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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: August 7th, 2023

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  • It’s a good question but I just read this on Wiktionary and Wikipedia and it’s obviously difficult to be certain.

    Both Wiktionary entries in English or French are saying the etymology is from papillon. Then the Wikipedia article for the papillote candy says that the word papillote in cooking is from this, but there’s no citation. And the origin of the word for the candy is also discussed there as being unsure.

    However, the French Wiktionary page on papillotte mentions that it’s the feminized form of papillot, which describes a small butterfly using the diminutive “ot”. This is grammatically cromulent. Like chien for dog, then chiot for puppy, or île and îlot.

    The papillotes for cooking are not arranged in a butterfly form, but it’s easy to see how it could come from wrapping food like this . So by extension it can also be used to wrap anything using a type of paper, like hair.

    As a native speaker, I tend to agree with the proposed etymology, as it kind of makes sense. There’s other words based on papillon so it makes it more likely. Like the verb papilloter to describe fluttering. Or bow ties, that are called nœuds papillon (butterfly knot), also because they look like butterflies.

    Still, sometimes the simple deductions are also the ones that are wrong. It could also come from papier, because papillotes can be made of paper. However the spelling is not helping because if it came from papier, it would be spelled papiotte. It could just be a coincidence than ends up working both ways.


  • You probably could, as papillote is something cooked wrapped in aluminium or parchment paper. The name comes from a candy that was wrapped in shiny paper and looked like a butterfly. So by extension now it’s also for any food that’s cooked wrapped in something. You can have a vegetable papillote, a salmon papillote, or a veal papillote.








  • So far I considered myself lucky that google only added AI results in English but recently they also started doing it in other languages. I googled in French which train stations had elevated platforms in my city and the AI results were confidently wrong. Entirely false information.

    It even added that one of the downtown stations was closed for renovations, which is also false as it has been reopened since December 2024.

    And you can’t disable it. It’s so fucking bad.


  • I don’t know the reference but the sentence reminded me of a stupid situation I was in. So gather round for an anecdote.

    I wanted to travel a bit so I booked a hotel in Toronto and took a train from Montreal. However, the day before that, I went for a bike ride and took my health card out of my wallet to only bring this with me. And I left it in the pocket of my exercise shorts. So I didn’t have it with me. Also, I don’t drive and have no license.

    So once in Toronto, it was impossible to get my hotel room because I had no valid ID with a picture. I tried to get another hotel room anywhere, checked with 4 or 5 others, but they all had the same answer. No ID with a picture means no room.

    I ended up spending the night outside. I slept on cardboard like a homeless person. Just besides Union Station and the CN tower.

    So I guess that if you travel under an alias, don’t forget the fake IDs.


  • If you speak French you can consider Guadeloupe as a possibility.

    Of course there’s cars everywhere but it’s entirely possible to travel there without a car.

    There are municipal buses from the airport to multiple cities. There are also ferries to go to the multiple islands. The island of Marie-Galante can be cycled, and is very nice.

    I spent a few days in Le Gosier, Pointe-à-Pitre and Grand-Bourg, and I never needed a car.

    On the opposite side, avoid SXM.



  • I was working as a level 1 tech for a consulting company. I had to take calls and monitor the systems.

    We had a ticketing system in place where we received alerts and various alarms in there. But because some of my coworkers didn’t do anything with these and some systems (and clients) suffered from this, people in management thought it would be a marvelous idea to have those alerts and alarms make a notification in Teams.

    So when some random location lost internet for a few minutes, we sometimes had hundreds of Teams notifications.

    I quit last month. I couldn’t take it any longer.


  • pedz@lemmy.catomemes@lemmy.worldGood memories
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    11 days ago

    I hated school because there was a bunch of kids mocking and laughing at me for most of it.

    I guess some popular kids had good times by pulling my pants down or constantly hitting my chair during class. They must reminisce and miss those times, when they were laughing with their peers.