Spyke

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general

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The -er suffix

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It's definitely not a contraction.

-er is the agent suffix in English. Effectively it turns words into those who do something related to that word.

Hawk > Hawker = One who "hawks" Run > Runner = One who "runs"

In principle this implies the existance of a verbal form of the root word, such as the two above examples.

Witcher, as used by the fantasy series, is a weird one because it's actually not related to the agent suffix.

The Polish title of The Witcher is Wiedźma which just means "witch". When it was translated to English they adopted "witcher" as a masculine form to the oft feminine "witch" by using the ability for the -er suffix to indicate a profession or association with a noun in English i.e. Cash > Cashier, someone who handles cash/payments (actually derived from french with the -ier suffix, but point still stands). In the cass of Witcher it is one who works as/with witches or else one who is associated with Witches.

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Anon tries to flirt?

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I mean there's also something to say for not being interested in flirting and wanting to be there for the event? They started touching him without permission. He, or anyone else, would be absolutely justified in not wanting that.

coffee

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[James Hoffmann] Join the Great American Coffee Taste Test!

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I'm extremely anti-gatekeeping any hobby, and I've never gotten any bad vibes off him. He nearly always addresses the fact that many of the minutae that he focuses on are for the extreme nerds with extra money/time to spare. He even regularly talks about how many of the ideal processes he talks about, he doesn't do because it's a PITA.

He's very slow to recommend expensive/time consuming products, and he's quick to offer more reasonable alternatives.

That said, he's a coffee nerd with money to spare, so he definitely gets excited and involved with things that are a bit beyond your average bear.

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Are there universal words, and what are they?

Hi! I'm a linguist, and this topic is one that comes up commonly.

The answer is no. There is no such thing as languages/words that are native to humans. You can have things that are widely shared (mama/papa based on baby-talk as an example), but seeing as language itself is not universal to humans, there is no such thing as a word that is universal.

Feel free to ask any questions if you're curious!

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*Permanently Deleted*

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Yea very similar:

Padme Amidala: [steps away]I can't believe what I'm hearing. Obi-Wan was right. You've changed.

Darth Vader: I don't want to hear any more about Obi-Wan. The Jedi turned against me, don't you turn against me.

Padme Amidala: I don't know you anymore. Anakin, you're breaking my heart. You're going down a path I can't follow.

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British food

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You literally have burger cheese. It's the same shit.

The vast majority of people do not regularly eat Kraft singles just like the majority of brits don't eat burger cheese every day.