
Janaina Medeiros
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Product Placement

blake kathryn

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oozey mess

@theartofmadeline
hello vonnie
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Monterey Bay Aquarium

JVL
Today's Document
DEAR READER

shark vs the universe
Peter Solarz
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Love Begins
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

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@peaceoutsidethewindow
bts & ldf ė (yum) campaign
Things I Need:
1. An orgasm 2. Attention 3. $50,000
Linguistic thought of the day
native English speakers donāt tend to sayĀ āyes.āĀ
My clients are about 50/50 native and non-native English speakers, and non-native English speakers are pretty much the only ones who say āyesā when I ask them a question.
Native English speakers almost always sayĀ āyeahā orĀ āsureā, unless itās for emphasis. (āIs now a good time?āĀ āSureā vsĀ āIs this your first baby?āĀ āYes he is!!ā)Ā
Iāve noticed that with yes and no. Both of those sound abrupt by themselves (ānoā to a lesser extent than āyesā). āDid you do it?ā āYesā. To me, that would sound like someone whoās annoyed by the question, perhaps because itās been asked repeatedly. For yes/no to work, they have to be followed by something else, like your example, or by a word like sir or ma'am.
Iāve reblogged a post like this before but I suspect this is an indication that the meanings of yes (and yeah) and no are actually changing - that English is undergoing a shift from a two-form affirmative-negative system to something else, such as an echo system (like Irish or Chinese uses) (except that in English we donāt have to repeat the whole verb, we can just use the auxiliary do).
I.e. this is why, I think, itās so common for people to useĀ āyeah, noā to deny something andĀ āno, yeah, totallyā to affirm something -Ā āyeahā andĀ ānoā by themselves are too ambiguous, so we have to reinforce them by, for example, when we deny something, affirming the negative (āYeahā¦ā) and then denying the positive (āā¦noā), or when we affirm something, by denying the negative (āNoā¦ā) and then affirming the positive (āā¦yeah, totally!ā). Maybe this kind of thing will stick around, or maybe itāll shift to more of an echo system - I find myself sayingĀ āYeah, I doā andĀ āNo, I donātā a lot more than just the words āYeahā andĀ āNoā by themselves.
This situation reminds me of how, when the Latin demonstratives were turning into articles, writers had to add additional decitic words to ille, illa, and illud in order to make their reference sufficiently specific - e.g. justĀ āthat manā by itself was starting to meanĀ āthe manā, so to meanĀ āthat manā they had to say things likeĀ āthat aforementioned manā orĀ āthat particular manā.
Good tips for if your dialogue isnāt sounding realistic to your ear!
THE DAY HAS FINALLY ARRIVED! #BTS CANNOT WAIT TO FINALLY SEE YOUR BEAUTIFUL FACES @thebangtanboys (at Prudential Center)
King of Masked Singers! No idea who's gonna be performing but still super excited!!! (at New Jersey Performing Arts Center (NJPAC))
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my favorite meme is when conservatives are asked who their favorite band is, they excitedly proclaim their lifelong love for _____, a journalist rushes to ask _____ their reaction, ______ promptly tells conservative to fuck off
Tom Morello (Rage Against the Machine) article responding to Paul Ryan was a masterpiece
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Iām the guy in the blindfold
so the montreal police officers are on strike and to shame the government they decided to wear different kinds of pants
thatās so beautiful
the fashion police
Did someone say treat?