u/AccordingAd6178

▲ 1 r/turtle

My turtle is a red-eared snapper. I set a feeding timer for her that goes off at a specific time, And when I look at her after it goes off she looks at me as if she recognized the timer. I’m wondering if she just recognizes the sound, If she remembers the specific time I feed her, Or if it’s just a coincidence that she looks at me when the timer goes off?

If she does recognize the sound, Should I change the sound of my other timers so I don’t accidentally confuse her when it’s not feeding time?

reddit.com
u/AccordingAd6178 — 10 days ago

I have around 3 copyrighted videos on an alt account that all are unlisted. I usually will record and edit videos to make songs cut to certain parts that i like. I usually move the unlisted videos onto my public playlist in my main account. I was wondering if the videos can be taken down by YouTube because of the copyright, Or if my alt / main channel could receive any punishment or deletion for this

reddit.com
u/AccordingAd6178 — 12 days ago

I have an old British character from 1880 who says “One very literally cracked me open” when talking to someone. When he says that, He means he had his stomach torn open by someone else. Originally it was “One even quite literally cracked me open”, But I had another “Quite” used in the sentence used in a different way, So I wanted to remove the second. Would “One very literally“ be grammatically correct? And is there a better historically correct replacement for “Very” under this context?

reddit.com
u/AccordingAd6178 — 12 days ago

I have a character who says “He’s just a slow learner. It works.. although, in very subtle ways.”, But I started to wonder if “albeit“ would be better or not? I’ve tried learning how to use it, But it’s hard to tell whether it matches this context or not

Edit: For more context, This character ( Kavach ) is talking about another character ( Warren ) after someone mentions how Warren barely changed despite Kavach trying to help him stop being rude for years.

reddit.com
u/AccordingAd6178 — 13 days ago

I’m trying to write dialogue for an old British man from the 1880’s. Because his vocabulary is meant to be very proper, Would it be correct to do “Instead’ve” or “Instead of”? Or is there something else more correct than those two that I don’t know of?

reddit.com
u/AccordingAd6178 — 14 days ago