My Linux Mint Cinnamon won't boot up. It's getting stuck on this screen and I don't know what to do to proceed. Before this screen appears it shows the LM logo for a moment.
I'm a total noob and just been using this for a month or two. Did not make any recent changes that I can recall.
Possibly - the laptop battery died and the first thing when turning it on was to set system time in BIOS. But it's not the first time doing that, just the first time it didn't boot afterwards.
Your disks volume can't boot, so it's dropping you to a prompt to investigate. You need to run a disk check with 'fsck' at a minimum. If you're not familiar with the CLI , just boot a LiveISO, and check your system disks from a desktop you're familiar with.
This seems to have worked, got my desktop back. I did fsck on something like /dev/sda9 then answered yes to fix a bunch of things. Thanks for your help.
No, can't be lack of anything, it was the regular Mint 21.3 installer image overwriting Debian on a normal ext4 formatted partition. Nothing should have gone wrong. Reinstalled with formatting on, and it started working.
"Hadn't" means "had not" (not done in the past), not "had not" (lacked possession). I'm Finnish and might be wrong.
Native English speaker. I started to write up an answer but the more I dig into it the more confused I am.
The subject and predicate need to agree for a sentence to sound normal. "It hadn't" uses "had not" as the predicate which implies past action and needs a verb to sound normal.
You could say:
It had not installed the tooling.
Or It had not verified that the tooling installed correctly.
In it "It didn't have" the predicate is "have" so a noun can follow and sound normal.
You could say:
It didn't have the tooling.
Here is where I'm becoming confused.
Usually you can remove negatives and extra words to clarify grammar. In the sentence "It had the tooling" the predicate is still "had" but it doesn't imply action so a following noun is fine. Also the sentence "It did have the tooling" is grammatically correct but sounds wordy and would probably be found in a legal document or technical write up. Why does the grammar change when you add a negative? "It hadn't the tooling" sounds ridiculous but logically it should be fine if "It had the tooling" is fine! This is driving me crazy.
Somebody who paid more attention in English class will have to correct me. I guess we're just going with " English is weird and it sounds better that way".