Having an engineer for a father, yes, I remember. It always ended with “Car Talk.” /s
“DON’T DRIVE LIKE MY BROTHA”
Kids are honestly a vomitorium, though. They want to be listened to. IMO, the time for your input is when they ask for it, which is still often. The generational gap makes things just as awkward as not speaking.
Aactually, it doesn’t, but good of you to actually open the link and have a butcher’s. “Vomere” means “to spew forth”. “Vomitorium” is “vomere” + -“orium”, meaning “place of.”
Having an engineer for a father, yes, I remember. It always ended with “Car Talk.” /s
“DON’T DRIVE LIKE MY BROTHA”
Kids are honestly a vomitorium, though. They want to be listened to. IMO, the time for your input is when they ask for it, which is still often. The generational gap makes things just as awkward as not speaking.
Kids are an entrance or exit passage in an ancient Roman amphitheatre or theatre?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vomitorium
Metaphorically, yes. They let a lot of things out. That’s why it’s called that. It means ""to spew forth. " (that’s in your link)
People used to think it was a place where people vomited.
Aactually, it doesn’t, but good of you to actually open the link and have a butcher’s. “Vomere” means “to spew forth”. “Vomitorium” is “vomere” + -“orium”, meaning “place of.”
yes, they go in and come out of the same place
But if they are the passage, then you’d be entering and exiting children, and that just sounds… wrong.