Posting IS praxis and this is a solidarity thread with the freedom fighters of New Caledonia
Going to double my comment here, considering the relevance:
The 18th of Brumaire was literally on the 9th of November, or, in other words, it happened on 9/11.Are ye an Brit? Your way of time says so...
Day/Month instead Month/Day, smh...
Your Honor, I am not a Brit!
In fact, many places outside of the TERF island use the day/month format. In particular, this includes France!Uhh.. that doesn't exclude you from any of those categories....
Ok, so you've won a pyhrric victory, you've proven yourself not Brit, but French
I expected this course of action from the prosecuting team, so I would like to present this piece of evidence:
Je ne parle pas français.Your Honor, I cannot be French.
"That's a nice pipeline ya got there pardner. Shame if something happened to it "
Any time someone tries to correct my pronunciation of croissant, I point out that the pastry originated from Austria so really it should be pronounced as [Exaggerated Arnold Schwarzenegger accent saying Croissant]
I didn't understand this at first but then I tried saying croissant out loud in my thickest attempt at a french accent and it's surprisingly accurate.
Lmao right? It's a "Qwua" sound and it does weird things to the mouth
it's surprisingly accurate.
I mean, both ye Anglos and French are non-rhotic...
There are a few rhotic English accents. The West Country is full of the Angloest Anglos to ever have Angloed, and they have some very juicy rhotisity
Hating "le oui oui baguette" is my normal state of being are you telling me that my hatred is finally justified in the eyes of the world???
If you look carefully, you can often tell if a person speaks French all the time by the pattern of lines on the side of their mouth, this allows you to quickly identify who to mock.
I see your reason, bueno amigo....
Vive Nueva Caledonia! Muerte al Francia!
The 18th of Brumaire was literally on the 9th of November, or, in other words, it happened on 9/11.