It says words, not phrases. So you’re not allowed to use “I,” “use,” “by,” “the,” “way,” or “and.”
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samus12345@sh.itjust.worksto Funny@sh.itjust.works•Teens are banned from the park.English2·5 days agoDawn has some mighty strange-looking fingers, too.
Especially if they looked like the capybara rejects depicted in the comic.
samus12345@sh.itjust.worksto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Fox news trying to explain github.English12·18 days agoThen it should be THE GITHUB “DICTIONARY.”
samus12345@sh.itjust.worksto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Fox news trying to explain github.English4·18 days agoScare quotes are used informally, but it’s not proper usage like a “news” channel should be doing. Which, fair enough, it’s Fox “News.” But it’s already larger text and all caps - why is more emphasis necessary?
Ohh, now I get what you’re talking about. I was referring to this picture looking 50s rather than 30s:
The OP image is established to have been drawn in 1934.
What does a passenger dirigible have to do with anything?
A microfilm viewer is definitely the inspiration, but is this 1930s? It looks more like 1950s to me. Even then, notice that the thing holding the screen is huge. I can’t find an image of a definitively 1930s one, but I did find this proof of concept for a home one from 1935. Pretty different form factor.
That is an impressively accurate-looking future TV for something drawn in 1934. TVs of the time looked something like this:
This follows that there may be a Kermit the Golf, Kermit the Folg, and Kermit the Glof.