New Zealand -> Kiwi.
Human languages: the words are made up and the rules don’t matter.
Especially true for English.
At least we don’t use the Roman method of varied hour lengths depending in the time of day and times of year.
In what way?
It also works both ways: invest in passenger rail, services can improve, and so more people will use trains.
I’m not on desktop so can’t inspect to see the img src.
But it’s possible for a url in img src to have a different response (ie, html) when it’s a direct navigation (ie new tab).
Presumably to disable that hot linking from other websites/apps. Especially if they use scrapers.
But yeah, bad ux.
But to where would they expel the Jews if they did not have some level of support for Zionism and allow Israel to exist?
I imagine that theoretical speed could only be used for drone planes.
It’s electioneering in that it is to create damage control ahead of dropping or delaying any promised reward to those that voted for the income tax cut.
It can allow them to defer until they claim that NZ is not fragile, which would probably be as a re-election campaign: vote for us because WE fixed a fragile economy, let’s keep the momentum so that we can let people keep more of their hard earned income.
I don’t have an example, but I would like to see a rotary phone dial ui as input method for a phone number.
Edit: I see there’s mentions and a gif in another comment.
They can’t fix the bug because it’ll affect the outcome of any experiments.
is the number of people still arriving in…
Don’t have to be a a great and prosperous country to have people want to move here. Just have to be better than where they are (with respect to their personal circumstances).
Is “selling ground leases” mean they sell the land and lease the property? If so, sounds dumb.
Nothing will top the r/nostupidquestions favourite of [Is Stephen pronounced like Stephen?](https://www.reddit.com/r/NoStupidQuestions/comments/3bmo28/is_stephen_pronounced_the_same_as_stephen/]
Cool. Can’t see that data url. Use an image of pastebin like it did.
When does a colloquial term become a non-colloquial? Usage by government/official contexts?