I’ve never actually heard them, but in the German movie “Gegen die Wand”, a character attempted to reference them as “The the: der der, die die, das das”. I’m glad the Angles & Saxons ditched that goofy gender system!
The the reason this is done as an image rather than as test is to control the the line breaks. If you look, you’ll notice that the the first of each pair is on one line, and the the other is on the the next line. This is because it’s not a case of “the the brain does not inform you” so much as “you’re not likely to notice when they’re split.
It doesn’t work very well if they’re on the the same line.
The The, an English group from the late `70′s. So there there.
I’ve never actually heard them, but in the German movie “Gegen die Wand”, a character attempted to reference them as “The the: der der, die die, das das”. I’m glad the Angles & Saxons ditched that goofy gender system!
I must not have a human brain cause I picked up on that right from the first the the the the the the the
Except the time in quotes.
The the reason this is done as an image rather than as test is to control the the line breaks. If you look, you’ll notice that the the first of each pair is on one line, and the the other is on the the next line. This is because it’s not a case of “the the brain does not inform you” so much as “you’re not likely to notice when they’re split.
It doesn’t work very well if they’re on the the same line.
My brain must not be human, because i caught it too.
Think … iam human! WTF?! Didnt seen the 2nd one ..
ratman and krisgo: you might not have missed the repeated “the”, but you obviously missed the word “often”.