Anyone else is still thinking about how Noah died in the same way Naomi did?
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Anyone else is still thinking about how Noah died in the same way Naomi did?
WHY AM I IMAGINING JAMIE SINGING THE CHORUS OF ‘NEW RULES’ TO MARA
❧ mara dyer/tsc discussion group
Attention Mara Dyer fans!
We have created a new group in Goodreads to discuss the books and all of you are welcomed to join. The group is called G1821 (yes,that’s the name) and you can find it here.
spread the word!
tagging:
mara dyer blogs: @noahelliotsimonx @maradyerdaily @fuckyeahmaradyer @shawswhore @maradyerph @noahshawtrilogy @maralovesnoahtoruins @mara--shaw @maradyerenespanol @g1821-maradyer @madeforyoumara ,sorry if I forgot someone!
people involved in this project: me, @realmaradyer @i-am-mara-a-dyer [moderators]
special tag: @michellehodkin ► the author, @betweenthepage ► you are like our president? and @wheronducks ► you also asked for this group :)
One thing I really want to know is how Mara was (her personality and traits) before everything happened. I want to know about her relationship with her mother,father and brothers, her classmates, boys, her friends and her life in Long Island. Everything.
a murder of crows
from Quora:
“If the verdict goes against the defendant, that bird is killed (murdered) by the flock. The basis in fact is probably that occasionally crows will kill a dying crow who doesn't belong in their territory or much more commonly feed on carcasses of dead crows.
The term "murder" was used to describe a flock of crows as far back as the 15th century, according to the Oxford English Dictionary. (Here’s a spine-chilling version from 1475: "A morther of crowys.") There was a time once in England when it was fashionable to coin words for groups of animals based on their qualities, whether perceived or real. Hence we have a pride of lions, a gaggle of geese, and a murder of crows. Lions were thought to be regal beasts, so they got a proud name. Geese were noisy, flocking creatures, so their group name reflects that. Crows were thought to be loud, thieving birds. so their group name reflects those traits.
The OED suggests this is an allusion to “the crow's traditional association with violent death” or “its harsh and raucous cry." If you've ever heard dozens of agitated crows in full cry, it really does sound as if they're yelling bloody murder.
This usage, which apparently died out after the 1400s, was revived in the 20th century. The first modern citation in the OED comes from 1939, but the usage was undoubtedly popularized by its appearance in An Exaltation of Larks (1968), a compendium of "nouns of multitude" by James Lipton.”
@i-am-mara-a-dyer there it is, and it seems I need to buy the Oxford Dictionary.
I just noticed we don’t know when Jamie’s birthday is.
[sometimes I draw like Mara, sometimes I draw like Noah]
saw this on facebook