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merc, to comicstrips in JPEG

There is no such thing as an objectively correct pronunciation

But, there are patterns to the language and using a soft “g” sound doesn’t follow those patterns, so it’s objectively a less correct pronunciation.

the guy who created it

Who cares about that guy? He made a mistake, he should have looked up how words are pronounced before trying to get people to mispronounce “gif”. If he’d said it was supposed to be pronounced “dug” people would have just ignored him, but his attempt wasn’t that absurd, it was just slightly wrong, so not everyone ignored him the way they should have.

instead of a group of people being dumbasses and laughing at a correct pronunciation

It really sounds like you didn’t have friends. The rest of us did.

Also how people speaking other languages handle names doesn’t have anything to do with this

Of course it does. How you pronounce things depends on the language you use. How people pronounce the letters “gif” is based on their language. In English, it’s a hard g.

merc, to comicstrips in JPEG

English preserves the pronunciation and spelling of loan words

English doesn’t preserve the pronunciation. It approximates the pronunciation while keeping the spelling, and that pronunciation drifts over time and changes in different places. See: Lieutenant, a word that has two wildly different pronunciations in English, neither of which sound anything like the original French word.

merc, to linuxmemes in big deal

What illusion are you alluding to?

merc, to linuxmemes in big deal

His eye makeup is pretty good, but it can’t disguise how much bigger one of his eyes is.

merc, to linuxmemes in Distros bad

I think Windows is hot chocolate from an instant packet where you just add hot water.

It’s objectively pretty bad, it’s definitely not coffee, but it’s easy to make, and you get the same standard thing every time.

merc, to memes in What did Canada do?

I don’t want to chat with Chlorine Trifluoride, it’s nasty.

But yeah, there are some obscure situations where oxygen isn’t the oxidizing agent, but the name “oxidizer” gives a clue how rare that is. In most normal situations, oxygen is the oxidizer and the thing it reacts with is the fuel. Partially that’s due to Oxygen being a good electron acceptor, but mostly it’s because there’s a lot of oxygen in the planet, and anywhere you can have humans you pretty much need to have oxygen.

merc, to memes in What did Canada do?

Oxygen isn’t flammable, Oxygen is what reacts with the things that are flammable.

merc, to memes in They never admit they were just wrong

Meanwhile virtually every possible (and infrequent) side-effect of the vaccine is also a possible (and frequent) side-effect of COVID.

Like, cardiac issues are possible, very rare side effects of the vaccine. Cardiac issues are common side effects of getting COVID. So, even if you’re really worried about one specific side-effect of the vaccine like pulmonary embolism – guess what, you’re much more likely to have one if you don’t get the vaccine because then you’re much more likely to get it as a COVID side-effect.

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