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#zasir
faenixx · 1 year
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hiss hiss
witcher oc brainrot
hiss hiss
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ignitra-za · 2 years
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Sir Whoopass™: Immortal Death (FINALE) | A Comedy RPG | Episode 11 | GAM3R ZA
Sir Whoopass™ takes on The Ancient Ruins of Empty Echoes, The Ancient Ruins of Stuffed Pantries and the The Ancient Ruins of Mouldy Ceiling.
Find me on Social Media: 🐤 Become a follower on Twitter: https://twitter.com/GAM3R_za 😊 Become a fan on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GAM3Rza ☕ Buy me a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/gam3
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📺 Other Playlists 📺 https://www.youtube.com/c/GAM3RZA/playlists
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peakek · 5 years
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broke: zadr
woke: zagr (zim and gir romance)
bespoke: zasir (zim and a successful invasion romamce)
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ambfurniture · 2 years
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Acme 87335 Latitude run zasir chrome metal frame and faux marble top modern coffee table. Coffee table measures 51' x 27' x 18' H. Some assembly required.
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mezaveridianken · 4 years
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Zasir, Hesayave Kiserya, raeniase armya ardaza.
Zasir, Mes'heyave Kendalirya, telavris ky vays armyada sevennada.
Zasir, Renve Kaldirya, relse ky syneven sykin haelen.
Zasir, Kijianve Kendirya, estel ky kauryss, ky neralyssdae, ara elaida shry kyte senna, daeni vir ky elvse arnil azri azra heyasevia.
Ky keve eln darat, Sennie Rya'el, ara lasi azri senelma armya eema. Telavrise ky azri veyranse ara elia daeni heldianse ara Meza'elrente hesdin.
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Hyacinthe Holder, 81
I grew up speaking many languages. I was born in St. Martin, on the French side. My mother was from Santa Domingo and she spoke Spanish all the time. Then we moved to Aruba and went to the Dutch school where we learned Dutch, the native dialect Papiamento, French and some English.
My father loved languages. He spoke 11. And he wanted us to learn German and Italian and Portuguese. Sitting around the dinner table we had to use them all. Which you don’t think is odd until someone from the outside comes to dinner.  When I was 15 or 16 we went to the United States and our father gave us a crash course in English, Latin and Greek. He was a chemist, earned a doctorate in divinity and eventually became a social worker. My mom taught classical music.
It took a while for us to adjust. No one understood what we were saying, and we didn’t understand them. And because I didn’t really understand English, they thought I was intellectually challenged, so at first I was placed in a class for slower students. They gave me an I.Q. test and I couldn’t read most of the questions, so I couldn’t answer them. We were taught to be polite, so I didn’t tell them the truth. Eventually, my father went to the school and straightened them out and I got placed in an average class. And one teacher told me I would never learn English, but another overheard and told me she had free time and would help.
Dating was not something we did in Aruba; we called it courting. But we loved this American culture where we had so much more freedom. I went to Coney Island with my cousins, and they brought along a young man who I got together with my last year in college and we married in 1961. My parents were old fashioned, so he did have to call at home and my father asked him a lot of questions, then told me he was a very nice young man. James Holder. We had a beautiful daughter and she had two children who are very attentive to me. But we didn’t stay married. It was very decent, though, we recognized it didn’t have to be ugly. So we divided everything up and we got along so well people wondered if we were really divorcing.
I never remarried. My great joys are my grandchildren, my daughter Ayannah’s children Menelik and Nyasha Zasir.  
I loved to travel. My grandson reminded me I had been on 14 trips in one year. To me it was so interesting to see the basic human element, no matter where I was, I loved different cultures and food, and people. The hardest thing to me was segregation. We learned how to work with it, as bad as it is. I remember when we came to the United States, the immigration officer would not accept that I wrote “black” in the race box. No one used that word then, they called us colored. But my mother wouldn’t have it! So the officer said, “Let her write what she wants, I’ll just change it.’”
I always try to look for the goodness in people and not judge them.  
Hyacinthe lives at Hammond Glen in Sandy Springs, Ga. Learn more about her independent retirement community here.
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ignitra-za · 2 years
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Sir Whoopass™: Immortal Death | A Comedy RPG | Episode 9 | GAM3R ZA
Sir Whoopass™ takes on the Trial of Courage granting him his Second Villain Beating Artefact. He then also takes on The Ancient Ruins of inadequate Opportunities.
Find me on Social Media: 🐤 Become a follower on Twitter: https://twitter.com/GAM3R_za 😊 Become a fan on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GAM3Rza ☕ Buy me a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/gam3
🔔 SUBSCRIBE / 👍 LIKE / 💬 COMMENT Subscribe to my channel here! - https://bit.ly/31VvBdd
📺 Other Playlists 📺 https://www.youtube.com/c/GAM3RZA/playlists
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ignitra-za · 2 years
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youtube
Sir Whoopass™: Immortal Death | A Comedy RPG | Episode 4 | GAM3R ZA
Sir Whoopass™ takes on the Ancient ruins of stubbed toes and the Ancient ruins of misplaced belongings and destroys the energy sources within.
Find me on Social Media: 🐤 Become a follower on Twitter: https://twitter.com/GAM3R_za 😊 Become a fan on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GAM3Rza
🔔 SUBSCRIBE / 👍 LIKE / 💬 COMMENT
Subscribe to my channel here! - https://bit.ly/31VvBdd
📺 Other Playlists 📺 https://www.youtube.com/c/GAM3RZA/playlists
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ambfurniture · 2 years
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Acme 87339 Latitude run zasir chrome metal frame and faux marble top modern end table. End table measures 24' x 24' x 20' H. Some assembly required.
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