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#Midgy
princepv · 2 months
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some doodles
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uyxtt9xmgtvmn · 1 year
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Kinky Spa - Asian Chick Honey Gold Gives A Nuru Massage & Happy Ending Naked gay sexy men straight Fucking the Nerd Quick creampie for wife Sexy milf sucking dong Cojiendo a culona mexico Gozando na bundinha da casada novinha سالب طيزه ناقزه وقاعد يعرض Perfect Brunette with Big Ass and tits Super sexy fucking with Shyla Stylez and Bridgette B Tight Leggings Mature Woman
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0sweetpape0 · 6 months
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I feel sorry for those who don’t know Russian because you won't understand what this little shit says he-he >:)
I have terrible handwriting
TRY TO UNDERSTAND WHAT I WROTE, ENGLISH MAN
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mings · 7 months
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Is it just me, or are these blank blogs reaching plague proportions? Every day, I'm block, block, blockity block, but it's like a zombie horde. No matter how many you cut down, there are always more behind them.
I'm not that tech savvy. I believe they're bots, but can anyone explain what their point is?What do they hope to achieve?
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realjoehours · 5 months
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sorry world i’m full of too much love to be an edgelord today
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docholligay · 1 year
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Forgive me, I have a hobby level interest in some aspects of linguistics* and can’t shut up.
So, phonology is the first thing you pick up as an infant. How the SOUNDS are made. Not words, SOUNDS. All languages can be broken down into a series of sounds, all of which are made by moving your mouth a certain way, to oversimplify it. We learn those mouth movements very young. FIRST. Words come next, morphology, syntax, etc. BUT, to my point, phonology is what we learn first and this is the building block of a language. So, some people ‘keep’ this longer than others, but for most of us the sweet spot is birth-10 or 12 (And frankly, some people lose it earlier). I started hearing and learning Spanish casually when I was...6? I started studying it in earnest, as much as I could, by 8, and I of course went on to minor in it at school, I was a Spanish lab teacher for a few years, until recently I volunteered in the summer to do translation for migrant workers with the clinics. But all this started because I learned the trill early enough. I sound ‘right’ in that pronunciation way. My pronunciation of Spanish is pretty good, but it has nothing to do with me being ‘smart’ or whatever stupid thing we’ve assigned it.
This is true of all languages. There are sounds in Chinese I cannot make. Xhosa is right out, for me.
If someone is an asshole to you about you not being able to roll your R, it’s roughly the same as me being an asshole to a Japanese person at not being able to pronounce the hard R at the beginning of my legal name. You never learned the phoneme! Your mouth is like, “You want me to do what now?” and some people can retrain their mouths, but it’s very very difficult, and this idea that smart people have flawless pronunciation and can all flawlessly imitate any accent and dumb people just can’t hear it or whatever shows a ridiculous misunderstanding of how language works.
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I mean this makes sense when you consider that Duolingo is an American company and what reason would we have to learn peninsular Spanish, and also one of the founders grew up Latin America so of course LA Spanish is going to be the go-to, but if it makes you feel any better I find Duolingo nigh-unusuable, because I know enough Spanish that I know there is more than one right answer. If that makes sense. I have learned enough Spanish that I have my own way of speaking, too. I ended up just, before I had the baby, auditing upper-level courses at the college because it was the only way to get that exposure to speaking while also being allowed some...flexibility? I guess? With how things are said. Computers ain’t everything, basically, and they’re bad at teaching language. Also, you know, what’s ‘correct’ and what’s ‘done’ are different. A lot of thing English spoken in the rural community I’m a part of isn’t GRAMMATICAL, but it is RIGHT, you know? There are variances in language and just because ones of privilege win the grammar war--and I have an English degree, I’m not even opposed to a ‘central grammar we all agree upon for say, the news--doesn’t mean that the way things are said in other communities is wrong. Duolingo tries to tell me “Seen you come over here” is wrong and I’m like, “eat my entire ass, owl, that’s how “I saw you come over here” would be said in my circles” ahaha. But I have a hick accent no one is interested in defending but me, that is often the butt of the joke, so.
ANYWAY, all this to say that Duolingo has its uses but it has exceptional limitations. I’m not really a ‘online language learning’ gal, but I do prefer Babel, generally. It was easier for me to skip ahead to the higher-level shit I needed to be engaging with, at least, though it occasionally frustrates me as well.
*It’s just, a huge field. And there are a million ways to be ‘into it’ I would say the VAST majority of my interest is in English, particularly American English in all its variants, but I do have a lot of affection for other English-speaking countries versions of the language--Kiwi English is very fun, I have loved the tightness of the East End/Cockney accent for a very long time, which tracks with the fact that most of my favorite American Englishes are also very working class, any way the point of all this is that the linguistics of, say, Spanish is not really my knowledge base but most of this is pretty broad anyhow
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thebroodiestelf · 8 months
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my mom's 4 year old baby Midge passed away last night 💔
I'm going to miss her personality she was a little weirdo. she would yell at you to follow her and pet her but don't do it wrong or she'll bite you. follow her to the laundry room sink where she will take a complicated route to jump onto the counter (folding chair to washing machine to countertop) bc she was under the impression that she couldn't jump that high, and then turn the sink on for her. she won't drink out of it or anything because she has a fountain but she just wanted you to turn it on. she needed you to be playing fishing pole cat toy with her at all times or she would knock things over out of boredom. don't you dare pick her up she will meow like she's being murdered. she was not a cuddler but if you sat still and it was winter time she would sometimes sit on your legs for warmth. I had to buy her a water fountain because she was waking my mom up constantly to turn the sink on bc she refused to drink still water. she liked going outside on supervised yard visits to chase bugs but you had to leave the door slightly ajar or she would get scared and huddle next to it to wait for it to open again. she was absolutely uninterested in any and all people food and even cat treats or wet food. it was her dry kibble or nothing. the only time she would try to get into your food while you were eating was if you had an open cup of liquid for her to stick her face or foot in to investigate. the older cats were not interested in being her friend but they tolerated her presence and she kept the dog company while my mom was at work. my favorite game to play with her was running past the front window when I left bc she would chase me from inside on the windowsill if I ran back and forth.
she was a little stinker and one of the quirkiest cats my family has ever had and it's a shame the vet couldn't diagnose what was wrong with her fast enough to help her but at least she isn't suffering anymore. she'll always be with us as part of our wifi password ❤️🌈
thank you for attending my cat eulogy
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eonars · 1 year
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some people who grew up on the east coast and moved to the UK a little later in life came out of it with a really tv/radio ready transatlantic accent that harkens to times gone by however EYE used my formative years to create the unholy blend of southern california/valley accent with glaswegian
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theodrrr14 · 2 years
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Wow
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blinkesusa · 1 year
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Midgi from Demon Turf.
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a pic of my cat! her name is Midgie and she has no teeth but she's ok
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princepv · 9 months
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I like them
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elizaflamingo · 2 years
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Baffles me that midgies are a Scottish thing, like you guys literally don’t get them. Square sausage too, I literally can’t imagine life without square sausage.
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docholligay · 2 years
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CONCERNED THAT IT MIGHT BE GETTING INTO THINGS OF ACTUAL EMOTIONAL RELEVANCE, TRUE BLOOD PUTS US BACK WITH A HALF DEMON BABY OR SOME SHIT.
That baby should barely be sitting up, to say nothing of having the hand strength and coordination to pull the head off a doll, TO SAY NOTHING of an entire group of them, but sure, killing is wrong is gonna do this. I am, my god, so disinterested in this demon nature vs nurture shit.
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thoodleoo · 1 year
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new follower here and I'd like to offer pics of my kitties as thanks! the brown playful cat is Midgie (silly, has no teeth, purrs and snores so loud) and the grey sleeping cat is Mithra (18yo, blind, very affectionate but doesn't know how to sit still)
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OUUUGH OLD KITTIE
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vintagestagehotties · 10 days
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Hot Vintage Stage Actress Round 1
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Uta Hagen: Nina Mikhailova Zarechnaya in The Seagull (1938 Broadway); Georgie Elgin in The Country Girl (1950 Broadway); Martha in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1962 Broadway)
Tallulah Bankhead: Hallie Livingston in Nice People (1921 Broadway); Judith Traherne in Dark Victory (1934 Broadway); Regina Giddens in The Little Foxes (1939 Broadway); Sabina in The Skin of Our Teeth (1942 Broadway); Midgie Purvis in Midgie Purvis (1961 Broadway)
Propaganda under the cut
Uta Hagen:
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Tallulah Bankhead:
There is nothing about this woman that does not turn me on. Sexiest woman to have ever lived
ambisextrous, alcoholic, supported foster children, helped families fleeing the spanish civil war and world war ii, related to several alabama politicians, supported civil rights, wild sex life, top of the hayes commission doom book, her last words were a request for codeine and bourbon, drank champagne out of her shoe at the london ritz, inspiration for cruella de vil
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