A list of puns related to "Unforeseeable"
The party: two lone wolf characters, level 18. Classic difficulty.
So far we've had: ambush by demon minions β bunch of level 20 critters bump off the party by round 2; let's freeze the party and restore from save at the harbour; possessed child: lose one character to remove the demon, then the other gets ganked by four level 18 critters, half of whom have multiple elemental immunities; and now a bunch of spiders in the sewer which spew deathfog on defeat.
There was a bit of this sort of bullshit along the way, but Arx takes the cake. What the hell is this? Are we supposed to play the game first on story mode, read all the guides on the internet, and then play classic? Should we plan every encounter in advance, spoilers be damned? I'm >this< close to uninstalling and never playing again. It's infuriating.
I mean, this is a rant, but is this what people expected? That you had to basically have already played the game, to play the game?
Hi, I tried searching this sub hoping to find information on how the IRS handles the exceptions when trying to exclude capital gains from a home sale but nothing quite answered my question. I have no qualms looking for/hiring a CPA, but the general consensus of redditors during tax season is that most people don't need one because their situation is not complicated. I don't think my situation is complicated, but I also want to make sure there isn't paperwork or something I'm missing.
Specifically, I am questioning whether or not I qualify for an exclusion under the "Other Facts and Circumstances" section in IRS Pub 523.
I was single when I purchased a condo toward the end of the month 4/2019. I then found out 10/2019 the association was interested in selling our buildings as a package to a developer that wants to "deconvert" them into apartments and it required a vote once they showed us what sale price each unit received ($50K gain after basis). There was just enough votes to pass. Several extensions and a global pandemic later, we've some how proceeded into closing the sale. I almost wished they asked for another extension just so I didn't have to do all this digging and just say BOOM 2 year primary residence, done, but it is looking like they will close end of March, or early April 4/2021. I closed on this condo 4/26/2019 so <24 months but close!
Still, I believe that I can exclude the gains from the sale because this was "unforeseeable". When I bought the place, I didn't know this was going to happen and fully intended to live in it for several years. Even if I said no, I wouldn't have been able to control the sale since there were enough owners wanting to sell.
Does this count? If so, do I just fill the forms/columns out with the proper codes, assume I can exclude the maximum amount, print out the emails saying the vote was passed and rest easy?
Thanks in advance!
I have social phobia and a short attention span. Wondering if anybody has any experience in this field. Seems straight forward, list house, show house, hustle, etc
Any help would be most appreciated.
D.
I was on high school at this time and we were having chemistry classes at the laboratory. In this room, we used to sit in groups of four or five students, so it was common not to have the teacherβs attention all the time. Besides that, in my group, weβd already finished our activities, so we got all we need to get bored: nothing to do and a few minutes before the end of the class.
Thatβs the exact moment when you try to make something up to trick the time. I was near my friend and we used to talk a lot in other situations, but we needed to be silent as the class was not over yet, so I got an idea:
I felt the class was going to end soon and, when that happens, the school bell would ring. Then I started a countdown showing my fingers to my friend, trying to match the zero with the bell. Iβve never done that before, I was thinking something like if I miss, then it would be his time and the game would keep going until the bell rings. But, as it I was my first turn, I didnβt explain anything to my friend, I just started counting out of nothing, looking seriously at him.
Five... Four... Three... Two... One... Zero β when I closed my last finger β boom. Suddenly, there was a total blackout. There was no power in entire school. All dark. All light was over.
My friend was looking at me completely scared, thinking how could it be possible for me to know when something like this would happen. It may be just a coincidence, but the way all things went, like my face completely serious starting the countdown just out of nothing and the perfect match with the blackout, made, for sure, he thinks that I have some power over the matrix.
Hello, new to reddit so sorry if I don't know lingo or mess up formatting but I needed some advice that wasn't my slightly biased friends or family and considering all of my finances because I'm young and terrible at these sorts of things. Also there's a ton of background which may or may not play into this so sorry for the rambling.
I'm a recent college graduate living in my own apartment in the city with my first full-time job. Things have been thrown up into the air for most people with the pandemic but my job and living situation has luckily been very stable as I got situated right before things all went downhill. I've been wanting to build my own pc for a while now as I practically live on my computer when I'm not working. I primarily use it for light work but also play video games that my current laptop can barely handle (the lowest possible settings at 20fps that dips into the single digits is really hard to work with at times and I think I'm lowkey killing my computer slowly) However, while I've toyed with the idea on and off, due to needing something portable for school, living at home with no space, and money I've been putting it off. Now I've been looking at the idea of getting one (thinking around a $1k build but can go a bit cheaper or more expensive) but killing myself over whether it's a good idea or not considering my finances.
My income isn't bad for being my first job (bi-weekly pay at an hourly rate that equates to roughly $40 per year, have been there since February and my supervisor hired me to eventually fill a more manager role), but after taxes and retirement and rent I see about $900 per month of my income. On top of this, I also pay for food and car insurance, as well as smaller monthly payments of internet, electric, and subscriptions that I have. Overall I estimate (which I tend to round up so that I don't end up with no money) that this costs roughly $400-500 per month, so I end up with $400-500 per month to save/spend. I currently have around $6k in savings plus some extra money that my parents have hiding around if I run into some trouble (I think only a few thousand but hey, it's something). While I do have 2 credit cards, I typically use only one and treat it more like a debit card (I also have like, $400 worth of rewards on it cause I haven't touched that since opening the account).
Because of the pandemic, student loan interest has been frozen as well as payments, but since I just graduated in May I wouldn't have been
... keep reading on reddit β‘Race mode should be called Defregg.
Thank you.
Please note that this site uses cookies to personalise content and adverts, to provide social media features, and to analyse web traffic. Click here for more information.