> I work with senior citizens and tried to explain how to parse the domain in the URL by looking for the first forward "/" after the "https://" and then scan backwards but they find that mental algorithm confusing and those instructions don't stick.
Might try explaining it this way?
It works the same way as a postal address. The first part before `/` is the envelope: by analogy it runs streetaddress.city.country.
You can give a name to your house, or add an apartment to the front - but that doesn't change the most significant part.
happy birthday. Did you get any nice presents? It's nice to see you.
Output:
Another year decays!
Darkness falls upon your day!
What offerings did you seize from the void?
The ritual of your birth is complete!
I behold your face once more!
YEAH!
There are no units of exercise and no units of depression either.
In my opinion the best measure of exercise is perceived effort. So while you're asking for objective answers, I think a lot of this is inherently subjective.
The benchmark you're asking for is also ill-defined. For example: How frequently to be as effective as what type and what frequency of therapy?
As an avid knitter, I can confirm it really is. In practice there might be multiple knots as you change balls of yarn for example but topologically each sweater is just a very fancy knot.
> Old English cnyttan "to tie with a knot, bind together, fasten by tying," related to Old Norse knytja "bind together, form into a knot," Middle Low German knütten "to tie, knot," Old English cnotta "a knot," from Proto-Germanic knuttjan, from stem knutt-. Of brows, late 14c. Intransitive meaning "do knitting, weave by looping or knotting a continuous thread" (especially in reference to plain stitch) is from 1520s.
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