evidence that paramedic captain, tommy vega is a child and a whole ass mood
seen from United States
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seen from Italy
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seen from Australia
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seen from Malaysia
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seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
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seen from United States
evidence that paramedic captain, tommy vega is a child and a whole ass mood
HTTYD RAREPAIR WEEK
29th Quit it! Or I will bite you
Dagur just beeing annoying and stealing Gustavs food.
Jogi using his detached, overtly calm 'War gut. War Espresso trinken.'-voice when talking about how luckyass we were to win ICONIC
[Barry voice I'll come to arceus's defense since they totally helped me and my best friends fight a man trying to become God Oh wait they didn't
Pae, what all has Dia stolen from you? That you noticed, of course.
Pants, obviously. I think some shirts and a jacket once. I also think he has a pair of my shoes.
…and maybe some boxers.
i’m one of those fun crazy ppl where doctors call me asking for me to come back in to be studied for $3000. it’s multiple states away so i won’t do it but it’s nice to be wanted
hey there alyx! i’m not native, but i did teach myself spanish and have many friends who speak it. when referring to myself with they/them pronouns in english, it’s easier, but in spanish, there isn’t really another option besides “ella or él”. this could be a super specific problem, but if you’ve ever had to figure out pronouns in other languages, i’d love to hear how you did so! thanks!
english is really the only language i speak fluently! i’ve seen many spanish speaking non-binary folks talk about the issues there not being a neutral pronoun, but some adjectives can be conjugated in a way that’s not ending in o/a. i suppose you could remove the pronouns all together and just say “es ______” but that’s more assocatied with objects. in chinese when speaking about a person you use “tā”, which verbally sounds the same, but when spelt in hanzi is 她 (she), 他 (he, though arguably can be used neutrally as well) and 它 (it, which is used to refer to animals). because the character in the “he” tā is just made up with the character for “person” (which is why when referring to a plural “they” you say tā men 他们 ) it can be used in writing when being unsure of what pronoun to use, but more contemporary writing will also switch to pinyin (using the romanicized alphabet) and just say tā to keep it explicitly neutral.
truthfully i’ve only taken a couple years of french, elementary/middle school spanish so in regards to that i’m definitely not super knowledgeable about contemporary or local dialects of spanish, and my public high school chinese lessons definitely do Not make me an expert. if anyone has any additions/corrections i’d love to know more about how folks feel comfortable in reference to the language they speak/how people refer to them!
Guys
I'm at a custard shop across the street from my house, and they started selling something called "the rowdy bar" and all I can think about is Julian, that rowdy boy