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You’re clearly not “hushable”.

Why can’t you just use a butterfly to manipulate bits like a normal adult?

Kids these days with their fancy pants editors. SMH.

Kannada

In ಕನ್ನಡ (Kannada): ನೀನು (neenu) is the informal you and ನೀವು (neevu) is the formal you.

Pretty much all verbs can be conjugated into formal and informal variants. And a ton of words have spoken and written variants - but let’s not get into that now.

Ex for verbs:

  • “go” is ಹೋಗು (hogu, informal) or ಹೋಗಿ (hogi, formal)
  • “stand up” is ನಿಂತುಕೊ (ninthuko, informal) or ನಿಂತುಕೊಳ್ಳಿ (ninthukolli, formal) etc.

Where I’m from, we use the formal variants when talking to pretty much anyone. The informal version is mostly used if you’re talking to friends, toddlers, or cousins (of your own age). The other use case for the informal versions is if you want to insult someone without swearing at them.

Rules change from one city to the next though, and there are regions where using the informal variants is the norm. This leads to some extremely confusing situations - the first time my girl friend met my parents, she addressed them using the informal you and they were shocked (till I jumped in and clarified) as they thought she was dissing them, but it’s just how people spoke in the city where she grew up. 🤷‍♂️

Safari is the third, not edge.
Primary and Clone?
Thanks, I’ll check that out!

Yup, CBIL pays out a monthly dividend and resets to ~$50.

Good point, I’ll have to see how taxes on those dividends affect the final amount.

Optimal strategy to allocate stocks and bonds between TFSA/RRSP/non-registered?

https://lemmy.world/post/23323428

Optimal strategy to allocate stocks and bonds between TFSA/RRSP/non-registered? - Lemmy.World

This is my scenario: TFSA is maxed and has the emergency fund in CBIL. I have roughly equal money in RRSP (maxed) and my non-registered account. I like to keep my overall portfolio at 50% stock ETFs (primarily VFV) and 50% low duration bond ETFs (primarily CBIL). I understand that this is a sub-optimal allocation, and I’m okay with that. This is thanks to childhood trauma from growing up too broke, and I’ll make up for the lower returns by spending less and investing more. So far, I’ve kept VFV in my RRSP and CBIL in the non-registered account. However, I’ve been wondering if it’d be better to switch the two around: Buy CBIL in the RRSP account and buy VFV in the non-registered account. PROs: - CBIL-RRSP will grow less than VFV-RRSP -> lower “income” in retirement -> lower tax consequence. - VFV-non-reg profits will be taxed at the 50% (maybe higher in the future) inclusion rate. CONs: - Can’t think of any at the moment. Help? I’m also considering switching the TFSA to hold stocks instead of bonds, and have the emergency fund in the non-reg account. This makes sense too, right?

Yes. Hence the rest of my comment. I should’ve probably put a “/s” at the end. :)