Do you know this SFX? #1170
I know where it's from
It sounds familiar
I've never heard this

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Japan

seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from Brazil
seen from Czechia
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Colombia
seen from China
seen from Slovakia
seen from India
seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands
Do you know this SFX? #1170
I know where it's from
It sounds familiar
I've never heard this
Tobi Otogiri from Fight Song by Eve
Do you like this character design?
Yes
No
It's Complicated
1170: Transandrogynous type
PT: 1170: Transandrogynous type /end PT
DEFINITION ⦂⠀Someone whose type is transandrogynous individuals; who seeks out transandrogynous individuals in a relationship, or prefers transandrogynous individuals over other individuals, even if one could have a relationship with others.
PT: Definition: Someone whose type is transandrogynous individuals; who seeks out transandrogynous individuals in a relationship, or prefers transandrogynous individuals over other individuals, even if one could have a relationship with others. /end PT
ADDITIONAL ⦂⠀Coined on the 15th of May, 2026.
PT: Additional: Coined on the 15th of May, 2026. /end PT
TAGGING ⦂⠀@attracted-to-x @c1rcus-of-silliness @dearestchild @goregender @orientation-archive @radiomogai @shipchive
Coffee girls
Love to have a little dad-son-roleplay...
Akutagawa daily 1170/★
Most Beloved Wrestler Tournament
#1170
Danhausen
David Finlay
The Martyrdom of Thomas Becket Dec 29, 1170
British Museum, London
This fourteenth-century English alabaster sculpture retains most of its original paint and gilding. It was made in Bakewell, England in the late medieval period.
It depicts the murder of archbishop Thomas Becket, also known as St Thomas of Canterbury.
To the right of the scene Becket kneels, dressed in red, before an altar prepared for Mass. Behind him are four fully armed knights, called Hugh de Morville, Richard Brito, William de Tracy and Reginald Fitzurse, the first of whom, probably Fitzurse, plunges his weapon into the archbishop’s head. Only a small stub of the blade survives. Standing behind the altar is Edward Grim, shown wearing clerical robes and carrying a cross-shaped staff. He receives a sword blow to his arm from the second knight.