They could also feel the shock and it just isn't painful.
I've had a lot of physiotherapy that involves sticking needles into muscles and stimulating/shocking them.
Sometimes it hurts a lot, other times it doesn't hurt at all and the muscle just happily twitches and jumps around.
As a Canadian, Subaru's AWD is like magic in the winter when my neighborhood streets are covered in a foot of snow.
This is how I have my mirrors, but my wife likes to see the side of her vehicle which for some reason is how it was taught when I was a kid.
She doesn't believe that I can watch a car approach in the rear view, see it transition to the side and there's a point I can see it in both at the same time, then transition to seeing it in my peripheral vision and the side mirror.
My advice for non-native english speakers: words are made up, they mean whatever people agree they mean.
It doesn't really matter what the dictionary says, except as a general guide. What really matters is what the person you are talking to thinks it means. We are really just trying to communicate.
Don't try to apply logic
If you want a better estimate of how many Cheetos can fit in a bag... Here's a paper on the maximum packing density of cylinders.
About a decade ago I bought a bare wireless charging circuit and coil.
I built it into a wooden phone stand that holds my phone up just like this one.
A direct flight from Toronto to Yellowknife in February is 5h and under $300.
Honestly, I can't see any reason to choose Churchill over Yellowknife.
Other things I've also had in Iceland are smoked puffin, and swordfish.
The texture on the smoked puffin was not nice, a bit like raw chicken.
Swordfish was good.
There's Deep Brain Stimulation for epilepsy.
Possibly also something for Parkinson's disease.
@KitDeMadera
@lemmy.ca