Or rare meat. The core of the meat has to reach a high enough temperature to reliably kill the parasites. 145F for pork and fish. 165 for everything else. Note that chefs routinely go lower than these temperatures in order to avoid tough, leathery meat. I would imagine that fish tapeworms are the most common in the US since cooking fish too long will ruin it. And then of course there is sushi.
Here (Denmark, Europe) the local health authorities think freezing hard enough for long enough will render raw fish safe for eating.
Fish may be sold as safe for raw eating iff they have been frozen to below -21C for at least 24 hours.
My freezer can do -18C or - 30C, so here it's -30C for 24 hours. And I mostly use other things in stead of (raw) fish.
Section 2:
Section 2
That's just like the little annotations to the US constitution that SCOTUS members have in their heads.
It's just that it's out in the open where you can see it!
I find that compared to hiring a native teacher over the internets Rosetta Stone is worth at most a tenth of the asking price.
In short: Even if it's ever so slightly useful, it's still a waste of money.
If you have time to burn and don't have to pay for it, Rosetta Stone can save you 2 or 3 hours of other learning.
More if you're slow
At least you know those people are just trying to be (unreasonably) nice.
It's worse when someone decides their incomprehensible English is better than your incomprehensible Japanese.
Also given to excessive verbiage.
doesn't have a subject.
fixed!
Also, if you want to protect your children, try to protect them from meaningful threaths!
I keep an eye on what my children do online, but not for fear that they might see a nipple.
We even have mirrors in the house!
. As for literacy of the common people, are you sure anybody cared?
Actually, yes. If you read the history of Hangul, it was quite intentionally designed for that purpose, long before imperialism was an issue. As for commies, they've always had a penchant for improving literacy - among other things, that makes it easier to spread propaganda far and wide (newspapers and posters are cheap and efficient, but you must be able to read them in the first place).
Fascinating! Someone in 144331444 really cared that much.
Thank you!
Can you explain why (traditional/simplified) chinese is that bad?
Because ideograms are a particularly silly way of writing things down, very hard to learn (even for native speakers), and do not mesh well with computers, and generally any form of storage/writing other than scribbling them by hand.
It's no coincidence that there were numerous attempts in the history of countries who have adopted Chinese writing system to move away from it to improve literacy rates for common people. Koreans have done that with Hangul, and even Chinese themselves came up with a simplified script under commies to make learning more manageable. But it's still fundamentally a mess, and I see alphabetic and syllabic writing systems as vastly superior.
Then also, of course I'm biased towards my own culture, which means that I prefer Latin/Greek or something derived from them. Though I do find Hangul very neat, and wouldn't mind using it just because it's so well designed.
Very hard to learn - yes!
Mesh quite well with computers, provided you use an auxiliary input system. Seems to me most people learn an alpabeth script for that use.
And there are Hangul, and other systems in other countries, created to suplement chinese ideograms. As for literacy of the common people, are you sure anybody cared? More than they cared about being Modern (Western) and stopping Chinese imperialism?
Both Korea and Vietnam have abandoned Chinese ideograms in modern times, are there others? Do you have examples that precede western influence?
For those who don't know: Please note that the creation of Hangul, and in some sense the Japanese kanas, seriously predates western influence in the region, but they were (are) use intermixed with Chinese Ideograms. (I believe Vietnamese had some such system too, but now they use an alphabeth.)
Part of the subtlety is in the information you are required to give.
In German for example you can't talk for very long about someone without revealing their sex, or rather, it becomes very noticeable that you are avoiding revealing their sex.
Try to explain about the heart-shapeded carrot(s?) you are growing in your garden in English, without revealing wether it's one or several.
In Japanese the listener wouldn't notice that you are trying to avoid giving out that information. Can you do that in English?
Nice.
But we really need these things to already be at the scene, or at least not half a world away in some warehouse.
So what would you buy one of these for?
Racing?
Hmm. And so they do indeed need to roof all roads with solar panels in order to replace nuclear with that.
Putting it into the Pacific might well be a better idea
Mind that Japan actualy has quite a lot of inaccessible land. Of course if they could access it to place solar panels there
No. I got that from 160 hectares yields 6MW -> so to get 4.7GW we need 4.7GW / 6MW * 0.160km^2 = 125.3km^2
Rounded to nearest "easy to calculate in my head" number.
"Gravitation cannot be held responsible for people falling in love." -- Albert Einstein