what people who say "don't say 30 year olds are old, 30 is still young!!!" don't understand is i know that. i'm not calling my 25yo coworker old because i believe it. i'm calling him old because i enjoy psychological warfare
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Kiana Khansmith

⁂
ojovivo

Discoholic 🪩
Cosimo Galluzzi
Keni

JVL
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

tannertan36
almost home
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
One Nice Bug Per Day
Game of Thrones Daily

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Three Goblin Art

roma★
we're not kids anymore.

if i look back, i am lost
Jules of Nature
seen from Kenya
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@audhd-student
what people who say "don't say 30 year olds are old, 30 is still young!!!" don't understand is i know that. i'm not calling my 25yo coworker old because i believe it. i'm calling him old because i enjoy psychological warfare
perseus dot tufts dot edu is a beautiful name for a baby girl
They should invent Jstor wrapped
"The best thing we can do with power is give it away" - On the leftist critique of superhero narratives as authoritarian power fantasies:
The ongoing "Jason Todd is a cop" debate has reminded me of a brilliant brief image essay by Joey deVilla. So here it is, images first and the full essay text below:
"A common leftist critique of superhero comics is that they are inherently anti-collectivist, being about small groups of individuals who hold all the power, and the wisdom to wield that power. I don’t disagree with this reading. I don’t think it’s inaccurate. Superheroes are their own ruling class, the concept of the übermensch writ large. But it’s a sterile reading. It examines superhero comics as a cold text, and ignores something that I believe in fundamental, especially to superhero storytelling: the way people engage with text. Not what it says, but how it is read. The average comic reader doesn’t fantasize about being a civilian in a world of superheroes, they fantasize about being a superhero. One could charitably chalk this up to a lust for power, except for one fact… The fantasy is almost always the act of helping people. Helping the vulnerable, with no reward promised in return. Being a century into the genre, we’ve seen countless subversions and deconstructions of the story. But at its core, the superhero myth is about using the gifts you’ve been given to enrich the people around you, never asking for payment, never advancing an ulterior motive. We should (and do) spend time nitpicking these fantasies, examining their unintended consequences, their hypocrisies. But it’s worth acknowledging that the most eduring childhood fantasy of the last hundred years hasn’t been to become rich. Superheroes come from every class (don’t let the MCU fool you). The most enduring fantasy is to become powerful enough to take the weak under your own wing. To give, without needing to take. So yes, the superhero myth, as a text, isn’t collectivist. But that’s not why we keep coming back to it. That’s not why children read it. We keep coming back to it to learn one simple lesson… The best thing we can do with power IS GIVE IT AWAY." - Joey deVilla, 2021 https://www.joeydevilla.com/2021/07/04/happy-independence-day-superhero-style/
“Just this once, everyone lives.”
War and Peace and the urge to murder the next person to tell me to meditate
You know, studying is not that bad. We all like to learn things, we are curious. It's classroom learning that's boring and takes the joy out of studies. So don't sit with the material you have to learn just rereading it and trying to understand what you can and memorising what you can't.
Treat your academics like a freaking fantasy book. Studying Language? Imagine yourself speaking the language you are learning to native speakers. In front of your relatives. Who don't know what the hell is going on. Science? No problem, it's even better. Imagine yourselves a part of what you are learning about- like just imagine being an electron in a crowd of them.
Or make puns out of stuff that's exhausting to learn. A cation is pawsitive cause a cat has paws. An anion is negative cause onions make you cry. Phyics is getting confusing? Close you book once you've gotten the concept to an extent and try to visualise it as happening in your room. (My physics teacher used to jump around the room making exaggerated hand gestures to help us visualise the concepts he was teaching).
Make a little song out of math formulas. Tell yourself bad dad jokes that fit into what you are learning when you are memorising the steps to solve an equation.
History and Geography could be the funnest. Imagine yourself as a giant monster looking at the Earth and scratching latitudes and longitudes on earth with your long nails, evilly laughing as you scratch the Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn on 23.5° North and South 'cause the 235th King missed to send his offering. Make a story out of it. Imagine being a citizen of Mesopotamia and watching events unfold rather than rereading it again and again in hopes to remember it.
Learning and studying can never be as entertaining as mindlessly watching youtube videos, but it doesn't have to as traumatisingly bland as school taught us.
Screw the calm nerd stereotype, go crazy with the material you've got to deal with anyway. Make yourself a part of it. Make it entertaining for yourself. At the very least, it'll help prevent a burnout. At most, you might just fall in love with the subject.
I don't like the term "on the autistic spectrum" because I've very bad balance and would definitely fall off
Boundaries are not put up to be hacked away at, and if your first thought about someone telling you their boundaries to to question them/try to tear them down, you might be part of the reason they’re up in the first place
Current collection
Pedazo de vista 😯, desde Remillapata (Vilcashuamán) en la plaza de toros, cerrando el día de la Virgen del Carmen.
#nature #Ayacucho #peru #igers #igersayacucho #igersperu #photo #photography #instapic #happy #marcaayacucho #marcaperu #vilcashuaman #travel #tour #cultura #patrimonio #paisaje (en Vilcas Huamán, Ayacucho, Peru) https://www.instagram.com/p/CgGPFqFMMWI/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Silvia Falcon singing PARAS in Quechua (Tawaintisuyu’s language), Paras is considered by some folk comunities as a ritual dance which dancers get involved into certain rythms to ask for rains and prosperity for haversts.
Quechua
Yeah I just made the title that to catch your attention. Anywho, I am going to Peru for two months (I mean, I’m not sure if I’m going yet I’m still applying but I’m trying to use positive language here) and so I’m trying to get like some basic Quechua before I go. And before anybody goes “but they all speak Spaaanish in Peru” imma go no, some don’t, and also the organization I’m specifically going with interacts a lot with Quechua speaking people. Mostly they need English and Spanish out of me but if I can say “hey, I can hold an itty bitty conversation in Quechua” then even better! SO yeah basically I need Quechua learning resources. Like all of them. So if you ever spot some resource no matter how small or inconsequential you think it is I need it. Give it to me. Please. I beg of you. (Btw I’m gonna be in Cuzco, Peru, so that’s sort of the region/dialect I need but I’ll take anything and everything).
Wiki university has a basic Cusco Quechua course for free! It's also very similar to Ayacucho Quechua. There's also andes.org for vocab and dic.qichwa.net as a dictionary!
Quechua
Yeah I just made the title that to catch your attention. Anywho, I am going to Peru for two months (I mean, I’m not sure if I’m going yet I’m still applying but I’m trying to use positive language here) and so I’m trying to get like some basic Quechua before I go. And before anybody goes “but they all speak Spaaanish in Peru” imma go no, some don’t, and also the organization I’m specifically going with interacts a lot with Quechua speaking people. Mostly they need English and Spanish out of me but if I can say “hey, I can hold an itty bitty conversation in Quechua” then even better! SO yeah basically I need Quechua learning resources. Like all of them. So if you ever spot some resource no matter how small or inconsequential you think it is I need it. Give it to me. Please. I beg of you. (Btw I’m gonna be in Cuzco, Peru, so that’s sort of the region/dialect I need but I’ll take anything and everything).
Nouns
Runasimi: Quechua language
Runa: human being
Simi: language, tongue
Wiraqucha: Mr
Quya: Mrs or Ms
Wayna: gentleman
Sipas: lady
Suti: name
Verbs
Kay: to be
Yachay: to learn, to know, to live
Gustay: to like
Riy: to go
Llamkay: to work
Quy: to give
Mikuy: to eat
Upyay: to drink
Greetings
Buynus diyas: good morning
Rimaykullayki: good morning/afternoon/evening
Chaskillaykim: good morning/afternoon/evening
¿Imaynallataq kachkanki?: how are you?
¿Allillanchu?: (are you) fine?
Allinllam: I’m fine
… kachkani: My name is… (lit. I am…)
Anchatam kusinki: nice to meet you
Ñuqapas anchatam kusinki: nice to meet you too
Getting to know Quechua
Here, some of the most common questions regarding the language of the Incas, a language that you may have not even heard its name in your life. So, why not some facts before starting with the vocabulary lists?
What is Quechua?
Actually, Quechua is not a single language, but a family. We are not going to discuss how linguistics have classified it, but it’s important to know that are two main groups: Quechua I or central, and Quechua II or peripheral. The last one is the most spread but contains multiple dialects. I’ll be focusing in the southern dialects of Quechua II, especially on those called Ayacucho Quechua and Cusco Quechua.
Where is Quechua spoken?
Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru and part of Chile and Colombia. It has official status only in Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador. As you see, it is spoken through the areas that once formed part of the Inca Empire.
How many people speak Quechua?
The real data is unavailable due to the lack of a census in the last years. But according to our last sources and linguistics works the total number would be over 10 million people today.
How do you write it?
The Incas did not develop a script for their language. Today, Quechua was adapted to fit in the Latin alphabet, common to many European languages.
Unfortunately, a problem is that there is not a single way of writing the different sounds, and there have been many attempts to unify the orthography, but many have failed. On my case, I will try to use the “Standard Quechua”, created by the linguist Rodolfo Cerrón Palomino.
Does it look like any other more spread language?
Quechua grammar and vocabulary is not alike any European language, nor Asian, nor African. The closest family is the Aymara languages, which were and are also spoken in South America.
However, a lot of vocabularies have entered to Quechua from Spanish and vice versa. In Bolivia, particularly, Quechua words are used extensively even by non-Quechua speakers.
How does it sound?
Quechua’s phonology varies between the different dialects, but as I’ve said, I’m focusing on the Southern Quechua.
From my point of view, Quechua shares many sounds with Spanish, and thank the new rules of orthography, one could say that every sound has only one way to be written. That is, pronunciation can be determined from spelling.
Some Quechua features:
Quechua is a highly-agglutinative language. Eg:
Buwis: ox
Buwisninkukunapaq: for their oxes
Quechua has not articles.
Quechua has various cases, and uses them instead of prepositions or postpositions.
All the nouns have a regular declination, and all the verbs have a regular conjugation.
Like English, adjective lack gender and number, and are placed before the noun.
There are plenty of suffixes, and many of them aren’t directly translated to other languages.
There are topic and comment suffixes.
Many of those suffixes show the speaker intentions or moods, so Quechua becomes a very expressive language.
Usually, the common word order is SOV.
Renata Flores Rivera, Quechua pop-star