a transgender raccoon girl

  • 37 Posts
  • 41 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 9th, 2023

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  • I think it was used wrong. CMIIW, but you only need to separate clauses with a comma if the subordinate clause comes before the main clause, so this: We squint at the sun, because it’s too bright

    Should’ve been this: We squint at the sun because it’s too bright

    But if the subordinate clause comes before main, then a comma is needed: Because it’s too bright, we squint at the sun

    However, the above mistake is not a mistake in German and a few other languages. If you translate the above sentence in German, it looks like this: Wir blinzeln in die Sonne, weil sie zu hell ist (yes, i use Google Translate)







  • Your community, as in the community you moderates? Yeah it makes sense.

    From what I’ve heard, moderators (and admins probably) can see deleted posts, as this scenario did happen to my post in the communities I moderate. Fortunately, only moderators, admins, or anyone with your posts’ link before it was deleted could potentially see your deleted posts.

    That’s why it’s recommended that you edit your post title, description, and url/images to “deleted by creator” or similar when deleting your posts, as moderators can’t undo edits.



  • In a nutshell, it’s like English’s they (plural animate or inanimate), it (for feminine objects, remember that german is a gendered language like french) she, and you (both singular and plural) combined.

    Though, Sie meaning “you” is the polite version, used to address someone politely. For informal situations, there’s the impolite and always-singular “Du”

    While there are different conjugations and capitalization between the different uses of Sie, in the end they all use the same word.











  • There are plenty of Solitaire games out there aside from MS Solitaire, including free and open source ones. I think PySolFC fits that bill quite well, a huge collection of Solitaire games available for Windows (and other platforms, Linux included of course).

    Or KPatience if you use Linux. It’s even preinstalled if you use KDE, which I do.



  • I have quite a few recommendations. They are not quite non-freemium since they are free, but if your reason to prefer non-freemium is to avoid ads and in app purchases, then none of these games have them. They are all also open source and the link I provided below will be for their respective F-Droid version (note: some of these games are not available on Google Play Store):

    • Simon Tatham’s Puzzle - A collection of many puzzle games ported to Android. The puzzles include Minesweeper, Net, Sudoku, and more.
    • Simple Solitaire Collection - As the name says, it’s a collection of card-based Solitaire games.
    • Simple Brick Games - A game that imitates very basic handheld with very small pixel count. Games include tetris, breakout, and more.
    • 1010 Klooni - A puzzle game where you have to use various shaped blocks to fill an entire horizontal or vertical line.
    • Tower Jumper - This is a clone of a popular android game in which you move a jumping ball and try to reach the end of a tower avoiding the obstacles.
    • Ball2Box - A puzzle game about shooting a ball into the box.
    • Anuto - Another ugly tower defense.

    This particular game requires far more attention and strategy than the ones listed above, but it can be played once every few minutes if you constantly save and reload (just don’t play online):

    • Unciv - 4X civilization-building game, similar to Sid Meier’s Civilization series.