Coffetym
Songster
They look bored!*Bard
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They look bored!*Bard
You might want to check & see if that’s accurate. With today’s inflation it feels like it may be equivalent to $29 USD. I think you might have placed the decimal point in the wrong place.Yep. Equivalent to $.29 USD.
I could just pretend that my sis doesn’t live near the border and that I don’t know or work with a bunch of Hispanic people.You might want to check & see if that’s accurate. With today’s inflation it feels like it may be equivalent to $29 USD. I think you might have placed the decimal point in the wrong place.
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Also, don't mispronounce tortilla or quesadilla as "tor-till-ah" or "kay-sah-dill-ah".I could just pretend that my sis doesn’t live near the border and that I don’t know or work with a bunch of Hispanic people.
They’d laugh too.
Sir! It's "Kwee-suh-dill-uh"Also, don't mispronounce tortilla or quesadilla as "tor-till-ah" or "kay-sah-dill-ah".
Not Kay-sah-dee-ah?Sir! It's "Kwee-suh-dill-uh"
in reality it's probably closest to "keh sa dee ya". but it's super regional and dependent on the parent language on top of it. Someone speaking Mexican Spanish and someone speaking Honduran Spanish say it slightly differently because of how the inflections change between the parent tongues. English works the same way. "Park the car in Harvard Yard" from someone in the south sounds totally different from someone in Boston.Not Kay-sah-dee-ah?![]()
Keh sa dee ya is more like how we say it here.in reality it's probably closest to "keh sa dee ya". but it's super regional and dependent on the parent language on top of it. Someone speaking Mexican Spanish and someone speaking Honduran Spanish say it slightly differently because of how the inflections change between the parent tongues. English works the same way. "Park the car in Harvard Yard" from someone in the south sounds totally different from someone in Boston.
Makes sense lolin reality it's probably closest to "keh sa dee ya". but it's super regional and dependent on the parent language on top of it. Someone speaking Mexican Spanish and someone speaking Honduran Spanish say it slightly differently because of how the inflections change between the parent tongues. English works the same way. "Park the car in Harvard Yard" from someone in the south sounds totally different from someone in Boston.