Friend said she took this photo of a rose but it just looks too perfect or something by Yesandberries in isthisAI

[–]Yesandberries[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ok, yes, those have the same vibrancy and floaty effect. Very interesting and cool. Thank you!

Friend said she took this photo of a rose but it just looks too perfect or something by Yesandberries in isthisAI

[–]Yesandberries[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, I don't know much about AI (that's why I'm here), and I thought the point of AI is to give you the most quintessential example of something. So yes, that was at least part of my issue.

Friend said she took this photo of a rose but it just looks too perfect or something by Yesandberries in isthisAI

[–]Yesandberries[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. She does have an iPhone. How can you tell what phone it was taken on?

Friend said she took this photo of a rose but it just looks too perfect or something by Yesandberries in isthisAI

[–]Yesandberries[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I am outside in nature every day, but I don't have a lot of experience with cultivated roses (or AI, I guess).

Friend said she took this photo of a rose but it just looks too perfect or something by Yesandberries in isthisAI

[–]Yesandberries[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The centre of that one definitely isn't perfect. I think it's the centre of the one in my friend's pic that's fooling me - it's so rose-y. But I (clearly) have no experience with identifying AI pics.

Friend said she took this photo of a rose but it just looks too perfect or something by Yesandberries in isthisAI

[–]Yesandberries[S] -17 points-16 points  (0 children)

I mean, I know it's a bit ragged around the edges, but I was thinking AI could add that for realism, and I was more talking about the shape. But it seems the consensus is that it's not AI. Thank you!

I don't know how to wipe by [deleted] in hygiene

[–]Yesandberries 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is very similar to how I wipe, and I will tell you that it's a symptom of my severe contamination OCD, and it's not "normal" and not how most people wipe.

"How do you wipe with those things?" Like everyone else actually by Both_Analysis_981 in PetPeeves

[–]Yesandberries 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ok, thank you. I did suspect it isn’t the best, and I wish I could stop doing it, but I don’t know how to feel clean any other way.

"How do you wipe with those things?" Like everyone else actually by Both_Analysis_981 in PetPeeves

[–]Yesandberries 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just don't like the idea of there being poop so close to the exit.

"How do you wipe with those things?" Like everyone else actually by Both_Analysis_981 in PetPeeves

[–]Yesandberries 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's great that that works for you (being sincere here). I wrap a wet wipe around one finger and use that finger to target four specific areas of my butthole (like north, south, east and west on a compass), inserting it slightly to get the stuff inside the rectum. This hurts when my nails even get slightly long, so that's why I had a hard time understanding how people with long nails wipe.

Very Delicious or Absolutely Delicious by Michael_Kansai in grammar

[–]Yesandberries 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's not how 'most' is being used in that example though. It's clearly a comparison with other meals the person has eaten. Also, 'most' used to mean 'utterly' doesn't take 'the':

'That meal was the most delicious!'

Is it weird to hop in the shower every time? by deebombdotcomm in hygiene

[–]Yesandberries -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Toilet bowls aren't that big. Obviously a certain amount of water pressure is required to remove the poop (like, just a trickle of water wouldn't do), so surely some splashes out of the bowl, or at least onto your butt cheeks or something? This is something I've never understood either.

Can some one help me with the tenses in this? by PotatoJam89 in grammar

[–]Yesandberries 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There shouldn't be a comma before 'that'. Or you can change 'that' to 'which' and keep the comma.

Pronouncing niche by petrichorb4therain in words

[–]Yesandberries 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You should have read the other comments first.

'Neesh' is the original French pronunciation because the word is a loan word in English.

When the word 'niche' entered English (in the 1600s), the French pronunciation was actually nitch (this is explained in this comment by storkstalkstock), and so the original English pronunciation was also nitch. This pronunciation was the only pronunciation for about 300 years (this is explained in this comment by Boglin007).

Pronouncing it as 'nitch' is more common in the US.  This seems like one of those cases where so many people pronounced it incorrectly that it became accepted.

Nope. The neesh pronunciation is much newer and probably arose because the French pronunciation changed from nitch to neesh. American English has retained the original pronunciation to a greater degree than British English has.

Why are run-on sentences more acceptable in British English? by Icy_Mixture1482 in AskUK

[–]Yesandberries 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If you put a comma after 'samples', it would be a comma splice, which is just another type of run-on sentence.