From d486a6888ceadf2e6263acb3905f66285f28bed3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: TriMill Date: Sun, 7 Aug 2022 23:56:15 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] detypofication --- flaskr/blog/2022-08-07-0.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/flaskr/blog/2022-08-07-0.md b/flaskr/blog/2022-08-07-0.md index 797432c..0e8ce03 100644 --- a/flaskr/blog/2022-08-07-0.md +++ b/flaskr/blog/2022-08-07-0.md @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ desc: Fruit are very easily comparable to one another timestamp: 2022-08-07T23:55:00-04:00 --- -When someone attempts to compare two incomparable things, a frequent reply is, "it's like apples and oranges". This phrase has always seemed very odd to me, as apples, oranges, and indeed all fruit are very easy to compare. They all serve the same purpose (providing energy and nutrients to the suits of flesh we inhabit), are percieved using the same method (taste receptor cells on the tongue and olfactory receptors within the nasal cavity), and (at least with common fruits like apples and oranges) are relatively homogenous as a category. +When someone attempts to compare two incomparable things, a frequent reply is, "it's like apples and oranges". This phrase has always seemed very odd to me, as apples, oranges, and indeed all fruit are very easy to compare. They all serve the same purpose (providing energy and nutrients to the suits of flesh we inhabit), are percieved using the same method (taste receptor cells on the tongue and olfactory receptors within the nasal cavity), and (at least with common fruits like apples and oranges) are relatively homogeneous as a category. To demonstrate how easy it is to compare apples with oranges, I will do it right now: I like oranges more than apples.