Semi-brief highly-generalized version: When dealing with texts that were handwritten (., before mass printing was introduced) I get checked regularly for STD's so I choose roommate(s) that you want to JO with? At
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New York NY bi horny wives don't knowingly pass anything on to my partners, but when is it too much? Sure, there are condoms, and dental dams for safe oral sex, but at the end of the day, unless you go with your partner for a blood test and don't let them out of your sight until the results come back, how safe can you really be? Personally I just try not to worry about it too much. Anyone have a different take on it?
Single women want casual encounter how to find sex there are all sorts of issues about how the texts were preserved. Keep in mind that "paper" (whether from papyrus or other plant source or from animal skins) was not necessarily easy to make/obtain and did not last. The ink on it have faded, worms or insects have eaten through it, fire/water damage, or whatever. So, in order to preserve texts, copies had to be made. These were of course hand written copies based on the original text. When people write things, even copy things, they make mistakes (often ed "scribal errors"). Or, if the text was damaged the scribe might not have been able to record the whole text and had to either leave a gap in the text or make an educated guess at what was missing. So the copy is altered from the original. Then there's the issue of textual lines. Typiy more than one copy was made for insurance purposes you know. So let's say copy A gets stored at one location, copy B at another, copy C at a third. As the copies age, they get recopied with each scribe introducing new errors/changes to the text. To add to this mess, languages change over time, sounds change, grammar changes, new spellings arise. Some scribes stay "faithful" to the text, copying what they. Other scribes "fix" the text according to what is correct at that time. (Depends on their training and school of thought.) Sometimes hypercorrection happens things are fixed according to what the scribe thinks is correct, even though they are introducing a new error. (An example would be changing computer "mouses" to computer "mice", where "mouses" is typiy considered correct plural for the thing attached to your computer (debatable though) and "mice" is correct for the cute furry thing.)