Table can mean “to discuss a topic at a meeting” (British English) or “to postpone discussion of a topic” (American English). Canadian English uses both meanings of the word
Canada . . . seriously? I can’t sanction that type of behaviour.
Table can mean “to discuss a topic at a meeting” (British English) or “to postpone discussion of a topic” (American English). Canadian English uses both meanings of the word
Canada . . . seriously? I can’t sanction that type of behaviour.
People who get het up about “literally” are fabulous.
If Dickens, Twain and Joyce can use it as an intensifier, then that’s awesome enough for me.
Of course literally is often overused figuratively, flogged like a dead metaphorse; but used literally, literally is often literally redundant anyway.
I think it’s got a third use now though, which is even more fun, using it to troll languague purists who think language drives communication rather than the other way round. That might well have motivated Mark Twain too.
And “terrific” and “awesome” are exaggerations of “scary”.
I use the free version, it’s ok. Not as user friendly of feature packed as gmail. I think they renamed to just “tuta”.
I find the web interface and android app are a bit limited - I think you need to pay to get decent searching and autofilter/rules and so on. If stuff is important you need to stick a tag or a folder on it fairly soon othewise it might become hard to find.
Option for encryption, but I rarely use that because I don’t trust recipients to understand why they should care.
Based . . . can’t use that word Located in Germany so believe what you like about GDPR and privacy laws and stuff like that.
Overall I’m happy with it. It’s fine for just doing your basic sbemail stuff. It hasn’t been good enough to convince me to go for paid version, so I can’t say about the paid features.
Meh, sounds like a worse version of notepad++, which has been very popular and reliable since the early 21st century.
If they make notepad more bloated than notepad++ then I’d use it even less.
But each to their own.
No, it’s just another example that words’ usages and meanings can change a lot, even flip, over time. A new usage can literally spread like a
meme and become the meaning - at least to all intensive porpoises.virus