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#wren hanno
yut-art · 9 months
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I finished Girls of Fate and Fury recently and I love them sm :') 💖
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floofysmallbob · 8 months
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ok I know this is like a tiny fandom but still
I could not resist drawing Wren. Fucking. Hanno.
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Definitely not finished, but I’m still proud, and I hope that hot book characters get more recognition
Edit: I am aware I accidentally whitewashed her, I will fix it.
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rrcavalli · 11 months
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just finished the last book of the girls of paper and fire trilogy!! I love my comfort warrior lesbians
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smokedanced · 8 months
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@vocesincaput said: 🍷
MY EXPERIENCE IN THE ROLEPLAYING COMMUNITY    /    ACCEPTING ↷
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🍷 a character i want to write but never made a blog for :: Mmm. There are a few, although for the most part, I do add anyone I want to write as a test muse. There are some I know I wouldn't be good at writing without bothering to test like, Sam Winchester? From Supernatural. Kind of semi want to write Jim from Our Flag but same, just, I know I wouldn't have the muse... Sun Kwon from Lost, Jimmy Price from Hannibal, Wren Hanno from Girls of Paper and Fire, Jane Eyre from- Jane Eyre- There are many characters I would want to write in theory but only in theory, and truly probably more wanna write with those muses.
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scienza-magia · 8 months
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Contraddizione sul moto inerziale in meccanica classica
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Scoperto un errore nella traduzione della Prima Legge di Newton dopo quasi 300 anni. Una nuova interpretazione degli scritti di Isaac Newton chiarisce cosa intendesse il padre della meccanica classica con la sua prima legge del moto: lo rivela un articolo pubblicato su Scientific American del 5 settembre scorso. Una traduzione imprecisa della prima legge del moto di Isaac Newton, che è rimasta inosservata per 300 anni, ci offre una nuova prospettiva sul pensiero di questo innovativo scienziato quando delineava i principi della meccanica classica. Spesso, la prima legge del moto viene riassunta con “corpi in movimento tendono a mantenere quel movimento, mentre quelli fermi tendono a restare fermi”.
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Isaac Newton, ritratto di Sir Godfrey Kneller (1689) Tuttavia, l’origine di questo principio, che potrebbe sembrare intuitivo riguardo all’inerzia, ha delle sfumature. Nel suo libro del XVII secolo, Newton, scrivendo in latino, affermava che un corpo tende a mantenere il suo stato, sia esso di riposo o di movimento costante, a meno che non venga influenzato da forze esterne. Con il passare del tempo, vari teorici hanno interpretato le parole di Newton pensando si riferisse a corpi non influenzati da forze esterne. Ma gli studiosi si sono chiesti: dato che non esistono corpi completamente isolati dalle forze nel nostro universo, perché teorizzare su qualcosa di inesistente? Pare che Newton non intendesse affatto riferirsi a corpi teorici non influenzati da forze. Newton sembra utilizzi una specifica frase latina non per limitare l’applicazione della sua legge, ma per evidenziare che un corpo cambia il suo stato solo quando una forza esterna lo influisce. Quindi, in sostanza, ogni variazione nel movimento di un corpo è il risultato di forze esterne. Newton stava cercando di stabilire l’esistenza di forze che influenzano il movimento, contrariamente ad alcune teorie precedenti. Probabilmente, la persistente confusione riguardo alle parole di Newton è dovuta a una traduzione in inglese del 1729 che ha introdotto piccoli, ma significativi, cambiamenti nel significato: in particolare usando la  parola “se non” (unless) invece di “salvo nella misura in cui” (except insofar).
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Copia della prima edizione di Sir Isaac Newton del suo Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica con le sue correzioni scritte a mano per la seconda edizione. La prima edizione fu pubblicata sotto l’impronta di Samuel Pepys, presidente della Royal Society. Al momento della seconda edizione, lo stesso Newton era diventato presidente della Royal Society, come notato nelle sue correzioni. È stato digitalizzato dalla Biblioteca dell’Università di Cambridge e può essere visto nella Biblioteca digitale di Cambridge insieme ad altre opere originali di Isaac Newton. Il libro può essere visionato nella Wren Library del Trinity College, Cambridge. Le tre leggi di Newton Le leggi del moto di Newton sono tre principi fondamentali che descrivono il rapporto tra un corpo e le forze agite su di esso e il suo movimento in risposta a tali forze. Queste leggi sono state enunciate da Sir Isaac Newton nel 1687 e formano la base della meccanica classica. Ecco le tre leggi: - Prima legge (o legge dell’inerzia) Un corpo rimane in stato di quiete o di moto rettilineo uniforme a meno che non venga sottoposto all’azione di una forza esterna. In sostanza, un oggetto si muoverà ad una velocità costante (che potrebbe essere zero) a meno che una forza esterna non agisca su di esso. - Seconda legge (o legge della dinamica) La forza esercitata su un oggetto è proporzionale alla sua accelerazione e ha la stessa direzione e lo stesso verso dell’accelerazione. Questa legge può essere espressa con la formula: F=m×a dove F è la forza totale agente sull’oggetto, m è la sua massa e a è la sua accelerazione. - Terza legge (o legge d’azione e reazione) Per ogni azione c’è sempre un’uguale e contraria reazione: ovvero le forze di due corpi su l’altro sono sempre uguali e dirette in direzioni opposte. Se un corpo A esercita una forza su un corpo B, il corpo B esercita una forza di uguale intensità e direzione, ma opposta, sul corpo A. Queste leggi sono valide in sistemi di riferimento inerziali e costituiscono le fondamenta della meccanica classica, che è stata utilizzata per descrivere e prevedere il movimento degli oggetti per secoli. Tuttavia, per oggetti che si muovono a velocità vicine a quella della luce o per oggetti di dimensioni atomiche o subatomiche, è necessario fare riferimento alla teoria della relatività o alla meccanica quantistica, rispettivamente. Fonte: Scientific American Read the full article
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oh-jail-for-mother · 2 years
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BLUE AND LOVA!!! LOVA AND BLUE!!! I REPEAT--
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brycesbookshelf · 4 years
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Stuck between wanting to read and not wanting to move this precious baby
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jsperfhey · 3 years
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MAKE ME CHOOSE. @juliettecai asked: june iparis or wren hanno?
falling in love is the most dangerous thing women like us can do.
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eleftherian · 2 years
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wren fucking hanno giving me damn Emotions like a baby!!! stop making me feel things god damn it!!
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Gods though, as many bad things as she’s done, my heart hurts for Wren. This girl just sees herself as a human sacrifice for her father’s cause to the point where she’s disappointed with herself for not dying when she should have and had to do terrible things to “redeem herself” for daring to survive. Her whole purpose since she was a child was to die for the cause and she’s so committed to it that she freaks out and runs away at the mere thought that there might be life outside of death and pain.
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emsye-tries · 4 years
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Fire in. Fear out. 🔥
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Girls of Storm and Shadow (Girls of Paper and Fire #2)- Natasha Ngan
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Background: I read the first book in this trilogy a few months ago after it had sat on my shelf for a while. I ended up liking it, I think that it handled the sexual assault/rape storyline very well. I also have a lot of respect for the author, as she included crisis hotlines in the back of each book, making clear she didn’t include those issues just for the plot, but to help survivors. There is going to be one more book in the trilogy (coming out in March of 2021) but I wanted to get caught up with any series that I was in the middle of before heading off to college. I have 3 days to read 2 more books- so let’s hope I can do it.
First Half: Oh my gosh am I in love. If the first book was The Hunger Games, this is a mix of Catching Fire and Mockingjay. Wren and Lei are on the run from the king but also trying to convince other groups to join the resistance. There is fighting, deals being made, we get flashes into what is happening in the royal palace. It is going so fast. This is the perfect middle book so far. It distances itself from the first book, but doesn’t fall into the problem of running out of plot/getting to the resolution too fast. I think that it is an improvement up on the first book. There are multiple queer characters that just show up and are on the side, but its done in a way that makes it not unimportant, but not outside of social norms if that makes sense. If it stays on the current trajectory, this will be 5 stars.
Second Half: I hate everyone in this book. The good characters get killed off, the ones we used to like turn out to be just as bad as the main villains, there were twists every chapter. I NEED the third book right now. I don’t know how it is all going to end. There was a massive cliff hanger. This wasn’t an easy book to read. The plot, pacing, character development were all amazing, but it was dense. This probably took me double the time to read compared to another book of the same length. I’m not saying that that is a huge problem, but it isn’t exactly a strength.
Overall: This was great. I think it was a huge improvement upon the first book and I can’t wait to see where the final book ends up. 5 stars.
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paragon-of-anxiety · 2 years
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Why are so many fictional women suddenly named Wren? like you will never be Wren Hanno
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Review: Girls of Fate and Fury (Natasha Ngan, Girls of Paper and Fire #3)
Rating: ★★★★/5
“Uncompromising and unforgiving.
Fair and merciful.
Hearts are all of these things, and more. And no matter how complex, how contradictory they might be, that doesn’t mean they do not deserve love, or forgiveness.
Or a second chance.”
This was a really solid ending chapter in the Paper Girls’ journey. I didn’t find anything surprised me, but I enjoyed it and absolutely flew through it.
After fighting so hard to find allies to defeat the king, Lei and Wren are separated. Wren is back with the Hannos, while Lei…Lei has been taken back to the Hidden Palace, to the place that haunts her. All Wren wants is to save the girl she loves, but after their last conversation, she isn’t sure where she stands with Lei; all she knows is that she can’t let her remain in the palace with the king who is sure to break her. As battles rage and the kingdom’s fate hangs in the balance, Lei and Wren just want to find each other again, and build a life free of the tyrannical men who have put them through hell.
I really loved the first two books in this series. They were 5-star reads for me, between the characters and the emotion and the way real issues are dealt with in such a raw, authentic way. What made them 5-star reads were the surprises along the way, the things that happened that left me going what??!! And although most of the ingredients from the first two books were here, that surprise and intrigue were what I found were missing here.
Basically everything is established going into this book. We know there’s going to be a war between the King’s forces and the Hannos, and Wren and Lei have had struggles but really just need to be back together and work things out for good. All that needs to happen is the follow through with it all - and it does, don’t get me wrong. It just all felt like a logical conclusion, the right end to the story…and I wish there was something more that made me go !!!!! again.
However, as I said earlier, all of the same emotion and social commentary is present here again. This is such a wonderful, feminist series, full of heart and beautiful relationships, both romantic and friendly. I adore that side of it; it really showcases the power of women, and it gives them opportunities to stand on their own two feet in spite of all of the ways the world has told them they can’t.
And Wren and Lei are just as wonderful as ever. You really can’t help but root for them, want the best for them, and I was so happy with how things worked out for them in the end.
I highly, highly recommend this whole series. It’s passionate and emotional and beautiful, and despite some tough topics, everything is handled so sensitively. 
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hauntedpearl · 2 years
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okay so the girls of paper and fire series started out so well!! it wasn't perfect, but i really was excited to read it and I had a lot of fun with that first book. I'm on book three now, and it's just been such a tideous thing to get through it. Like. GODD. it's so boring, i hate myself for even hating it but godddd it's so boring.
i mean on the surface, it has a great premise — it's this finale where there's a war going on and wren and lei are seperated and have to fight their way back to each other and ketai hanno is being sus af like it's a good setup, but the execution is like. just. so bland. i can't even pinpoint what's bothering me because I can't be arsed to even think about it.
I'm about halfway through at this point and I haven't been able to read more than 5-7% of the book at once. it's just not pulling me in at all! reviewing this will be super hard because. like. i don't understand what's not working, at the moment. i think the shift from first to third person when we shift PoVs every two chapters is one thing that's pulling me out of the story for sure. but like there's definitely more things, too. i have to sit and ruminate on all the events of the book to figure it out. i honestly love natasha ngan, and her writing style is still really sweet and lyrical, so reviewing this will be that much harder for me. sigh. I'm just very disappointed, and I did not expect that at all!
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oh-jail-for-mother · 2 years
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it's 2022 and the wren hanno tag is still very quiet
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