Not really. Though it's not like they have an excuse on infrastructure.
I'd say I say "dayta" more and I'm from the US. Though perhaps being partially deaf makes me a little more sensitive to pronunciation and enunciation of some similar sounding words? <shrugs> And yeah, that last one (caysh) I have literally never heard. "cash" or "cashay" I've heard, but not "caysh"
Though I do think I change D/E based on the phonetics of the prior word. "A database" (pronounced "uh daytabase") vs "A database" (pronounced "Ay dahtabase"), maybe in a feedble attempt to differentiate the first two syllables?
"Where it is in a sentence" might have been a bit too precise... I just sometimes say both. I _think_ the first one is because I learned it from READING "kludge" and pronounced that phonetically... and then also HEARING "kluge" (C) and then thinking it was the same word. And now I'm all mixed up
You can start by finding some more Twitter mutuals. Tools like this can help - https://skeet.labnotes.org/ - though be warned the Twitter rate limits currently cause issues so you may need to try a few times.
(I have invites if any of the STL crew need them)
It felt like a big sea change when I had to remove Tweetbot from my phone because of that set of changes to twitter. Now I am uninstalling TweetDeck PWA from my desktop (which I frankly mostly used for work). Feels like another sea change. Twitter was unusable without those two apps.
(I'm trying to avoid emailing RicoHotline because that pains me too)
It the court wanted to, which it absolutely does not, could it turn around and say "wait that opinion we released last week is null because we found out they lied about Stewart way back when and so it never should have gotten to us." Has the SC ever nullified an opinion after the fact like that?
Big if true