Nothing shows respect like a junk spray can.
Nothing shows respect like a junk spray can.
Build one lane for each person.
have a nice cakeday
Not for a company with 120 Billion profits.
| ||
|| |_
For mammal, if you wanna dig deeper into the orders… again, non-exhaustive, non-reviewed GPT stuff:
Here’s a list of some of the major orders within the class Mammalia (mammals):
Monotremata: Egg-laying mammals, such as the platypus and echidnas.
Marsupialia: Marsupials, which give birth to underdeveloped young that typically continue to develop in a pouch, including kangaroos, koalas, and opossums.
Eulipotyphla: Insectivores, including shrews, moles, and hedgehogs.
Chiroptera: Bats, the only mammals capable of sustained flight.
Primates: Includes lemurs, monkeys, apes, and humans.
Rodentia: Rodents, characterized by continuously growing incisors, including mice, rats, squirrels, and beavers.
Lagomorpha: Rabbits, hares, and pikas.
Carnivora: Carnivorous mammals, including dogs, cats, bears, and seals.
Perissodactyla: Odd-toed ungulates, such as horses, zebras, and rhinoceroses.
Artiodactyla: Even-toed ungulates, including pigs, deer, giraffes, and cattle.
Cetacea: Whales, dolphins, and porpoises.
Sirenia: Manatees and dugongs, also known as sea cows.
Proboscidea: Elephants, characterized by their long trunks.
Hyracoidea: Hyraxes, small, herbivorous mammals that resemble rodents.
Scandentia: Tree shrews, small mammals that are somewhat similar to squirrels.
Dermoptera: Colugos or flying lemurs, gliding mammals found in Southeast Asia.
Xenarthra: Includes anteaters, sloths, and armadillos, primarily found in the Americas.
Non-exhaustive, non-reviewed, GPT-generated list of classes:
Mammals (Class Mammalia): Warm-blooded animals with hair or fur; most give live birth and produce milk for their young.
Birds (Class Aves): Warm-blooded vertebrates with feathers, beaks, and typically the ability to fly.
Reptiles (Class Reptilia): Cold-blooded vertebrates with scales, including snakes, lizards, turtles, and crocodiles.
Amphibians (Class Amphibia): Cold-blooded vertebrates that typically begin life in water and undergo metamorphosis, including frogs, toads, and salamanders.
Fish (Class Pisces): Cold-blooded aquatic vertebrates with gills, fins, and scales, including bony fish (Osteichthyes) and cartilaginous fish (Chondrichthyes).
Arachnids (Class Arachnida): Invertebrates characterized by having eight legs and two main body segments, including spiders, scorpions, ticks, and mites.
Insects (Class Insecta): The largest class of animals, characterized by having three main body segments, six legs, and typically one or two pairs of wings.
Crustaceans (Class Crustacea): A diverse group of aquatic invertebrates with exoskeletons, including crabs, lobsters, shrimp, and barnacles.
Invertebrates: While not a formal class, this group includes various animals without a backbone, such as:
Ask an LLM about animal classes.
It’s the taxonomic rank you’d be interested in.
Also depends at what detail you wanna go.
Things like rodents are at the order level under mammals.
Arachnid aren’t insects, they’re their own thing, etc.
I can’t find that email in the pending accounts, if you can confirm me the username of the account.
Thanks
I’ll take a look, thanks
I cook and bake everything at 360° for this reason.
Pacific Merfolk declare war on China, more at eleven.
Healthy eater as in eating other healthier people.
Well that sucks.
Also, put parchment paper between portions instead.
Maybe something like PineTime?
It’s likely a very different experience than an apple watch, as in, much more basic in functionality. It’s also like $30.
Nestle is so bad that it bad-list-overflowed.
For me they’re moved at the top right corner instead of next to the buttons themselves
an 8-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy are among the dead.
Great way to radicalize the next generation.
Le lac nommé “Lac Pas de Nom” c’est pas mal aussi.
https://toponymie.gouv.qc.ca/ct/ToposWeb/fiche.aspx?no_seq=47091
Ne pas confondre avec le “Lac Sans Nom”
On sent l’inspiration
Après, il y a l’Avenue Larue…
https://toponymie.gouv.qc.ca/ct/ToposWeb/Fiche.aspx?no_seq=218729
Phone books had your name and phone number. Some had your street address too.
Before that, there were books that even had your occupation.
Random directory example from 1886:
Last name, first name, occupation, street name, number.
1790…