Lithuanian! Im not sure if they were loaned from estonian :3 we used to have 10 (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, instrumental, locative, illative, allative, adessive, and vocative) allative is basically dead outside of a few words like velniop, adessive is just dead (only really seen in old writings) but illative is the interesting one: it's not used in standard lithuanian outside of some set phrases (kairėn, dešinėn, and in our anthem vardan), but it's still used in dzūkija and east aukštaitija, so... Yeah that's some lore :3
Well the c being s and k thing comes from latin I think :3 like v and u being the same letter.. and I believe i also had a second sound? Plus there's vowel shifts that happened after the writing was standardized and all that, and characters that no longer exist like Þ and ð
Either way it can be confusing when coming from a language with a fairly regular pronunciation ^^ (though of course we also have some quirks lol)
It really is illogical lol :3 I tried teaching my parents before and trying to explain why all 3 Es in mercedes or all 3 Cs in pacific ocean make different sounds like "they just do"
Though my native language is quite hard for non-native speakers as well
The longest I've been awake has been 3 days/72 hours. Generally I struggle staying awake except for some cases where I get especially hyperfixated, and in those cases tiredness doesn't usually hit me hard until after. Staying up for 2-3 days will usually knock me out for a long time after tho
Here in lithuania we basically get those who lived through the soviet occupation, those who lived through the january 13th, those who lived through the mafias/gangs of the 90s, and gen Z who were born after everything settled down lol
It's not really related to dry january, but it's my 2nd time seeing that term this month, and after looking it up to find it's a real thing, I think it's a kinda neat (probably) coincidence as the name of january in my native language would roughly translate to "dry month" in english :3
As I understand it, just cause you feel better it doesn't mean the bacteria is fully gone. If you stop taking them before that point the surviving bacteria (which were more resistant) will start multiplying again and you'll need more/stronger antibiotics at that point
I don't mind tinkering, but for this PC, stability is key
I don't want an upkeep heavy OS
Yeah I wouldn't recommend a rolling release distro like cachy then lol. Debian or it's derivatives would be better for something low maintenance that you don't need to update frequently
I also wouldn't recommend bazzite, just cause im not a fan of immutable distros as they feel too locked down for me, but I've never attempted to set up a jellyfin on one, so someone else with more experience would provide a more concrete answer for your purposes there
This is so me :3