And no “water with a twist of lemon/slice of cucumber” goofs. Water isn’t allowed.

  • queermunist she/her
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    -39 months ago

    They obviously wouldn’t, they’d just bring tap water or bottled water or something. What are you even talking about.

    • snowe
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      29 months ago

      The whole point of this conversation is that OP is excluding drinks on some arbitrary line that no one else understands. If lemon water isn’t allowed then what is?

      • queermunist she/her
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        9 months ago

        OP is excluding drinks that aren’t regular water, this isn’t complicated.

        If you went to a restaurant and asked for water, what would they give you? Probably something from the tap, or a bottle, or a purified pitcher. Maybe mineral water, but that’s as much additive as you’re going to get. It wouldn’t even be sparkling, and they’re certainly not going to give you milk and smugly tell you “well TECHKNIQUELLY its water!” you damn dork. You know what OP means, you’re being ridiculous.

        • snowe
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          19 months ago

          If you’re in other countries they most definitely will give you sparkling water if you don’t clarify you want water ‘sans’ carbonation.

        • @zagaberoo@beehaw.org
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          19 months ago

          It sounds like you agree, though.

          Cucumber water is not what you’d expect when asking for water, yet OP excludes it as being invalid for being equivalent to water. So where is the line?

          Tea is absolutely my non-troll answer, but how different is that really from cucumber water in this context?