Cursed
Also he's not a monkey. Humans be stupid.
"Apes" are a subgroup of monkeys. Also, by extension, humans being a subspecies of apes, are also monkeys.Also he's not a monkey. Humans be stupid.
All apes are monkeys but not all monkeys are apes"Apes" are a subgroup of monkeys. Also, by extension, humans being a subspecies of apes, are also monkeys.
Yes, that's how "subgroups" or "subsets" work.All apes are monkeys but not all monkeys are apes
As for me I am still trying to figure out why they call tortoises literally "crow turtle" in Chinese 乌龟Yes, that's how "subgroups" or "subsets" work.
Knowledge is knowing apes are a distinct subgroup of monkeys, wisdom is knowing not to point out taxonomical minutiae when the statement made isn't even incorrect as such.
Did you know coconuts aren't nuts? Peanuts are actually beans? Strawberries aren't berries? But bananas are? (You probably did.) But is there a need to correct people about things when it doesn't really matter?
Also tortoises are turtles, fite me.
However obviously scientific definitions differ from common divisions, like how someone might disagree that tomatoes, corn, cucumbers, eggplant, squash, peas, beans, walnuts etc are all fruits
Does "乌" mean only "crow" or does it have other meanings? This random Chinese-English translator page says it means "dark" or "black"As for me I am still trying to figure out why they call tortoises literally "crow turtle" in Chinese 乌龟
They aren't black, but you are right it also has connotations of blackDoes "乌" mean only "crow" or does it have other meanings? This random Chinese-English translator page says it means "dark" or "black"
https://en.bab.la/dictionary/chinese-english/乌
Just like English where "raven" also means "black".
So it could just be "black turtle"?
Are Chinese tortoises black?
What if there's just one toot...okay maybe two.