HYDRATE OR DIEDRATE BROS -Telum,
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ojovivo

Kaledo Art

Andulka
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Peter Solarz
taylor price
tumblr dot com
will byers stan first human second
RMH
One Nice Bug Per Day
Cosmic Funnies
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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roma★
todays bird
sheepfilms
trying on a metaphor
NASA
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@hx--raeth
HYDRATE OR DIEDRATE BROS -Telum,
Well-Known and Obscure Toxins: How They Work
Well this is a morbid subject but HEY it’s almost Halloween baby!! I was super curious about what toxins actually do on a molecular level after reading about cone snails. Obviously toxins can kill you, but how?? I wanted to know the grisly details. This is not an exhaustive list, just some types of poison, venom, and other toxic substances I was curious about, so let’s get to it.
Deadly Nightshade
Where is it found? Atropa belladonna grows in Europe, North Africa and Western Asia.
How it works: slows your heart waaaaaay down. deadly nightshade contains tropane alkaloids atropine, hyoscine (scopolamine), and hyoscyamine which disrupt the nervous system’s ability to regulate activities such as heart rate, breathing and sweating. It can cause narcosis, paralysis and heart failure as a result. Yikes. But an antidote exists that can reverse these affects if administered in time.
Toxicity: the entire plant is toxic, with roots having the highest toxicity but berries posing the greatest threat to humans because of their appearance. 10-20 berries can kill an adult, and 2-4 can kill a child. Symptoms of mild poisoning include dilated pupils, sensitivity to light, loss of balance, confusion, hallucinations (wild) and convulsions. Doesn’t sound like a good time.
Do not eat the shiny attractive berries!!! (cows and rabbits and other animals can eat it but humans, dogs and cats…NOT SO MUCH)
Totally fun and not morbid fact: during the Renaissance, belladonna was used by women in small quantities to dilate pupils and give a seductive appearance, and this is how it gets its name belladonna, or beautiful woman. Atropa comes from the Greek Fate Atropos who cuts the threads of mortal lives with her shears. Snip snip!
Hemlock
Where is it found? Conium maculatum grows naturally in Europe and North Africa, and has spread to North and South America, Australia and Western Asia.
How it works: stops your breathing. the flowers contain an alkaloid called coniine, which directly affects the nervous system and causes paralysis of respiratory muscles, leading to death from oxygen deprivation. Hemlock poisoning is treated by artificial ventilation for 48-72 hours until the effects wear off.
Toxicity: about 100 milligrams of coniine is fatal to an adult. That’s about 6-8 hemlock leaves, or a smaller dose of the seeds or root. Animals can also be poisoned and killed by hemlock, but luckily dangerous substances cannot be passed into the human food chain from milk or fowl.
Basically you’re only gonna get poisoned by this if someone puts it in your tea, because I assume you’re not gonna just go around just like…chomping on pretty flowers. Right? Right?? ok good.
Arsenic
Where is it found? arsenic is a metalloid that occurs often with sulfurs and metals. It can be present in volcanic ash and groundwater, and as a result can be found in low (acceptable) levels in plants and seafood. Good news: it is rare to find arsenic occurring at dangerous levels in nature.
How it works: in high levels, arsenic disrupts ATP production and causes organ failure due to necrotic cell death. This process can last between 2 hours to multiple days. It can also be fatal in lower doses administered over a period of time, and as such, was a popular murder weapon when it was readily available during the 1800s in England. Symptoms such as vomiting and diarrhea don’t immediately alert someone that there has been an attempted murder unless maybe you’re Sherlock Holmes.
Toxicity: google probably thinks I’m a murderer and won’t tell me just how much arsenic will kill a person. COME ON, google!!! it’s for SCIENCE!
Arsenic is no longer readily available for people to just get in large quantities, so that’s a RELIEF.
Cyanide
Where is it found? cyanide is a chemical compound produced by certain algae, bacteria and fungi. It is also found in plants such as peaches, apples, apricots and bitter almonds. A type of bamboo that grows in Madagascar is so rich in cyanide that it would kill humans, but not the golden bamboo lemur for whom this bamboo is a primary source of food!!! You go girl, eat that cyanide bamboo.
How it works: in non-bamboo-lemurs, cyanide disrupts ATP production, affects the central nervous system and heart, and causes histotoxic hypoxia: the inability of cells to take up oxygen from the bloodstream. Antidotes can work if administered in time for lower doses of cyanide.
Toxicity: 200 milligrams of solid cyanide or a cyanide solution, or exposure to airborne cyanide of 270 parts per million is sufficient to cause death within minutes. Um, YIKES. Really, cyanide was already scary enough as a solid before nature went and made it into a gas that kills upon inhalation. DEEPLY uncool.
Murder mystery writers: slip belladona or arsenic into your literary victim’s tea. Belladonna is sweet, arsenic is tasteless, but cyanide has an acrid and bitter taste.
Fun (well, not fun) fact: if you eat 200 apple seeds (about 40 apple cores) you will receive a fatal dose of cyanide. So like, don’t do that. An apple a day keeps the doctor away and is completely safe, but 40 apples apple cores a day WILL KILL YOU
Vampire Bat Saliva
Where is it found? Vampire bats are found in the Americas.
How it works: a toxic substance called Draculin (I’m serious) in the saliva of vampire bats acts as an anticoagulant by inhibiting an enzyme involved in the coagulation pathway.
Toxicity: vampire bats are indeed venomous and toxic, but they are not at all lethal. It just sorta sucks if you’re being bitten by a vampire bat, but you’ll live. Unless that bat has rabies. Vampire bat saliva also contains an analgesic, meaning the bites are almost completely painless. SO THAT’S SOMETHING
Cobra Venom
“hello do you have a moment to hear about cell death?”
Where is it found? Many species of cobra are found throughout Africa, Southwest and Southeast Asia.
How it works: most cobra venom includes neurotoxins that cause paralysis as well as cytotoxins that cause necrosis and blood coagulation. blood coagulation can happen in minutes.
Toxicity: many types of cobra venom are treatable, but may leave disfigurement from necrosis. If this isn’t scary enough for you, just know that spitting cobras can reach 2.7 m (8.9 ft) in length and like to aim for the eyes.
But you’d still rather be bitten by a cobra than THIS deadly mofo:
Venom of the Inland Taipan
Where is it found? the inland taipan is the most venomous snake in the world and lives, YOU GUESSED IT, in Australia, ie the place where everything is designed to kill you. Evolution decided it can reach 1.8 meters (5.9 feet) with a maximum length of 2.5 meters (8.2 feet), which I think everyone can agree is a dick move on evolution’s part. Take it back, TAKE IT BACK!!!!!
How it works: the venom contains neurotoxins, hemotoxins, and myotoxins AND an enzyme to increase absorption of the venom. Basically it causes paralysis, blood coagulation and muscle damage, because one of these things wasn’t enough apparently. Antivenoms against Australian venomous snakes exist but are least effective against the venom of the inland taipan.
Toxicity: the inland taipan’s venom has a murine LD50 value of 0.025m/kg. This means there is a 50% chance that .025 milligrams per kilogram of weight will cause death. It’s bite contains enough venom to kill at least 100 adult humans. But GOOD NEWS! the inland taipan lives in such remote places that it rarely comes in contact with people. Other slightly less venomous snakes are therefore responsible for more deaths. ….So that’s…still terrifying. just don’t go into the woods in Australia FOR THE LOVE OF GOD
What’s deadlier than the deadliest snake in the world, you ask?
Tetrodotoxin
Where is it found? tetrodotoxin is found in several animals such as pufferfish, moon snails and the small but deadly Australian blue ringed octopus (DAMMIT Australia)
How it works: blocks sodium channels. This prevents normal transmission of signals between the body and brain, causing loss of sensation, paralysis and inability to breathe. Fun!!! Don’t pick up the frickin evil little octopus
Toxicity: more powerful than cyanide, that’s for sure, about a thousand times more powerful in fact. the oral median lethal dose (LD50) for mice as 334 micrograms per kilogram. Fatal pufferfish poisoning result in death in about 17 minutes. The blue-ringed octopus, however, carries enough venom to kill 26 adult humans within just a few minutes. There is no anti-venom.
What’s worse than that, you ask? Ah, you shouldn’t have asked.
Conotoxin
Where is it found? Cone snails are found in the Indo-Pacific, the Cape of South Africa, the Mediterranean, and even southern California. Smaller species are not that dangerous. Larger species, however…
How it works: paralysis within minutes. cone snails have multiple harpoons to administer venom to prey (or unsuspecting humans). the harpoons deliver a venom that has HUNDREDS of different types of toxins, each targeting different nerve channels or receptors. Some cone snail venom even includes pain-reducing toxins. These pain reducing toxins can be 100 to 1,000 times more powerful than morphine. How THOUGHTFUL.
Toxicity: vastly more potent than tetrodotoxin. the oral median lethal dose (LD50) for mice is is 10 to 100 micrograms/kilogram. So like, GOOD LUCK WITH THAT LOL
Ricin
Where is it found? Ricin is obtained from the beans of the castor oil plant.
How it works: inhibits protein production and results in organ failure, respiratory failure and circulatory shock.
Toxicity: The median lethal dose (LD50) of ricin is around 22 micrograms per kilogram of body weight. If that sounds bad just wait till you hear about poison dart frogs 😭
VX
Where is it found? Nowhere in nature. VX is synthetic. It is an oily amber colored liquid in its natural form, was first developed as a pesticide and later for chemical warfare. It is considered a weapon of mass destruction and is banned under the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993.
How it works: causes stimulation and fatigue of muscarinic and nicotinic ACh receptors, resulting in violent contractions followed by paralysis and death by asphyxiation.
Toxicity: 7 micrograms/kilogram. this is one of the most toxic synthetic substances on earth. Humans have got nothing on mother nature though…
Batrachotoxin
(This guy is called phyllobates TERRIBILIS. but is his cute little face terrible? noooo.)
Where is it found? in certain types of beetles, birds and poison dart frogs found in Colombia.
How it works: similar to conotoxin, batrachotoxin interrupts sodium channels. The resulting migration of Na+ ions causes heart failure and paralysis.
Toxicity: The LD50 is around 2 micrograms per kilogram, meaning that an amount the size of two grains of table salt will kill you, and that this is even worse than a cone snail, Ricin, or VX. Batrachotoxin is one of the deadliest alkaloids known. No antidote exists.
Fun frog fact: this was the poison commonly used by the Embera-Wounaan for poison darts, and that’s where poison dart frogs get their name! How…cute.
Botulinum, most toxic substance in the world
Where is it found? made by the bacteria Clostridium botulinum and related species.
How it works: causes Botulism, which if untreated can result in paralysis and respiratory failure by preventing the release of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Botulinum is used in very very very VEEEEEEERY small amounts in Botox, in case you ever needed reasons NOT to do Botox lol.
Toxicity: the lethal dose of 1.3–2.1 nanograms per kilogram in humans. of any toxin natural or synthetic, this is the deadliest known. However!! Actual good news this time: treatments involving antitoxin therapy and intubation are very successful and mortality from Botulism is extremely low. Yay!
More good news: toxins have been instrumental in medicinal breakthroughs throughout history and continue to be vital to modern medicine. A drug for diabetes was recently synthesized from Gila monster venom: it increases the production of insulin when blood sugar levels are high. A painkiller has been developed for chronic pain patients that is derived from a component of the venom of our friend, you guessed it, the cone snail! These are just two examples of toxins being used in medicine, and a lot of research is still being done because face it: we still don’t know a lot about how our bodies work. Paralyzing agents are extremely important to our understanding of the body and the development of non-opiate non-addictive painkillers because of how they disrupt signals between nerves and the brain.
Long story short: don’t eat nightshade and stay OFF AUSTRALIAN BEACHES and you should be just fine.
Oh and your tea is getting cold ;)
my birb
SOFT BORB AAA
Everyone: we want more LGBT+ characters in our stories !
Rick Riordan: okay here have a gay Italian sad boy
Everyone: I mean, it’s all right but-…
Rick Riordan: I understand. Want a bisexual main character, who happens to be a god?
Everyone: oh that’s actually nice…but! How about girls-
Rick Riordan: you’re totally right. Here have a pair of lesbian hunters
Everyone: …um this is actually pretty nice…how about-
Rick Riordan: a pansexual main character?
Everyone: yea-
Rick Riordan: with a gender fluid love interest? Say no more! Anything else?
Everyone:
I don’t know… why not an aro/ace character maybe ?
The Hunters of Artemis
This is why Rick Riordan is so important
He is like little baby
reblog for riordan. love this guy! also, when he got the Stonewall Award for the Magnus Chase series? his response:
“…it’s a call to do better in my own writing. As one of my genderqueer readers told me recently, “Hey, thanks for Alex. You didn’t do a terrible job!” I thought: Yes! Not doing a terrible job was my goal!”
love it.
I can not explain how much I love rick roairdane.
Rick Riordan is also using his money and fame to lift marginalized authors. He started a whole imprint called Rick Riordan Presents. The books published there have mythology and folklore from all over the world, and they’re written by authors who actually belong to those cultures. The first three books announced have stories based in Korean, Mayan, and Indian cultures, written by Yoon Ha Lee, Jennifer Cervantes, and Roshani Chokshi respectively.
Rick Riordan is pretty fucking cool. Ive never seen a YA put as much care and effort into growing as a writer, specifically with a focus on increasing diversity, as him.
The fact that he’s a UT alum from San Antonio who taught middle school English just warms my heart.
PLEASE click on the link to his Stonewall acceptance speech my god you won’t regret it
Attention JKR, this is how representation works
Russian Language Resources?
Sooo I just started to study Russian a bit more seriously and I was wondering if anyone has any tips on online resources? Any blogs, masterposts, sites?
I’m mostly interested in grammar stuff, since I have a lot of native speakers on my hands to practice spoken language!
Btw if you post a lot about this kind of content like/reblog this post, I will check your blog out!
Thank you so much in advance! ❤
Russian Grammar Anna group Vvord Explore russian Everyday russian LR Russnet Russian for everyone RussianPod101 Master Russian Russian for free BliuBliu Russian Cornell Lingualy Speak Russian Study russian online Russian Yes Russian Practice Russian Learn 50 languages My languages WordBrewery ieLanguages
Also, since you mentioned grammar, check out this post with grammar books.
Enjoy your studies ^^
Textbooks for Russian learners in documents
0-A1 — ELEMENTARY:
“Иллюстрированный словарь русского языка” Джой Оливьер
“Пять элементов” (A1) Т. Эсмантова
“Поехали!” С. Чернышов
“A living Russian grammar” N. Bitecktina
“Фонетические игры и упражнения” И.С. Милованова
“Русский с азов”
“Дорога в Россию” В.Е. Антонова
“Давайте знакомиться!” В.А. Красман
“Шкатулочка” М.Н. Баринцева
“10 уроков этикета” А.Л. Максимова (speaking, basic vocabulary)
“Русский в играх” А.А. Акишина (Russian language at play)
“Приглашение в Россию” (elementary practical course of Russian) Е.Л. Корчагина
A2-B1 — BASIC:
“Пять элементов” (А2) Т. Эсмантова
“Говорите правильно!” Н.Б. Караванова
“Пишем правильно” (guide to writing) Г.В. Беляева
“Очень простые истории” Н.В. Кабяк
“Русский язык в упражнениях” С.А. Хавронина
“Дорога в Россию” В.Е. Антонова
“Приходите!.. Приезжайте!.. Прилетайте..!” А.Н. Богомолов
“Поехали!” С. Чернышов
“Голоса” Richard Robin
New Russia: 127 Natural Dialogs and the Verbs You Need Most for Communication
“Русский язык в деловой среде” Larysa Fast (buisness language)
B2-C1:
“Владимир” Г.М. Левина
Учебно-тренировочные тесты. Грамматика. Лексика.
Учебно-тренировочные тесты. Чтение.
Учебно-тренировочные тесты. Письмо.
“Какой падеж? Какой предлог?” А.В. Величко
“Трудные случаи употребления семантически близких слов” С.И. Дерягина
“Игровые задания” (vocabulary and tactic of comunicating)
“Россия сегодня” А.Родимкина (reading & writing)
“Окно в Россию” Л.Ю. Скороходов
“Русский язык в деловой среде” Larysa Fast (buisness language)
ADVANCED:
“Русский язык: по страницам российской прессы” Н.Е. Сигова
“Россия: экономика и общество” А. Родимкина, Н. Ландсман
“Россия: день за днем” А. Родимкина, Н. Ландсман
“Россия: день сегодняшний” А. Родимкина, Н. Ландсман
Т. Попова, Е. Юрков “Поговорим. Пособие по разговорной практике”
“Чистая грамматика” Е.Р. Ласкарева
“Обсуждаем глобальные проблемы, повторяем грамматику” Н.В. Баско
“Человек в современном мире” Ю.А. Кумбашева
“Падежи! Ах, падежи” Кузьмич И.П., Лариохина Н.М.
“Русский язык в деловой среде” Larysa Fast (buisness language)
EXTRAS:
“Dirty Russian Everyday Slang” Erin Coyn & Igor Fisun
“Современная русская идеоматика” (idioms) Е.Е. Минакова
“Русские фразеологизмы в картинках” (idioms)
“Русский язык в грамматических таблицах” Редькина М.А.
Grammar materials in pictures and tables
Russian Grammar in Illustrations
Teach Yourself Begginer’s Russian Grammar
Texts and exercises for all learners (choose your level and practice readind & writing)
If you’re looking for something more specific ask me and I help you to find it! Feel free to refine anything and inquire texbooks for francophone/korean speaking/chinese speaking etc if you need them!
Add more textbooks in comments :3
language resources
hi guys since i just hit 1k (1.2k now) i decided to make this :) i don’t have a lot for other languages besides Spanish or French, but this is mainly what i have :) THERES LITERALLY NO ORDER TO THIS SORRY
General
website 1 (verbal planet)
worksheets
vocab lists
grammar explanations
free downloads
website 2 (the language gym)
you can choose what tenses you want to be studied on
tests vocab
play games
website 3 (word brewery)
great for vocab and practicing understanding
Spanish
English
Chinese
Arabic
Portuguese
Russian
Japanese
German
French
Italian
Polish
Ukrainian
Korean
Serbian (Latin)
Serbian (Cryillic)
Hungarian
Greek
Swedish
Norwegian
improving vocabulary
how to learn a new language 1+ language masterpost
how to learn languages 2
speed of a language (what is the fastest lang?)
apps for many languages
printable
losing interest in a language class
BaDum!
starting a language journal
language tips
studying tips
free online courses
topics to talk about in ur target lang.
ASL (american sign language)
tips
alphabet
Spanish
conversation vocab
animals
essay vocab 1
essay vocab 2
essay vocab 3
saying hello
saying goodbye
spanish tenses masterpost
nature vocab
mental health vocab
resources 1
resources 2
resources 3
some really random vocab
cual vs que
spanish comics
quick “today i have to” exercise
quick “tomorrow i have to” exercise
reaction phrases
time vocab
que fue explained
alli vs alla
summer vocab
cinema vocab
future indicative examples
para vs por
weather
extra handy vocab for conversations
linking time with actions
more basics
French
resources 1
resources 2
resources 3
resources 4
resources 5
resources 6
Le Passé Composé masterpost
langage-et-linguistique
basics cheat sheet
saying theres no point in french
beautiful vocab
verbs
adverbs
adjectives
be mean in french
animals vocab
weather vocab
slang
small talk
example of studying a song
my study playlist (hon hon)
trees and flowers vocab
im grateful in french
guessing french genders
dog vocab ;)
harry potter in french PDFs
level 3 stuff ( @dehgastudies )
questions + answers vocab
how to learn french
feelings
nighttime vocab
handy vocab for reading articles
travel vocab
essay vocab
places vocab
Italian
guessing italian genders
masterpost
resources
geography/astrology vocab
German
mission berlin game story
slow german
kids game !! easy vocab
language guide
Greek
great resources to begin learning
the basics
modern greek
greek resources
definitive article
key phrases
more basics
greek 101 site
Czech
vocab
Hungarian
vocab
Chinese
stroke order
mandarin verbs
basic words
Romanian
school vocab
appearance vocab
emotions
Polish
astrology vocab
Korean
travel vocab
how to read
korean grammar
how to study korean!
Portuguese
animals
ta falado
oneness
Hebrew
back to school resources
Japanese
learning
basics
household items vocab
clothing items vocab
Norwegian
textbooks based on CEFR levels
head vocab
resources
Vietnamese
resources
resources 2
alphabet
lessons
survival phrases
Welsh
resources !!
Resources for 125+ languages
I’ve found this list with resources for over 125 languages on pastebin (https://pastebin.com/UjkfE3qk - I can’t use hyperlinks in this post for some reason). I reposted it under the cut in case it ever gets lost but it includes the following languages:
Afrikaans, Ainu, Akkadian, Albanian, Ancient Sanskrit, Arabic (MSA as well as six dialects), Aramaic, Armenian, Assyrian, Azerbaijani, Basque, Bengali, Berber, Breton, Cajun, French, Cantonese, Catalan, Cherokee, Classical Armenian, Classical Greek, Classical Latin, Coptic, Cornish, Crimean Gothic, Croatian, Czech, Dari, Dutch, Egyptian, English, Esperanto, Estonian, Faeroese, Farsi, Finnish, French, Frisian, Furlan, Genovese, Georgian, German, Gothic, Greek (Modern), Greenlandic, Guarani, Hakka, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Hindi, Hittite, Hungarian, Icelandic, Igbo, Indonesian, Inuktitut, Irish , Italian, Japanese, Jèrriais, Koine Greek, Khmer, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay, Maltese, Manchu, Mandarin Chinese, Manx, Maori, Mari, Mayan (Classical), Mayan (Tzotzil), Mayan (Yucatec), Mixtec, Nahuatl, Norwegian, Okinawan, Old Church Slavonic, Old English, Old Iranian, Old Irish, Old Norse, Old Prussian, Old Tupi, Persian, Middle Polish, Portuguese, Proto-Indo-European, Quechua, Romanian, Rromani, Russian, Sami, Sanskrit, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian, Serbo-Croatian, Shanghainese, Sicilian, Slovene, Sm'algyax, Spanish, Sumerian, Swahili, Swedish, Tajik, Tengwar, Thai, Tocharian, Tok Pisin, Toki Pona, Tongan, Turkish, Vietnamese, Volapük, Welsh, Wu, Xibe, Yoruba, Yup'ik and Zulu
Some of the links are broken and there are more resources for some languages than for others but I still think it’s really worth checking out, especially for those of you interested in lesser known languages.
Keep reading
DICTIONARY MASTERPOST
pons [Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Slovenian, Spanish, Turkish]
shabdkosh [Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu]
wordreference [Arabic, Chinese, Czech, French, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Swedish, Turkish]
dict.cc [Albanian, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Latin, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish]
bab.la [Arabic, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Swahili, Turkish]
linguee [Bulgarian, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Latvian, Lithuanian, Maltese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish]
cambridge [Arabic, Catalan, Chinese, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malaysian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Thai, Turkish, Vietnamese]
dicts.info [73 languages]
dict.com [30 languages]
larousse [French, German, Italian, Spanish]
hablaa [73 languages]
glosbe [2150 languages]
freelang [267 languages]
Afrikaans rieme.co.za
Albanian argjio
Amharic abyssinica, amharicdictionary
Arabic arabdict, almaany, firdaous
Armenian nayiri, english2armenian
Bengali / Bangla bword, english-bangla, ovidhan
Burmese burmese-dictionary, myordbok
Cantonese cantodict
Catalan catalandictionary
Croatian hrvatski-rjecnik
Czech seznam, slovnik
Dutch vandale
Estonian sõnastik, dukelupus, eki.ee
Farsi dictionary-farsi, farsidic, aryanpour, ariadic
Finnish kaannos, findc
Georgian lang.interes, translate, targmne, nplg.gov, margaliti
German langenscheit, leo
Greek greek-language
Hawaiian hawaiiandictionary
Hebrew morfix
Hindi hindi-english, hinkhoj, hindi wordnet
Hungarian sztaki, dictzone, topszótár
Icelandic snara
Indonesian kamus, sederet
Irish irishdictionary, potafocal
Italian garzantilinguistica
Japanese tangorin, excite, jisho
Javanese kamusjawa
Kazakh lugat
Korean naver, daum, zkorean
Khmer angkor-planet, kheng
Latvian letonika, latvianforyou
Lithuanian anglu-lietuviu, dict.lt
Macedonian time, off.net.mk
Malay bhanot, kamus
Maltese mlrs.research, englishmaltesedictionary
Mandarin dict.cn, mdbg
Mongolian bolor toli, englishmongolian
Norwegian ordnett
Palauan tekinged
Polish pitt.edu, ling.pl
Portuguese portuguesedictionary
Punjabi ijunoon, learnpunjabi
Russian multitran
Spanish spanishdict
Swahili kiswahili, africanlanguages
Swedish ord
Tagalog pinoydictionary, tagalog-dictionary, tagaloglang
Tamil tamildict, tamilcube, agarathi, tamildictionary
Telugu andhrabharati, telugupedia
Tibetan eng-tib
Thai thai-language, thai2english, longdo, linedict
Turkish tureng, turkishdictionary, turkishclass
Ukrainian slovnenya, cybermova
Urdu urduword, urduenglishdictionary, urdu123, studypart
Uyghur uyghurdictionary, yulghun
Uzbek zangorikema
Welsh geiriadur
Vietnamese vietdictionary, vdict
Zulu isizulu
BaBa Dum! A Fun Vocabulary Game
Vocabulary can be a difficult aspect of learning any language. There are so many different words to know and it’s hard to know words for seemingly random items. That is where BaBa Dum is a great resource!
BaBa Dum is a game based learning website where you have several different options to play with. The options include:
Choosing Picture from Word
Choosing Word from Picture
Choosing Picture from Sound
Typing Word from Picture
And a mixture of everything!
Obviously there are several options open for whatever method suits you.
Right now, BaBa Dum has a fairly extensive language list available, including:
British English
American English
Chinese
French
German
Italian
Greek
Portuguese
Japanese
Lithuanian
Polish
Russian
Spanish
Swedish
It also has a Japanese Kana learning game!
Overall, this website seems to be very useful, and is definitely worth checking out!
It’s great fun, and the illustrations are really cool!
(too bad the Japanese vocab is only in hiragana—unless I missed something)
BOOKS FOR THE BROKE LANGBLRS
So instead of studying today, I went through a bunch of websites to find some links for free parallel reading. Give these a go:
https://www.grimmstories.com/
http://www.childrensbooksforever.com/index.html
https://www.lonweb.org/
http://bilinguis.com/
!!!! http://paralleltext.io/
http://readlang.com/
Resources for languages of Russia
Here is a cloud folder full of resources for various languages of Russia*, about 40 in total. Most of these books are in Russian, but still might be useful to you.
If you have questions or any resources that you would like to add to the folder, please DM me!
*I included languages spoken in Russia that are not state languages in any other country — ie, no Korean or English. Yiddish is included due to its recognition in Jewish Autonomous Oblast (and because I have resources for it).
Full list under the cut:
Keep reading
FSC interviews in a nutshell
How Do We Know How Small An Elementary Particle Is?
“But here’s the thing: we don’t know that this is true. Sure, the Standard Model says that this is the way that things are, but we know that the Standard Model doesn’t give us the final answer to everything. In fact, we know that at some level, the Standard Model must break down and be wrong, because it doesn’t account for gravity, dark matter, dark energy, or the preponderance of matter (and not antimatter) in the Universe.
There has to be something out there more to nature than this. And maybe it’s because the particles that we think are fundamental, point-like, and indivisible today actually aren’t. Perhaps, if we go to high-enough energies and small-enough wavelengths, we’ll be able to see that at some point, between our current energy scales and the Planck energy scale, there’s actually more to the Universe than we presently know.”
Are the fundamental particles that we know of truly fundamental? Are they point-like entities, with no finite size, no internal structure, and no capacity to ever be split apart into smaller entities? According to the Standard Model, they are. But observationally, we know that the Standard Model isn’t all that there is. Moreover, we’ve got a long way to go (some 16 orders of magnitude) from our present experimental limits to the Planck scale, and what we think of as “fundamental” could undergo a revolution at any place, without any warning, if only we dare to look.
Right now, the particles we know of appear fundamental down to a limit of about 10^-19 meters, but it’s a long way down to forever. Here’s what we know today.
^when me and my friends meet up
So GUYS i like club penguin
-gabs