Just your daily reminder to not check up on people who hurt you.
hello vonnie
RMH
Mike Driver

Love Begins

pixel skylines

Andulka

@theartofmadeline
Today's Document
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
KIROKAZE
Keni

Kiana Khansmith
Sade Olutola
Claire Keane
Monterey Bay Aquarium
One Nice Bug Per Day
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Discoholic šŖ©
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć
will byers stan first human second
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@leseratte24
Just your daily reminder to not check up on people who hurt you.
I'm sorry who wrote my biography? I would like to thank them for doing an excellent job. Great detail.
"how german sounds to other languages" videos: ha ha look at how aggressive german sounds when it's yelled at full volume by a furious bavarian
By Emm Roy
This is so important.
Left.
im tired of things costing money
On this day in 1960, 34 brave students from Virginia Union University staged a sit-in at a segregated lunch counter in Thalhimerās Department Store (which stood at Broad and 6th Street), after a campus visit from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. All thirty-four were subsequently arrested, in the first mass arrest of the civil rights movement of 1960, and became known across the country as the Richmond 34.
The 34 challenged their convictions and took their case all the way to the national Supreme Court, where the conviction was overturned in a legal victory for civil rights nationwide.
The names of the Richmond 34 are: Elizabeth Patricia Johnson, Joanna Hinton, Gloria C. Collins, Patricia A. Washington, Barbara A. Thornton, Lois B. White, Thalma Y. Hickman, Celia E. Jones, Carolyn Ann Horne, Marise L. Ellison, Virginia G. Simms, Frank George Pinkston, Charles Melvin Sherrod, Albert Van Graves Jr., Ford Tucker Johnson Jr., Leroy M. Bray Jr., Wendell T. Foster Jr., Anderson J. Franklin, Ronald B. Smith, Larry Pridgen, Woodrow B. Grant, Joseph E. Ellison, Gordon Coleman, Milton Johnson, Donald Vincent-Goode, Robert B. Dalton, Samuel F. Shaw, Randolph A. Tobias, Clarence A. Jones, Richard C. Jackson, George Wendall Harris Jr., John J. McCall, Leotis L. Pryor, and Raymond B. Randolph Jr.
you, an intellectual: the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis doesn't hold much water.
me, a chemical engineer: Oh, I don't know... that Benjamin Whorf guy seemed like he was pretty smart
Music now vs. music then. (by Seany Boy)
SEVERE WEATHER WARNING:Ā The weather forecast for tomorrow is a 800% chance of failure and tears..
oh jeez, wish Iād seen this sooner...
fucked up that its march and im nobodys gf
If you ever feel like youāve fucked up just remember that Ireland accidentally legalized crystal meth
my new favorite thing is adding ābitchā to the end of famous and influential quotes not all those who wander are lost, bitch
if at first you donāt succeed, try again bitch
do or do not. there is no try, bitch.
To thine own self be true bitch
Call me Ishmael, bitch
FOR NARNIA, BITCH
Itās the circle of life bitch
Happy Valentineās Day nerds!
Fucking a
at what point in history do you think americans stopped having british accents
Actually, Americans still have the original British accent. We kept it over time and Britain didnāt. What we currently coin as a British accent developed in England during the 19th century among the upper class as a symbol of status. Historians often claim that Shakespeare sounds better in an American accent.
whAT THE FUCK
Iām too tired for this
Always add in the video that according to linguists, Native southern drawl is a slowed down British.
Tā be or not tābe, yāall.
Fun fact: Same thing happened with the French accent. French Canadians still have the original French accent from the 15th century.
Ćtāe ou nāpĆ“ zĆŖtāe, vous zāauts.
Iāve been trying to find this post for months. Iām freakishly obsessed with this and want the truth of what early colonists sounded like.
Iām probably the only one whoād never seen this, but just in case.