I love hot myself. I also eat them alone without food. I want my paper very hot. I wanna feel inside my mouth is burning.
@Grandeur? We must work on the vernacular, man... I don't know what you mean, but I'll add into the conversation anyway... When I was young, I liked spicy. These days it makes me cough or sweat or something stupid. I've learned that mild is a better choice for me.
less then the point of ignition. i think there was a story about burning books that was called farinhight something, i forget the exact number, it was the point at which paper ignites. i forget who the heck wrote it to. i'm thinking bradberry but i'm probably wrong. it was someone well known, and at least partially for having written that one. i think there was even a movie based on it.
Man, you know what I mean. English ain't my first language. I may get confused how the words are spelled.
Perhaps a quick PM to Zen asking him to change the title to Peppers? I thought you were referring to some new pornographic newspapers that were out! As to your question. I put sweet chilly sauce on some of my meals, but when it comes to Curries and stuff I usually go for a medium such as Balti and Jalfrezi, or a Madras if I want something a bit chilli pepper hotter.
Yes! Pepper... paper... it's all the same. Kidding* I am learning Russian and pronunciation is one of the more challenging aspects for me. I think it's because there are some rules of the alphabet - how a given letter is to be pronounced when following a consonant vs. following a vowel for example - that we haven't really covered very much. Some things have gotten clearer since our class's start. I can now more confidently pronounce the Russian words for "I love you". Я люблю тебя used to give me trouble. I wasn't sure how to pronounce "люблю" (apparently the "ю" is pronounced differently when it follows a consonant and isn't the first letter of a word - it's unstressed. тебя also confused me because in Russian "e" sounds like "ye" in cases where it is stressed but only sounds like "ee" when it's not stressed. So in тебя, the "ye" becomes and unstressed "ee" sound. Anyway, I can now more adequately convey love to my significant other, who if you didn't know is from Kyrgyzstan and speaks Russian while knowing some English.
In some parts of the U.S. they are pronounced so similarly that the context is what distinguishes the word.
What's all this? I burnt my mouth on damn chilli peppers. Why are they called chilli if they are so damn hot?
In Turkey, most of the pappers are not hot enough. I tell them I want the hottest one in super markests but they are not really hot. So I just take it without food with my hand into my mouth and force myself to feel hot