todays bird
taylor price
sheepfilms

⁂
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Show & Tell
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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oozey mess
wallacepolsom
Keni
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Xuebing Du
Peter Solarz

Love Begins
One Nice Bug Per Day

izzy's playlists!
dirt enthusiast

tannertan36
seen from Malaysia

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seen from Sweden
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seen from Germany
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@noamixxxx
Princess Mononoke (1997) background art
I’m a full believer in doing small things for yourself to cultivate your soul without having to tell anybody especially in a day and age where people feel the need to capitalize on every aspect of themselves to create an aestheticized identity… like learning a language going on a run writing a poem practicing your craft going to a museum dancing for fun can and should give you personal fulfillment that doesn’t have to be presented through a lens or validated by an audience
dostoyevsky kinda ate with “your worst sin is that you have destroyed and betrayed yourself for nothing.”
Girls will say "I just need to lie down for a little while" and then sink into a muddy river and get all their hard.tissues replaced with mineral deposits
How I Learn Languages from Music
Music is an excellent way to learn vocabulary, especially if you listen often!
Benefits of Learning From Music
It's free
You reinforce new vocabulary you learn without flashcards
It more often than not is less effort than learning from tv/movies/textbooks
It's fun!
Potential Problems
Just like songs in English, grammar isn't always correct
Vocabulary can be obscure
Pronunciation isn't always the same as in spoken language
My Method
Find music you like (this is important so you'll want to listen to the song many times, even when you're not studying it!)
Listen without looking up lyrics to see what you understand
Listen again, this time reading along with the lyrics. Make note of what you understand now that you have the lyrics handy!
Listen again without lyrics Try to hear what you missed the first time but recognized from reading the lyrics.
Next, paste the lyrics into a document/ print them out/ handwrite them on paper
Highlight vocabulary and phrases you don't understand, and look them up and add the translations to your document
Highlight grammar you don't understand and look it up
If necessary, compare your translations to the translation in your native language (only do this for general understanding of the song, most translations aren't direct)
The last step is to review often! Listen to the song(s) all the time until you understand completely and can sing along!
Extra Credit
This step isn't necessary, but I like to find example sentences for the new vocabulary and add them to my flashcards
If you want to practice translation, go ahead and translate the entire song!
If anyone wants an example of how I do this, let me know and I can add to this post!
I recently went to Versailles to see an exhibition about two sculptures and I decided to see the newly re-opened part: the Dauphin's and the Dauphine's apartments on the ground floor of the central section, which makes a nice ensemble with Louis XV's daughters' apartments, that re-opened a few years ago. I love these rooms, they make a nice change from my usual medieval art and I find the library absolutely charming. Its ceiling is built lower than the in the other rooms, which makes the place look so comfortable.
Chambre du Dauphin; Chambre de Madame Victoire; bibliothèque de Madame Victoire; Grand Cabinet de Madame Adélaïde; Chambre de Marie-Antoinette.
(The photos are mine, feel free to reblog but please don't repost. I post my other visits of museums and castles under the tag #gwenlendiscoversmuseums).
Books to read to improve your French
Hi! If you're learning French and are looking for something to read, here's a list of books I read and loved as a French pupil that you might want to discover!
Beginners (A2-B1)
Tistou Les Pouces Verts, by Maurice Druon: This is the story of Tistou, a child who can make flowers sprout wherever his hand lands. Tistou uses his power to help adults around him to bear the difficult aspects of life, such as war and sadness. As it is a kid book, it is quite easy to read and full of vocabulary (especially for learning the names of flowers!)
The Laure and Compagnie series, by Catherine Missonier: This series of five books recount the eccentric adventures of elementary school pupils. The stories are all very funny (ranging from a class discovering that their teacher is a secret agent to a story about an alien who turns into a human and lands in a fifth-grade classroom)
Intermediate (B1)
Le Petit Prince, by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry: You may already be familiar with this book, as it is widely known. It tells the story of a little boy traveling from planet to planet in the universe looking for a place to settle. It is a very touching philosophical tale and by far my favorite book on this list.
Le Petit Nicolas, by René Goscinny: Nicolas is a boy living in France in the 50s. He writes about his daily life in post-war France, his relationship with his friends, with school, and his parents. I loved these books as a child. They are easy to read and very useful for learning about French society in the 20th century.
Intermediate-Advanced (B2)
Le Château de ma Mère and La Gloire de mon Père, by Marcel Pagnol: these two novels are autobiographical. The author recounts his youth in Provence. The author's style is simple to understand, but his stories are moving and give the impression of falling back into childhood.
Advanced (C1)
La Passe-Miroir, by Christelle Dabos: La Passe-Miroir is a series of French fantasy novels. Ophelia, a young woman living on the planet Anima, can tell the history of objects just by touching them. Her story begins when she gets engaged against her will to Thorn, a mysterious man from a frozen planet...
La Parure, Aux Champs and Le Horla, by Guy de Maupassant : Maupassant is one of France's most famous authors of short stories. I discovered those three in high school, and I really liked them because of their unexpected endings. These texts are short, but Maupassant lived in the 19th century, so his style is a bit more difficult to understand.
Voyage au Centre de la Terre, by Jules Verne (or, really, anything by Jules Verne): I think I must have read this book at least fifty times and I'm still not tired of it ;-)! Verne narrates the story of Axel and his uncle, Professor Lidenbrock, who, one day, find a map that might be able to lead them to the center of the Earth... The story is fascinating and the characters are quite endearing. However, there is a lot of scientific jargon that might be difficult to understand without a dictionary.
Hope these suggestions can help you find something to read!
Plum
i love it when you read multiple works from a writer and you start being able to pick out the things that stick with them. like the themes they keep thinking about, that can’t be satisfied with just one poem or novel or story. or the motifs they like to reuse and recycle throughout their works like an extradiagetic thread. it’s like drawing a map through a writer’s collection of all the things that keep them up at night
Taro Gomi: Spring Is Here
turns out i simply cannot handle things or situations
summer is for loneliness and eating fruit and warm rain at night
Soft concept: You’re laying down with your head resting in your partner’s lap. Your eyes are closed but you can hear the sounds of their video game. It’s a relaxing night, just you two enjoying each other’s company in the comforting environment of the room. Your partner decides to take a break from their game to pet your hair, causing you to fall asleep. They go back to their game, waking you up gently when they start to get tired to say they’re done with gaming for the night and that you both should head to bed to cuddle and call it a night.
Jane Austen // Bao Phi
“— É muito complicado ser a pessoa que doa mais. — É muito cansativo. No começo, você tem tanto amor que não importa se é você que doa mais. Só que no fim, você deu tanto sem ter nada em troca, que tirou tudo o que tinha dentro de si e ficou vazio o que não recebeu de volta.”
— Erro 404: amor não encontrado.