@clacke sorry, it wasnt meant as an answer I just wanted to say it. this thread led me down a long rabbit hole of reading about the Moses and Aaron on wikipedia
Conversation
Notices
-
˗ˏˋ wakest ˎˊ˗ (liaizon@social.wake.st)'s status on Friday, 11-Aug-2023 15:39:37 UTC ˗ˏˋ wakest ˎˊ˗ - Santa Claes 🇸🇪🇭🇰🎅 likes this.
-
˗ˏˋ wakest ˎˊ˗ (liaizon@social.wake.st)'s status on Friday, 11-Aug-2023 15:39:38 UTC ˗ˏˋ wakest ˎˊ˗ @clacke ay-ay-ron
-
Santa Claes 🇸🇪🇭🇰🎅 (clacke@libranet.de)'s status on Friday, 11-Aug-2023 15:39:38 UTC Santa Claes 🇸🇪🇭🇰🎅 @liaizon Yes, see top post. =) -
Santa Claes 🇸🇪🇭🇰🎅 (clacke@libranet.de)'s status on Friday, 11-Aug-2023 15:39:39 UTC Santa Claes 🇸🇪🇭🇰🎅 I ended up there because of the comments to a post where someone screenshotted a conversation that went something like:
1: Drake said only people with two-syllable names are successful, but his own name is just one syllable!
2: No it isn't, it's two syllables.
1: Seriously, it's one syllable.
2: It's two! You don't know syllables? Seriously, this is primary school stuff. It would have been different if his name was actually one syllable, like Aaron.
1: Are you kidding me right now?? Aaron is three syllables.Note: Apparently in Hebrew Aaron is actually three syllables! Not in English though. Unless you're Keegan.
Draké.
-
Santa Claes 🇸🇪🇭🇰🎅 (clacke@libranet.de)'s status on Friday, 11-Aug-2023 15:39:40 UTC Santa Claes 🇸🇪🇭🇰🎅 Apparently I have been missing out on an internet classic for 11 years.
"YOU DONE MESSED UP, AY-AY-RON"
English-language names aren't always easy to read if you don't hang with people that have those names and can teach you.