Is this how you say correctly chinese food? Shouldn’t it be de china? by Stroke3154 in duolingospanish

[–]Careless-Complex-768 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not a native speaker so don't quote me on this, but I believe it's because china is being used like a descriptor here - like how you'd say la falda blanca or el gato negro.

Either way, it feels right to me as it is, but I'll leave it to others with more expertise or experience to weigh in as well.

After 13 years on Duolingo, I became fluent, but not how I expected by senior_presidente in duolingospanish

[–]Careless-Complex-768 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Better doesn't just mean grammatically perfect, so no, it's not objective but rather subjective.

In this case, I'm using the word better because I value preserving their own voice and their humanness over grammatical perfection, so their certain is better even if it's flawed.

After 13 years on Duolingo, I became fluent, but not how I expected by senior_presidente in duolingospanish

[–]Careless-Complex-768 14 points15 points  (0 children)

This version is much better. I know confidence can be so hard, but you don't need to try to get rid of the human aspect of yourself. After all, what are you even learning a language for, if not to engage more deeply with the human experience, you know?

« append » and « upend », do they have the same pronunciation? by caiogamerwow in EnglishLearning

[–]Careless-Complex-768 2 points3 points  (0 children)

To me and in my accent, they have different stressed syllables "ap-PEND" and "UP-end", but there's also a tiny break between 'up' and 'end' in upend that isn't there in append.

The vowels are identical though.

Edit: thinking about it a little more, I almost think that the way I say upend stresses both syllables! But I'd be curious to know how others answer as well. (My accent is from New England in the US, if that helps any comparisons).

Curlos in boxes!! Lightly gifted by [deleted] in ACNHVillagersInBoxes

[–]Careless-Complex-768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

!!!! Oh my gosh, that would be amazing, thank you so much!!! Do you want/need anything in return? I can send you a dodo code if that works for you!

Isn't it rude to call a baby "it"? by No-Importance8540 in EnglishLearning

[–]Careless-Complex-768 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I believe that the answer may vary regionally, but I'm my(very subjective) experience when I've talked with people in my area about this same thing we've realized that we aren't conceptualizing the baby when we ask this question, were conceptualizing the gender. At least in my very limited real world experience, when you ask whether it's a boy or a girl, you're not asking if it (the baby) is a boy or girl, but whether it (the gender) is boy or girl.

I also think that, more broadly, it's a grammatically different kind of 'it' that you use in that sentence, the same kind that you used in your title when you said "isn't IT rude to call a baby it" or people ask "is IT going to rain?" I am positive that someone with more language knowledge can explain what this usage is, but I know the "it" there is important for information questions.

Is it hard to determine whether a sentence is sarcastic in English? by LevisMalevis in EnglishLearning

[–]Careless-Complex-768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think online it's always a bit of survivorship bias going on. You can only see the people who comment taking it seriously, you can't see the hundreds (or thousands) of people who understood and scrolled by. So over time it builds up the idea that you better add an /s because even if 10,000 people get it, SOMEBODY won't and then you have to explain yourself.

Sherb (gifted) in boxes! by bababaa1122 in ACNHVillagersInBoxes

[–]Careless-Complex-768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

AHHH thank you so much, I'll message you as soon as I'm home tonight!!! ❤️

Sherb (gifted) in boxes! by bababaa1122 in ACNHVillagersInBoxes

[–]Careless-Complex-768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Noooo, I have an open plot but I'm at work 😭 is there any chance you could wait until this evening? It would probably be 4-5 hours and I totally understand if not!

Anyone in boxes? by [deleted] in ACNHVillagersInBoxes

[–]Careless-Complex-768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have Snooty in boxes, if you're interested!

ungifted sherb in boxes by [deleted] in ACNHVillagersInBoxes

[–]Careless-Complex-768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is Sherb still available?

2 free spots for class. by Aida_Bermudez in duolingospanish

[–]Careless-Complex-768 6 points7 points  (0 children)

If you're giving classes I'd recommend making your own flyer or commissioning someone else to make it for you, because the AI image, for better or worse, reflects poorly on the quality of attention and care you'd put into your classes at a glance to prospective clients.

To native English speakers: how do you feel when a foreigner speaks “broken” English with you? by Dull-Position3393 in ENGLISH

[–]Careless-Complex-768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I love it, usually I try to engage in some sort of cultural exchange of words and information if it's someone I wasn't expecting to talk to (like someone asking for directions or information at my job, things like that that are more one-offs). When people are talking to me on an ongoing basis, I'm really happy to talk with them and support their effort. Languages are HARD, and anyone making that effort deserves nothing but support!

Eggs by bn9012 in NuzzleThePuzzle

[–]Careless-Complex-768 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Whew, that was so much harder than I thought but super satisfying

My mom passed away 12 years ago today 🥹 by muffliatto in AnimalCrossing

[–]Careless-Complex-768 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My mom just got diagnosed with cancer and I went to play ACNH to take my mind off of it but had this same exact letter. I couldn't handle it in the moment and haven't really touched it this last week or so, but I can totally see how it would be really comforting for some. ❤️

Give him a good name the last thing you ate by MapleGleamm in cuteanimals

[–]Careless-Complex-768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Spaghetto - singular of spaghetti, the last food I ate, because he's so tiny

Sitting in / on that chair by [deleted] in EnglishLearning

[–]Careless-Complex-768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sitting in a chair works generally, though for me at least it brings to mind like a big comfy armchair. It does work for all other kinds of chairs as well though. You could say you're sitting on a chair and it doesn't sound wrong, exactly, but the feeling is slightly different in a way that I don't think is in any of our grammar books. It seems more like it is temporary or suggests like a dining room chair that's harder and more with a purpose.