geopolitical implications.
re_shaft wrote: » It won't. The human concept of what a continent is is pretty arbitrary.
storker wrote: » "Thin air" isn't. It's actually quite thick. If your car could drive straight up, space would be about an hour's drive away. The size of the Earth compared with its atmosphere is proportional to the size of an apple compared with its skin.
storker wrote: » If your car could drive straight up, space would be about an hour's drive away.