• jcs@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    There is nothing more permanent than a temporary solution that works.

    • lugal@sopuli.xyz
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      12 hours ago

      I once learned that Norwegians have a word for that. It’s something like permasorium (provisorium being a temporary solution) and I try to introduce it into German because German does not have a word for it.

    • TwoBeeSan@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      Try to remember this everytime I bastardize something. Will always see it 4 months later and be like “heh”

  • IndiBrony@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I’ve been to this bridge. It’s the Devil’s Bridge in Wales.

    Here’s another angle, ripped from Wikipedia:

    The river underneath is insanely deep. Pictures do not do it justice just how much further it goes out of the bottom of this frame. You do not get out of there. That is death.

    The bottom-most bridge was built around the 12th century. How the hell they managed to build stuff like this way back then staggers me.

    • ulterno@programming.dev
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      22 hours ago

      The bottom-most bridge was built around the 12th century. How the hell they managed to build stuff like this way back then staggers me.

      I find it hard to relate with this sentence. That’s just 3 bridges on the top of what seems like a natural rock formation, right? With 2 being arches and the top one being a modern-ish structure.

      No matter how deep it is, it’s narrow enough to just move a prebuild wooden foot bridge used for people to go around constructing the thing.

      • IndiBrony@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        You may joke, but that’s actually part of the legend of the bridge!

        The legend goes that a woman saw her cow grazing on the opposite side of the river.

        To get it back, the devil offered to build a bridge in exchange for a living soul.

        The woman threw a piece of bread across the new bridge and her dog went to eat it. The devil got the dog’s soul 👍

        Poor dog

        • barsoap@lemm.ee
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          16 hours ago

          While we’re talking about Devil’s Bridges, Hamburg has one, too: It was built to make crossing the devil’s ford easier, so called because there were so many accidents there people couldn’t explain it otherwise. A carpenter was contracted, who is said to have made a pact with the devil, that the bridge may stay, at the price of the soul of the first living thing to cross the bridge. On inauguration day, then, the local reverend blessed the bridge and set off to cross it, when out of the bushes a rabbit appeared and sprinted across the bridge. A statute memorialises the occasion:

          …the less exciting explanation is that back when Holstein was still under Danish rule there were two bridges close together, and the double bridge then turned into the devil’s one. dövelt -> Düvel in Low Saxon makes a lot of sense but is boring.

    • ruk_n_rul@monyet.cc
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      1 day ago

      They really should continue the tradition by building a fourth bridge over the current one when the time comes.

        • BillTongg@lemmy.world
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          13 hours ago

          This deserves many more upvotes than you’ve had. I guess most people here just don’t get the reference.