Apparently these are not the seeds themselves but only the remains of the original ovulums that contained the seed when they still existed.
Multiplexer
That surprisingly wasn't that hard, actually.
One side of the family already settled on Threema for communication years ago, the other side I had to first show Signal to and help with installing it, but now they are even using it in other contexts.
And apparently I live in a bubble that is quite open to Signal, so most of the people I know at least use it in parallel to WhatsApp. And for the rest there is still RCS.
The actual hard part are (since I became a parent) all the WhatsApp groups that exist for most kinds of organized child activity, including distributing much of the crucial information regarding school.
Also at my wife's work WhatsApp is standard for coordinating with the colleagues.
For that purposes we use an old customized WhatsApp-only smartphone, that is used by the family like some old-fashioned fixed phone-terminal, only for messaging...
Hey, I already hate peanut butter, you don't have to convince me any more! ;-)
No, in a very private part of the Cloud, so don't be afraid!
If we allow for scientific names, the winner would probably be "Aa", the name of a type of plant.
But I personally would not count them, as not part of everyday language.
I asked an AI if it could come up with other suggestions. It burned up 5000 tokens while thinking and successfully found "Alabama".
So I think banana lost its first place in any case...
"Strange times for the berry club..."
I love that comic strip! :-)
But is "Ara" an English word? My favorite translation page tells me that the English name of the bird is "macaw". Still a nice A-ratio, although lower than for banana! :-)
Ok, I stand corrected, TIL about parthenocarpy:
In botany and horticulture, parthenocarpy is the natural or artificially induced production of fruit without fertilisation of ovules, which makes the fruit seedless
And the word "banana" might be a very promising candidate for the word with the highest "letter a"-to-consonant-ratio in the English language. Unless there are some double-a words out there...
I thought the tiny black dots inside were supposed to be the seeds?
Also: Strawberries are nuts - and Peanuts aren't.
Not only the U.S. grid is weak compared to China’s… Strategically China seems to be outpacing the U.S. on many fronts, being much more stringent and focused on long term goals than the chaotic U.S. at the moment. I really don’t like the idea of living in a world with China as the leading nation, but it increasingly seems like the most probable development in the mid to long run. And transition will likely not be smooth…