Comment by seydor 1 month ago [flagged] 6 comments seydor Reply mort96 1 month ago Neither beer nor speech were the topics of discussion. "Free as in speech rather than free as in beer" is an analogy commonly used to specify that you're talking about freedom rather than money. swiftcoder 1 month ago Being the only Romance language that doesn't have separate words for "libre" and "gratis" (liberté and gratuit, etc), has its downsides irishcoffee 1 month ago I could make an argument that "Complimentary" would be analogous to gratis in this context. tbrownaw 1 month ago > only Romance language...But we're (mostly) not one? 1 reply →
mort96 1 month ago Neither beer nor speech were the topics of discussion. "Free as in speech rather than free as in beer" is an analogy commonly used to specify that you're talking about freedom rather than money. swiftcoder 1 month ago Being the only Romance language that doesn't have separate words for "libre" and "gratis" (liberté and gratuit, etc), has its downsides irishcoffee 1 month ago I could make an argument that "Complimentary" would be analogous to gratis in this context. tbrownaw 1 month ago > only Romance language...But we're (mostly) not one? 1 reply →
swiftcoder 1 month ago Being the only Romance language that doesn't have separate words for "libre" and "gratis" (liberté and gratuit, etc), has its downsides irishcoffee 1 month ago I could make an argument that "Complimentary" would be analogous to gratis in this context. tbrownaw 1 month ago > only Romance language...But we're (mostly) not one? 1 reply →
irishcoffee 1 month ago I could make an argument that "Complimentary" would be analogous to gratis in this context.
Neither beer nor speech were the topics of discussion. "Free as in speech rather than free as in beer" is an analogy commonly used to specify that you're talking about freedom rather than money.
Being the only Romance language that doesn't have separate words for "libre" and "gratis" (liberté and gratuit, etc), has its downsides
I could make an argument that "Complimentary" would be analogous to gratis in this context.
> only Romance language
...But we're (mostly) not one?
1 reply →