Airmed (or Airmid) - Celtic goddess of healing herbs
requested by anon

#extradirty
Cosmic Funnies

Janaina Medeiros
No title available
Stranger Things
I'd rather be in outer space đž

â
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
One Nice Bug Per Day
Not today Justin
styofa doing anything

if i look back, i am lost
ojovivo
$LAYYYTER

izzy's playlists!
will byers stan first human second
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
NASA

romaâ
No title available

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from T1

seen from United States
seen from Estonia
seen from Germany

seen from Argentina

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
@akinonaeuri
Airmed (or Airmid) - Celtic goddess of healing herbs
requested by anon
Sleeping beauty | unknown photographer and ballerina
Flowing stream kimono and fringed orchid summer obi, seen on
This kind of orchid is named sagi kusa (white egret flower) in Japanese, you can see why below ;)
[sources: 1 / 2]
Donât call her âPrincessâ if youâre not gonna treat her like one.
Paolo Sebastian & Disney âOnce Upon a Dreamâ Spring 2018 Couture Collection
æ°èČ ăă«ăŒă°ăŹăŒć „è·ïŒăąă€ă¶ăăŻJKOP[6297ă»M6297]
For the sake of character development, feel free to ask me anything you would like to know or are unsure of about my muse.
@ninakennychase/Instagram
Hingan Alphabet
So I came across the Hingan Alphabet on twitter this morning and immediately wanted to translate it so I could throw it at my friends. I figured it would be a good idea to post it here for those who play Eastern characters but donât know Japanese. Enjoy my awful handwriting LMAO
Itâs more or less an altered version of the Hiragana alphabet!Â
We got some familiar symbols: numbers and punctuation marks. The consonants arenât quite as straightforward, however, as we donât really have them in English so Iâll try and give a quick, vague explanation.
- The tsu (referred to as small tsu, or sokuon) indicates that the consonant that immediately follows it is preceded by a glottal stop and held for an additional syllable. For example, words like gakki (musical instrument) require the use of a double consonant, otherwise, you could make an entirely different meaning (gaki just means brat).Â
- The ya, yu, and yo are used to indicate glides, or semi-vowels. Remember when your waifu went ânyaaaaaaâ in your favorite Doman animes? Well NOW YOU CAN WRITE THAT IN HINGAN. NOTHING IS STOPPING YOU.Â
I would heavily recommend looking at a chart since this is a bit difficult to take in at face value. But you more or less take a character that is ending in i from the first chart and then add the smaller character.Â
So say you want to say âhyaâ! Take the hi character, and then add the small ya after it. If you want to say âkyuâ, take the ki character, and then add the small yu after it.Â
- The a, i, u, e, o are used for sounds that arenât common within the Japanese language (or Hingan in this case, I guess) such as va, vi, wi, wu, etc. so probably will only matter for those wanting to spell the names of their characters that arenât from the Far East.
For the w sounds, you have to take the u character from the first chart and add whichever character next. So to write wi, take the u character and add the i character after it. To write wu, take the u character again and add the u character after it. Similar to glides.
For the v sounds, youâll have to use the u character again but add what we call dakuten, or tenten. If you look at the first chart and look at the characters that start with g, z, d, and b, youâll notice theyâre exactly the same character of the characters that start with k, s, t, and n but with a little mark on the right side. Thatâs the tenten! Use that same mark on the u character, and you have the v sound instead of the w sound.Â
This also works with glides. If you want to write vya, you use the u character with the tenten, and then add the small ya character to indicate that.Â
- âŠâŠâŠthat was not a quick explanation. UH⊠yea. If itâs difficult to understand still (which, prolly is considering my shit instructions) I would heavily recommend taking a look at hiragana charts and getting a better idea. Or better yet, ask me directly or a friend who knows Japanese! Because itâs only gonna get more difficult to understand from here on out LOL.Â
Next, we have long vowels on the right side of this chart. When the same vowel appears twice consecutively in a word, the two are pronounced as a continuous sound rather than as two separate vowels.Â
The 5 characters on the left side are plenty different though!
- Koto (not the instrument) and yori (not the name) are grammar particles, so I wouldnât recommend using them unless you have a good idea of sentence structure. Pretty, though.
- Nari (äč) has multiple readings. Itâs used to express an exact sum of money, or a historical way of saying âto beâ. I donât think itâs their money symbol, considering they would use the yen (ć) kanji to inticate that. So⊠uh⊠Who Know?
- The next one was a bit difficult to read, but it seems to be the ć kanji, which is a literal reading of seasons, weather, climate, etc.Â
- The very bottom far left character is read as ă , which is an iteration mark, meaning that the sound of the previous kanji (or a sound similar to it) before it should be repeated. An example would be èČă (iroiro, various) or æ©ă (hayabaya, âpromptlyâ) It also can be found in names.Â
I hope those explanations helped out a bit! Iâm really hoping a font with the Hingan alphabet comes soon, itâd make things plenty easier Iâm sure. Really looking forward to seeing folks who Hingan characters putting their names together! Itâs honestly a super pretty alphabet. @_@
Thank you so much to @chelonate who helped me out with some of the translation!! You saved me dang bootyâŠ.Â
Wedding paradise | blushwedphotos