Can't believe how many stereotypes are in "The Faker": brown skin, crooked nose, thin guy, lazy gamer... Beside, he's arguably the sanest of us all in a time where employment means exploitation and mobbing. I'm sure, at least "The Soldier" is giving him a hard time at his job. I'd rather stay at home too if I were him.
I have all my passwords managed at an inexpensive password service, so they're all in a database on my phone and my computers. No trouble at all. Also, I can log in from any computer in the world and retreive a password.
I don't know what you mean by "the German language makes bigger words to accommodate adjectives". In fact, bigger words are mostly created by accomodating substantives, just like in English (powerhouse, grindcore, roadhouse, ...) but eventually sometimes also adjectives, but not as a rule of thumb. Again, same as in English and only when the result is a denomination (Rotkäppchen, Blaumeise, Hartfaser, Schnellmerker ...) english: (blackheart, slowdive, ...) or in German, if the addition of a substantive to an adjective creates a new, more specific adjective (carminrot, stinkfaul, saugeil, ...). Actually, it's even more complex but not nearly as simple as this article suggests ;) In fact that's nothing to wonder about, as both are germanic languages and both share the same rules when it comes to the order of adjectives. Actually, another language that shares the same rules is French. As these are the only languages I know pretty well, I can't extend this observation to other languages, but I'm sure that Italian, Spanish, Purtugese, Danish, Swedish and even much more foreign languages also share the same rules.
Beside, he's arguably the sanest of us all in a time where employment means exploitation and mobbing. I'm sure, at least "The Soldier" is giving him a hard time at his job. I'd rather stay at home too if I were him.
L'enfant is French. Ugh. Can't even be bothered to right click and google a word...
In fact that's nothing to wonder about, as both are germanic languages and both share the same rules when it comes to the order of adjectives. Actually, another language that shares the same rules is French. As these are the only languages I know pretty well, I can't extend this observation to other languages, but I'm sure that Italian, Spanish, Purtugese, Danish, Swedish and even much more foreign languages also share the same rules.