I mean fair enough, but it made me laugh.
🇬🇧 English (Traditional)
🇺🇸 English (Simplified)
🇬🇧 English
🇺🇲 Pidgin English
A pidgin language is a simplified language that appears when people need to communicate with each other, but they don’t have a common language. But if the situation lasts long enough for children to grow up learning the mixture of languages as their native language then it quickly evolves into a creole. The difference is that a creole is not a simplified language, and it has regular grammar. While growing up children always “reanalyze” their language to regularize grammar and fill in gaps in expressiveness. This is a main driver in shifts in all languages. The effect is especially profound when starting from an irregular, simplified language.
Because of reanalysis pidgins tend to either be temporary, or to give way to creoles. I don’t know of a pidgin that exists in the US right now. There are creoles - there are some details here
Okay. Duly noted and amended…
🇬🇧 English
🇺🇲 Fuckwit
Throwback to Microsoft renaming “zip file” to “postcode file” in English.
The difference here obviously being that actual humans worked on the localisation Mint uses, whereas I’m sure Microsoft just uses machine translation.
Yeah, this feels like a courtesy thing. I just didn’t expect it.
(And only just now noticed after switching three weeks ago since this was the first time I had to delete anything in all that time.)
Some British words are better and some American words are better. It just depends.
I’m from the UK and I think “Trash” and “Garbage” are much more aggressive sounding than “Rubbish”. And I like that.
Several years back, I set my phone’s language to UK English so the voice assistant would be British, and my flashlight button changed to “Torch”.
Unfortunately mine says flashlight which is a mild annoyance since it doesn’t flash.
Can confirm. It always seems overly verbose, though. Why not just bin? Or Rubbish? Nobody IRL would ever say “rubbish bin”.
I guess because ‘bin’ is a shorthand of ‘binary’, that is, the directory where all your executable files reside, so the developers felt a need to clarify that /usr/bin isn’t to be cleaned.
I thought the ‘bin’ folder in program folders was where they put trash for longer than I’d like to admit. >_<
Well, that’s better than moving all your binaries to the rubbish bin
Just don’t put the stuff to delete in /bin or /usr/bin
Right, it goes in ~/.local/bin for safe keeping.
It’s “Wastebasket” in the UK on the GNOME desktop. I’m happy enough with that.
Gnome is going for the avocado-toast-eating market.
?
Fancy thing to call it maybe?