I hate this 10 comments
shadylady
· 3 years ago
Oh look, a penny!
4
I for one, welcome the bones victory 2 comments
dang :( 2 comments
shadylady
· 3 years ago
Why did it take me so long to realize that was not a windows logo and this meme isn't about some huge corporate plot
1
Spongybob squarepants~ 3 comments
Pastry is Hell 4 comments
shadylady
· 3 years ago
I'd suggest you try with your own flour, yeast, oil and sugar and not a prepare mix. Usually mixes are stored in shelves for extended periods of time, because of which the flour in them becomes stale, hence the gumminess. Using your own ingredients can give a softer, fresher loaf of bread.
1
When you lose track of what you've ordered 2 comments
Flickering skillful Anteater 1 comments
Freelance ensconced Mosquito 3 comments
A scene from an Indian TV show 13 comments
shadylady
· 3 years ago
Along with other Eastern Indo-Aryan languages, Bengali evolved circa 1000–1200 CE from Sanskrit and Magadhi Prakrit. Source - Wikipedia
As a person who has lived for 4 years in Bangladesh and 20 in India, I can safely say that Bengali & 'Bangla' (language in Bangladesh) are different indeed, but very, very closely linked.
Also, I didn't get your last point? What does you not understanding Indian languages have to do with anything? (No offence, I'm genuinely confused)
As a person who has lived for 4 years in Bangladesh and 20 in India, I can safely say that Bengali & 'Bangla' (language in Bangladesh) are different indeed, but very, very closely linked.
Also, I didn't get your last point? What does you not understanding Indian languages have to do with anything? (No offence, I'm genuinely confused)
Father son bonding 1 comments
shadylady
· 3 years ago
What else did the dad think the kid was gonna do with the remote
1
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Edited 3 years ago
Why Cats Paint 15 comments
A scene from an Indian TV show 13 comments
shadylady
· 3 years ago
Um, we Indians do include Bengali in the official list of languages. Bengali also originated from Devnagari, the script used for writing Sanskrit/Hindi. So yeah, definitely an Indian language. The language in Bangladesh is called Bangla, it has some differences in writing and wordings.