https://arstechnica.com/science/2024/10/injured-comb-jellies-can-fuse-into-a-single-organism/ - title: Comb jellies can fuse to heal injuries
https://linguistics.stackexchange.com/questions/30864/fourth-person-in-slavey-language - re: Fourth person pronouns - the real meaning of fourth person pronoun disambiguates sentences likes “he hit him” — adds a distinction between “focal” third person subjects and fourth person objects
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ze5i_e_ryTk&t=1843s - title: Goptjaam (欱攙): the unglossable* language (Cursed Conlang Circus 2)
https://www.leidenmedievalistsblog.nl/articles/whats-wrong-with-medieval-pigs-in-videogames - medieval pigs looked different
Medieval iconography and animal remains found at archaeological sites indicate that the domesticated pig in the middle ages was a long-legged small creature with a long snout and a lean figure. It had an arched crested back and, unlike modern pigs, long curved tusks. Most notably, however, the medieval pig was not naked and pink at all, but covered in long dark hairs. In appearance, it was therefore not dissimilar to a boar with which it was often cross-bred. Even in the seventeenth century - long after the middle ages - domestic pigs retained some of these traits, as the drawing below from 1610 shows.