I don't know the z80 specifically, but it's probably an assembly keyword for a special bit ("flag") that indicates if the result of the previous operation was nonzero.
Similar for me. I switched back in May of last year intending to dual boot as necessary until Win10 EoL, and it turned out it was never necessary.
The main thing anchoring me to Windows was gaming, and, despite hearing about it, I didn't really understand just how good Wine had gotten since I last used it.
Those don't seem to address the little girl. Kaguya grows quickly but is nevertheless apparently an adult by the time she goes to the moon. And the moon rabbit just loops back to Chang 'e.
Ain't nobody checking for consanguity 12 generations back before getting it on.
Also, if you keep extending the calculation backwards, it doesn't take long before your supposed number of nth-great grandparents exceeds the total population at that time.
It seems possible that there might also be finite closed rings of memes that all make fun of another. In this case there would be no normiest meme, and dankness would not be well-ordered.
I just learned the other day that "Roman dodecahedron" is a bit of a misnomer: They're mostly from Britain and Gaul, and none have ever been found in Italy. So Celtic or Romano-Celtic would be more accurate descriptors.
Yeah, the film winds up coming off as campy or even outright silly as the weirdness cranks up. The manga is still incredibly weird, but manages to hold the creepy tone better. Probably mostly due to what you can get away with in drawings vs live action; the screen adaptation probably would have been better as anime.
Hmm.. in some vampire myths you can distract a vampire by scattering a bag of grain or similar in front of them because they are compelled to stop and count it. (And yes, that is why Sesame Street's Count von Count is like that.)
So maybe it's only crosses that are almost, but not exactly perpendicular that cause them pain.
I mean, 独語, and 仏語 are perfectly cromulent, albeit less common than the katakana versions. And 米語 likewise exists, referring specifically to American English.
I don't know the z80 specifically, but it's probably an assembly keyword for a special bit ("flag") that indicates if the result of the previous operation was nonzero.