Here's my unedited ALS ice bucket challenge video :D

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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
YOU ARE THE REASON
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Product Placement

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Show & Tell
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
tumblr dot com

Discoholic 🪩
AnasAbdin

Kiana Khansmith
$LAYYYTER

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
occasionally subtle
🪼

roma★

Janaina Medeiros

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@benjayyy93
Here's my unedited ALS ice bucket challenge video :D
Zombies have been done to death. From The Walking Dead to World War Z, zombies are as popular as ever – and maybe even a bit too popular. But from Haitian voodoo to viral infections, the subgenre has had enormous staying power. Forget the zombies in movies and on TV right now – here’s a...
Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson on the defunding of NASA.
Wow. Fantastic.
Its so true though
Funny and bizarre German animal names
The German language is famous for some really long nouns (Donaudampfschiffahrtsgesellschaftskapitän comes to mind). This is because German nouns, verbs, prepositions and adjectives are like lego bricks; you can stick them together in almost any way to create new words that encapsulate new concepts. This gives the language a special ability to name just about anything. You could call it the German language’s lego brick-like quality, or Legosteineigenschaft (see what I just did there?).
But why does German rely on such an elaborate process to name things as simple as squirrels? When broken down into their separate components, the names of familiar animals mutate into bizarre new creatures.
The Uncanny X-Tiere
Comics are full of heroes with names like super, wonder, iron, ultra, bat or cat followed by -man, -woman, -girl or -boy. A lot of German animal names work the same way, where Tier – the word for animal – is preceded by a word describing that animal’s “super power”.
Stinktier – stink animal (skunk)
Faultier – lazy animal (sloth)
Gürteltier – belt animal (armadillo)
Murmeltier – mumbling animal (groundhog)
Schnabeltier – beak animal (platypus)
Maultier – mouth animal (mule)
Trampeltier – trampling animal (bactrian camel). The verb trampeln means to trample or tread upon, whereas the noun Trampel is a clumsy oaf.
Sometimes suffixes get more specific than -tier, but still tend to describe the wrong animal:
Schildkröte – shield toad (tortoise)
Waschbär – wash bear (raccoon)
Nacktschnecke – naked snail (slug)
Fledermaus – flutter mouse (bat)
Seehund – sea dog (seal)
Tintenfisch – ink fish (squid)
Truthahn – threatening chicken (turkey). Trut is onomatopoeic for the trut-trut-trut cluck of a turkey, but it’s also been hypothesized that the name comes from the Middle German droten which means “to threaten”.
No, I’m Pretty Sure That’s A Pig
Swine seem to be a popular yardstick in German animal taxonomy.
Schweinswal – pig whale (porpoise)
Seeschwein – sea pig (dugong). Not to be confused with the Seekuh, or sea cow, known in English as a manatee.
Stachelschwein – spike pig (porcupine). The English word is actually just as literal; porcupine sounds a lot like “pork spine”.
Wasserschwein – water pig (capybara)
Meerschweinchen – ocean piglet (guinea pig). The ending -chen denotes something small. Add it to the end of Schwein and you get a little pig, or piglet. Since the stems Meer and Wasser are often interchangeable, it’s most likely that Meerschweinchen actually means little capybara.
Just Plain Weird
I’d like to end this list by giving one animal a category all to itself: the humble squirrel.
Eichhörnchen:
little oak horn: Eiche (oak tree) + Horn (horn) + -chen (little)
oak croissant: Eiche (oak tree) + Hörnchen (croissant)
alternate names:
Eichkätzchen (regional name) and Eichkatzerl (Austria) – oak kitten
Calling a squirrel a “tree kitten” is reasonably literal, but where does “little oak horn” come from? It seems that the answer comes down to a misplaced h: Eichhörnchen comes from the Old and Middle German eichorn, which has nothing to do with oak trees or horns. In this case, the eich comes from the ancient Indo-Germanic word aig, which means agitated movement, combined with the now obsolete suffix -orn. Somewhere in history a superfluous h was added (along with the diminutive -chen ending) but the original meaning remained. Today, Hörnchen is a category of rodents that includes all squirrels, chipmunks, groundhogs, prairie dogs and flying squirrels.
Keep an eye on this spot for an upcoming post where we’ll delve deeper into the animal kingdom: branching out to birds, insects, reptiles, fishes and any other mammals we find crawling around.
Yet another while since I've posted, but been listening to the Thin Red Line soundtrack a lot recently, and its just captivating
Significant lack of Movie Posting on this blog of mine, so here's the new Trailer for Nolan's Sci-Fi epic: Interstellar. Cannot wait for this, hits Theaters November 2014
miss True Detective :/
On April 26th, 1986, a catastrophic nuclear accident occurred at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine. To date it is the worst nuclear power plant disaster in history.
Images:
Ukraine, Chernobyl, April 30, 1986: A television broadcast of the disaster site.
Ukraine, Chernobyl, May 15, 1986: Military helicopter sprays a chemicals which were meant to reduce the harmful effects of radiation.
Ukraine, Chernobyl, May 10, 1986: A policeman checks radiation levels of vehicles leaving an area near the power plant.
Sweden, June 1986: A farmer working in a field wearing a suit to protect himself from potential radiation.
France, Strasbourg, 16 May 1986: Measuring levels of radioactivity in the products sold at an outdoor bazaar.
Ukraine, Chernobyl, October 2, 1986: Woman holding a pig with birth defects which resulted from the radiation.
Ukraine, Pripyat, May 26, 2003: View of an abandoned housing complex.
Ukraine, Pripyat, May 26, 2003: An amusement park in the abandoned city of Pripyat.
Ukraine, Pripyat, January 27, 2006: Children’s shoes left at a contaminated nursery school.
Ukraine, Pripyat, January 27, 2006: Baby cribs and a gas mask left at a contaminated nursery school.
Episode 74: Ladies Night
In this episode we discuss crushes, pronunciation, and calling out the wrong person’s name in bed.
This episode is brought to you by CombatGent.com — Tailored suits starting at $160! Use coupon code “jakeandamir" and get a free tie with any purchase.
*deep sigh of contentment*
this pleases me more than it should
Are you high?
Nah, we just really love the internet.
AWWWWWWW
Jena, Germany (by freyavev)
how can you take a picture of Jena and NOT take a picture of the Jen Tower :/, otherwise what a small world!!!
I dont know why, but I want this on my wall hahah
Heartbreaking stuff