Die Geschichte um die sogenannten Backrooms entstand 2019 durch ein Foto in einem Internetforum. Nun hat der YouTube-Star Kane Parsons alias
styofa doing anything
$LAYYYTER
Xuebing Du
Show & Tell

if i look back, i am lost

JVL
Mike Driver
d e v o n
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trying on a metaphor

blake kathryn

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Janaina Medeiros
sheepfilms

oozey mess
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Sweet Seals For You, Always

Product Placement

izzy's playlists!

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@mythologybits
Die Geschichte um die sogenannten Backrooms entstand 2019 durch ein Foto in einem Internetforum. Nun hat der YouTube-Star Kane Parsons alias
Joanna Karpowicz „7 AM, Poland”, 42 x 29,7 cm, acrylic on paper, 2024 (from artist's fb page)
The Archivist
Cracow, by Tomasz Mazoń
'The Twelve Dancing Princesses' by Daniela Terrazzini
'Scary Wolves' by Ramona Kaulitzki
What texts look like the Bible but aren’t? Which books were excluded from the scriptural canon and why? In this one-day course we will explo
Valentýn
Pokud to použijete prosím napište mi hodnocení, případně reakci. Je to pro výzkumné účely. Děkuji.
'The Blue Bird and other Tales' illustrated by Frederic Clement
Bruna (Czech carnival character)
North Bohemian variant of mares, typical especially in the Podřipsko region. The mask of the brood was more expensive and also much scarier. It may have resembled a giraffe, a camel, or a goat, but the best documented is a ram-like brother that used to be walked in Keblice. As with the South Bohemian klibna, the body consisted of a man hidden under a blanket or tarpaulin, but who carried on a long perch a head in the truth terrible, covered with sheep's fur with large twisted horns. A red tongue hung from her mouth, and her lower jaw could be opened and closed with a string, so that the brother galloped eerily with her teeth. She had a crush on children in particular. Those who did not pray threatened to rip open their bellies and stuff them with peas (note here the parallels with the Advent figures of lucky and perechta), she was kind to the good ones and gave them small treats.
Final round: Haikea vs многоꙮчитїй, mnogoočitii
(poll at the end)
Haikea (Finnish)
[ˈhɑi̯keɑ]
Translation: A feeling of quiet, melancholic, sometimes even mournful longing. "Wistful" comes fairly close as a translation, though it's not exactly the same.
Finnish is an Uralic language belonging to the Finnic branch spoken by 5 300 000 people in Finland, where it is one of two national languages (the other is Swedish though it is less used, Finnish is the main language).
Motivation: It's one of the most beautiful words to say in Finnish, IMO; it has a beautiful flow to the vowels, and it almost sounds like a sigh. It's also an emotion often associated with a lot of Finnish art, literature, music and culture in general, and thus it's a strong part of Finnish identity.
многоꙮчитїй, mnogoočitii (Old Church Slavonic)
IPA not found
Translation: many-eyed
Old Church Slavonic is an extinct language that belonged to the Slavic branch of Indo-European languages. It’s closest related to today’s Macedonian and Bulgarian, but was standardised based on the dialect of Slavs living near 9th century Thessaloniki in today’s Greece by missionaries, who translated Christian literature so they could convert people easier. Old Church Slavonic was then used as the liturgical language of various Orthodox and Byzantine Catholic Churches. A later version of the language called Church Slavonic is still in use in churches today.
Motivation: This particular instance of the word appears once in a manuscript from around 1429. It is the book of psalms, and the word is used in the phrase "серафими многоꙮчитїй," to mean "many-eyed seraphim," as in an angel. the "ꙮ", or multiocular o, is one of my favorite Unicode symbols and also symbols in general. In the next version of Unicode it's going to be updated, because it doesn't even have enough eyes as the original manuscript gave it! Looking past the ꙮ fixation, though, I'm a fan of angels and angelic imagery, as well as eye imagery. A single word for "many-eyed" is really cool to me, since I don't recall there being one in English. It's a useful phrase for more than just angels, like spiders, molluscs...
Which is the ultimate best word?
Haikea
многоꙮчитїй
Aaand we have a final result! Congratulations to the winner and thank you to all who participated in submissions and voting
'The Witches and the Singing Mice' by Angela Barrett
Alyona Solomatina's illustration for russian tale "Marya Morevna".
What texts look like the Bible but aren’t? Which books were excluded from the scriptural canon and why? In this one-day course we will explo
Next weekend! Sign up for $69 US to be part of this workshop
Tamara Shevaryova's illustration for russian tale "Marya Morevna".
Koshchei the Deathless is an archetypal male antagonist in Russian folklore.
The most common feature of tales involving Koschei is a spell which prevents him from being killed. He hides "his death" inside nested objects to protect it. For example, his death may be hidden in a needle that is hidden inside an egg, the egg is in a duck, the duck is in a hare, the hare is in a chest, the chest is buried or chained up on a far island. Usually he takes the role of a malevolent rival figure, who competes for (or entraps) a male hero's love interest.
The origin of the tales is unknown. The archetype may contain elements derived from the 12th-century pagan Cuman-Kipchak (Polovtsian) leader Khan Konchak, who is recorded in The Tale of Igor's Campaign; over time a balanced view of the non-Christian Cuman Khan may have been distorted or caricatured by Christian Slavic writers.
'Bathing' by Marina Terauds from the Album : 'The Master and Margarita'
lonely nights