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What is the context for this? I am extremely entertained by the idea that this might be a thing.
54 0 ReplyIt's just an edit of this meme
73 3 Replyseveral alphabets, in fact
once you run out of Latin letters you start using Greek, Hebrew, Fraktur, etc
49 0 ReplyWait till you hear about the sickos using arabic numbers
26 0 ReplyThe woke mind virus strikes again. I use English numbers like 7 LIKE A REAL AMERICAN 🦅🦅🦅🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
/s incase it wasn’t obvious
21 0 Reply
I like using Japanese kana in my homework. I'm learning the language, and it helps with calming down after the rage of "what the hell is this thing, that doesn't make any sense???"
As a result, i have to prove that the set ま is open.
13 0 ReplyI like that! I should start using Kana or cursive Cyrillic in my derivations to mess with the professors
7 0 Reply
Or fancy letters, like the L in a Laplace transformation.
11 0 ReplyAnd if that's not enough, you just straight up make up new symbols, like Nabla
8 0 ReplyAh yes, because other science fields like linguistics would never just grab random letters and turn them upside down to repurpose them!
9 0 Replyəəəə... What do you mean? /j
3 0 ReplyThere exist a mirroded E
1 0 ReplyAny upsidedown A in the set of all real characters used in academia would immediately illicit mathematical memories.
1 0 ReplyDid you mean ALL the upside up A?
1 0 ReplyNope, it means "for any" as in no matter which one you choose it will be correct.
2 0 Reply
Also a good way to start an essay
1 0 Reply