Do you mean the foggy look? If so, that's not normal. A friend of mine had a similar situation and now has glasses that help clarify the eyesight.
JasminIstMuede
So sorry for the dumb question, but is ma'am tied to age? I've always used it on trips because I was taught in school that ma'am is correct formal English 😅
I had two 0,5 Pils for dinner too many nights when I was still in university 😅
I've thought about this too. There is no proof that he is one, and there is a chance that this all comes from his own stupidity, but if he were a Russian asset, he would act exactly as he is now.
Thank you for the corrections! I had no idea it was so simple. I think my colleague had problems because she wasn't aware of the FBAR for a few years.
Important note about this (though I don't know how much you earn): you can only exempt up to 120000 dollar equivalent per year, and you must still file your taxes every year with the American government even if you don't live there. Non-US bank accounts and investments also must be declared, even if you no longer live there.
I'm not American myself, but a colleague of mine is and she has mentioned having trouble with American agencies because some of these points (specifically the bank account point if I remember correctly).
Edit: corrections to my info in comment below.
Had a similar struggle with the German layout, but in the meantime I have moved to the "EURKey" layout. It is built in to many distros and available for Windows and Mac. It mimics a US layout while still having all the äüöß (and much more) I could ever need. Though I will say it's only really worth it if you're in IT or similar where you frequently need certain symbols.
I need to get myself a ThinkPad...
This is me with my husband 😅 Every month or two it's something new and I love it so much
: as a directory limiter is crazy 😅
(Never been an apple person)
Good to know that NT also supports / though. Somehow it never occured to me to try.
Only time I've ever used \ in a non computer context was in mathematics as "without" in set theory. As an escape character it's pretty practical too :)
Ok thank you :D
Is one better to use in a business context? Or is there something more gender neutral that sounds natural?