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Dec 2019

I found my long lost cheez-it stash today.

Rabbits and hares are slightly different in term of morphology, also one main difference is that baby hares are born fully developped and 'ready to go' whilst baby rabbits are born furless, closed-eyed, helpless little things.
Bunny is a more colloquial word (would never be used in science for eg.) and is often used for young rabbits and pet rabbits.

Ohhh... I thought that a BUNNY was a HARE! And a RABBIT was a RABBIT.

I learned something new today

Edit: Fun fact.
Rabbit in Danish is ”Kanin”
Hare in Danish is ”Hare”

In Polish rabbit is "krĂłlik" and hare is "zajÄ…c". xD

in my house rabbit , bunny and hare all mean the same thing.......dinner!

Yeah, I bet we could switch countries and no one would notice :smug_01:

That sounds like a good plan to mess with people's minds. :sip:

Hmm. Just realized that I lose my regular badge. XD

Seriously I’ve been away from the forum much.

two monkeys eating radishes while webbing across a city with short buildings and listening to Mozart while two dolphins are synchronized swimming to "Mr Bombastic".

i just found a dead rat on school grounds. Caught me off guard.

It's only early December and I already have enough of the snow. Can't tolerate seeing stuff falling from the sky constantly. It's so darn monotonous and mindnumbing.

Ehaaaat!!! You have snow! I’m in Denmark the land of Vikings and we have no snow!

Somethings up with this climate???

Well I'm in SK, Canada at the moment, so that's normal there is lot of snow. Back in France, though, temperatures seem to be a bit on the hot side. I can't wait to be there (another 3 weeks).
That being said once I left SK at -6C and arrived in France just in time for a -19C with snow haha

What power did you get?
I've been working in a lab for 10 years now and still no superpowers :frowning: