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Native Spanish Speaker here - In a nutshell, yeah that’s pretty much it! =)

To the best if my knowledge, Santo is used to clarify the difference between the title and the name.

Santo Tomás being the simplest example I can think of, as “San Tomás” can be confused as as “Santo Más”.

Everything else is pretty spot on and an excellent explanation!

May be trending down due to marijuana being more normalized but I agree, would definitely be interesting to see!
They’re already hundreds and sell quickly on my local second hand markets =( I’ve given up
Totally understandable and still very happy for you! <3
Looks like I need to pick up a book and practice reading more LOL thank you for the clarification!

I mean this as a sincere compliment when I say I thought I was scrolling past a photo of Marilyn for a moment - or someone doing a fabulous impersonation.

Either way you look amazing and like you’re loving your best life - absolutely love that for you!

TIL - thank you for sharing!
This post really is A gift that keeps on giving Show me that butthole

I wonder if this is part of the reason why Cox stopped listing their small business plans and prices online. And then there’s the “promotional discount” that expires after a year or two, requiring you to call back in and threaten to cancel your service before they’ll give you back the same price you were already paying. It helps if you actually have other ISP options.

Can confirm that’s by design, AT&T employs the exact same strategy with their business customers and forcing them into “All-for-less” bundle package.

Need a POTS line? $95 + taxes and fees per month, local service only, call features extra.

But get a POTS line and a $15 a month 250mb data plan on a tablet? Suddenly the POTS lime is $30 including long distance and all call features you normally take for granted included (call waiting, call forwarding, etc).

Of course, that price is guaranteed for a year and you’ll have to call billing (sales) to get it sorted out again.

We’ve let ISP’s get away with murder in the U.S.