Spicy chai latte
Mothra
Well this obviously depends on how well informed my impostor is. But I would say my choice of sushi or breakfast would be among things that could out the doppelganger. Also my choice of drinks, the drink would probably out the doppelganger faster than the food.
My suggestion would be find an end of life companion or death doula who is willing to have a chat with you, most will likely give you basic advice like this for free. It's important that you address this issue and tell your family though, and that you can communicate to them what your wishes are regarding treatment.
Good luck OP
Agreed, though, it adds up.
Are you talking about in people's homes or in like laundromats? I'd be really curious to learn about a consistent placement in the middle east in particular, it never occured to me thinking this would be a thing anywhere in the world.
I live in Australia and have seen a lot of people's homes for work reasons and can't find a left/right pattern of dryer and washer placement. People just put them wherever they can, if anything dryers tend to be placed higher up (on the wall, at shoulder height) and washers are always on the ground but there is no left to right preference.
Some people even have the machines in different rooms, usually this is the washer in the laundry (or bathroom if no space for laundry) and the dryer in the garage or outside the house. As I already said these are just tendencies and you find plenty of people with different arrangements.
In a similar line, "the world belongs to the brave"
(breathe in)
Gusfraaaaaba.
(Breathe out)
It's not because of masking itself. It could be anything as long as it has an association with a group, the opposing group will get riled up.
People speed up while you overtake them?
People spelling "seperately" instead of "separately".
People on the motorway overtaking you just so they can drive slower than you once they're in front of you. I always wonder why did they bother overtaking in the first place.
Is English your native language? As a native Spanish speaker myself I find using semicolons correctly easy enough, but most english speakers prefer to avoid them and many just don't understand them. I've even had teachers at uni mark me down for using them appropriately. I gave up almost entirely with their use when writing in English because of this.
Funny, if you ask me about tea in general, I think of it as essentially an asian thing with a couple "regular" or "plain" western varieties. I guess it's marketing doing justice to history for once?