It is not necessarily a character per se, but something akin to a body : an element through which you can influence and be influenced by the reality. Consider your mouse cursor for example : it lacks the humanization/personality of a character, at least imo, yet is the way you interact with most of your computer.
Takapapatapaka
From what i get from this article, this is technically true for one tree, but not for the forest, for which there is a peak in carbon capture at some point (when the canopy closes says the article), and then it can either stabilize either slowly decline. There are other huge advantages to keeping old forests intact though, especially regarding biodiversity.
"Chatte" (female cat) is the equivalent of pussy in english.
"Poulet" (chicken) is a cop. "Poulette" (hen) is a rather disrespectful word for a women.
"Gorille" (gorilla) is a tall muscular person.
"Cochon" (pig) is someone filthy, especially in the sexual sense. (can be used as an adjective, "films cochons" are porn films).
"Canard" (duck) can be a newspaper, or a mistake when playing music.
"Levrette" (female greyhound) is the name for the doggy style sexual position.
"Vache" (cow) can be either someone mean, either a cop. The second case is rarely used except in the sentence "Mort aux vaches" (death to the cops) and probably comes from the Wache germanic root for Guardian, rather than the actual animal.
Y'all seem to think that those people only exist in one random Lemmy community and never use anything else.
Women getting too much and too bad male input is literally what leads to women only spaces, not the other way around. And yet they still get male input everywhere else. It's like thinking going to a Warhammer shop will radicalize you because they don't play poker there, it's not even stupid, it's absurd.
If you go for a tent, first don't forget the tent pegs, and then it's always comfortable having a tiny mallet to plant them, rather than using a rock or your bare hands.