Love & Relationships by TUNA Dunn.

ellievsbear
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
sheepfilms
Not today Justin
Sade Olutola
Jules of Nature
One Nice Bug Per Day
Peter Solarz
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Sweet Seals For You, Always


Origami Around
DEAR READER
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
we're not kids anymore.
todays bird

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Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă
Today's Document
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@ratedsgames
Love & Relationships by TUNA Dunn.

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This is the funniest joke Iâve ever madeÂ
this is a real line Microsoft put in the script for an Xbox One ad
This shit is so irritating âcause they completely misunderstand why people like that fuckinâ game. So that means somebody in marketing doesnât have their shit together and if it stays not together then the game will continue to be marketed oddly and that means the dev team gets the wrong feedback and they donât FIX THE SHIT ABOUT IT THAT DRIVES ME NUTS
Make toddâs dream come true
Why does the normal boots not just have an orgy with themselves?
We did. Shane won.
I splatted the most turf.

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So⌠I really like the Stuck Together Podcast (ft. poofy hair and big sleeves)Â
@cheratomo
@ratedsgames
Ahahaha! <3 This is so cuuuute, thank you! c:
settle this for me once and for all
is âchaiâ a TYPE of tea??! bc in Hindi/Urdu, the word chai just means tea
its like spicy cinnamon tea instead of bland gross black tea
I think the chai that me and all other Muslims that I know drink is just black tea
i mean i always thought chai was just another word for tea?? in russian chai is tea
why donât white people just say tea
do they mean itâs that spicy cinnamon tea
why donât they just call it âspicy cinnamon teaâ
the spicy cinnamon one is actually masala chai specifically so like
thereâs literally no reason to just say chai or chaiÂ
They donât know better. To them âchai teaâ IS that specific kind of like, creamy cinnamony tea. They think âchaiâ is an adjective describing âteaâ.
What English sometimes does when it encounters words in other languages that it already has a word for is to use that word to refer to a specific type of that thing. Itâs like distinguishing between what English speakers consider the prototype of the word in English from what we consider non-prototypical.
(Sidenote: prototype theory means that people think of the most prototypical instances of a thing before they think of weirder types. For example: list four kinds of birds to yourself right now. You probably started with local songbirds, which for me is robins, blue birds, cardinals, starlings. If I had you list three more, you might say pigeons or eagles or falcons. It would probably take you a while to get to penguins and emus and ducks, even though those are all birds too. A duck or a penguin, however, is not a prototypical bird.)
âChaiâ means tea in Hindi-Urdu, but âchai teaâ in English means âtea prepared like masala chaiâ because itâs useful to have a word to distinguish âthe kind of tea we make hereâ from âthe kind of tea they make somewhere elseâ.
âNaanâ may mean bread, but ânaan breadâ means specifically âbread prepared like thisâ because itâs useful to have a word to distinguish between âbread made how we make itâ and âbread how other people make itâ.
We also sometimes say âliege lordâ when talking about feudal homage, even though âliegeâ is just âlordâ in French, or âflower blossomâ to describe the part of the flower that opens, even though when âflowerâ was borrowed from French it meant the same thing as blossom.Â
We also do this with place names:Â âbreaâ means tar in Spanish, but when we came across a place where Spanish-speakers were like âthereâs tar hereâ, we took that and said âOkay, hereâs the La Brea tar pitsâ.
 Or âSaharaâ. Sahara already meant âgiant desert,â but we call it the Sahara desert to distinguish it from other giant deserts, like the Gobi desert (Gobi also means desert btw).
English doesnât seem to be the only language that does this for places: this page has Spanish, Icelandic, Indonesian, and other languages doing it too.
Languages tend to use a lot of repetition to make sure that things are clear. English says âJohn walksâ, and the -s on walks means âone person is doing thisâ even though we know âJohnâ is one person. Spanish puts tense markers on every instance of a verb in a sentence, even when itâs abundantly clear that they all have the same tense (âayer [yo] caminĂŠ por el parque y juguĂŠ tenisâ even though âayerâ means yesterday and âyoâ means I and the -ĂŠ means âI in the pastâ). English apparently also likes to use semantic repetition, so that people know that âchaiâ is a type of tea and ânaanâ is a type of bread and âSaharaâ is a desert. (I could also totally see someone labeling something, for instance, pan dulce sweetbread, even though âpan dulceâ means âsweet breadâ.)
Also, specifically with the chai/tea thing, many languages either use the Malay root and end up with a word that sounds like âteaâ (like tĂŠ in Spanish), or they use the Mandarin root and end up with a word that sounds like âchaiâ (like cha in Portuguese).
So, can we all stop making fun of this now?
Okay and Iâm totally going to jump in here about tea because itâs cool. Ever wonder why some languages call tea âchaiâ or âchaâ and others call it âteaâ or âtheâ?Â
It literally all depends on which parts of China (or, more specifically, what Chinese) those cultures got their tea from, and who in turn they sold their tea to.Â
The Portuguese imported tea from the Southern provinces through Macau, so they called tea âchaâ because in Cantonese itâs âchaâ. The Dutch got tea from Fujian, where Min Chinese was more heavily spoken so itâs âtheeâ coming from âteâ. And because the Dutch sold tea to so much of Europe, that proliferated the âteâ pronunciation to France (âtheâ), English (âteaâ) etc, even though the vast majority of Chinese people speak dialects that pronounce it âchaâ (by which I mean Mandarin and Cantonese which accounts for a lot of the people who speak Chinese even though they arenât the only dialects).
And âchaiâ/âchayâ comes from the Persian pronunciation who got it from the Northern Chinese who then brought it all over Central Asia and became chai.
(Source)Â
This is the post that would make Uncle Iroh join tumblr
Tea and linguistics. My two faves.
Okay, this is all kinds of fascinating!
Quality linguistic research
Accurately-titled novels.Â
But romances are the âpredictableâ ones.
 I donât know if these are specific actual books with the titles changed but I know theyâd probably actually have vague symbolic titles that sound infinitely more interesting than their actual content.
Let me introduce myself
4/5 black people agree: why should I know who you are?
Selfie Stick
I freaking LOVE this even as the truth in it pains me. X.x

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Confused
These comics are so fucking funny.
I really like the Stuck Together Podcast, and decided to draw one of @cheratomoâs many quirky moments, specifically THE TACO OF FRIENDSHIP!!!!!!! Â Â (also @ratedsgames in the background for fun)
Whoever makes the best fan art of Todd, I will buy âHer Storyâ for.Â
ratedsgames
Hey, want a good video game? This is a thing apparently. (My hair is much more gigantic than this by the way, these are from when I got new Rated S Games art like two years ago)
New print and an all-new store. See everything here.
THIS IS ACTUALLY FACTUAL AND NEEDS TO BE ADDRESSED MORE
http://www.usms.org/articles/articledisplay.php?aid=294
âKnowing that they were losing âvaluable productâ due to their slavesâ propensity to swim, slave owners began taking drastic steps to protect their property. One of these steps was to instill a fear of the water by dunking disobedient slaves in water until they nearly drowned and by creating fear through stories of creatures living in the water. Thus it didnât take long to excise or destroy the West African swimming tradition from African- American culture. The Jim Crow laws that were enacted after The Civil War prohibited blacks from the popular seaside resorts in places like Atlantic City, N.J. and Revere Beach, Mass. And by the 20th Century, as the swimming pool began to gain in popularity in the United States, the color line prohibited blacks from enjoying this pleasant recreational skill.
In addition, self-segregation also played a role in limiting those of African ancestry from getting in the water. I remember my Aunt saying to stay away from the pool because, âblack folk donât swim.ââ
Such a long and consistent history of anti-Blackness and swimming. Long before police openly assaulted little black girls in McKinney, GoodWhitePeople⢠were enforcing White Supremacy and segregating swimming pools.
Motel manager, James âJimmyâ Brock, pouring acid into a swimming pool to drive black people away from a âSwim Inâ protest, in St. Augustine, Florida on June 18, 1964.
Next time you hear someone ask questions like, âWhy donât black people swim?â Or âWhy are so many black people afraid of dogs?â And, âWhy are there do so many black people live in poverty?ââŚ..let âem know that those arenât coincidences. These things didnât just happen naturally, all on their own. Thereâs a reason for it, and you donât have to be an historian to know theyâre all interconnected through slavery, endemic racism and persistently racist cultural norms.
always reblogâŚ

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hey guess what
New PBG video! ARMS review for the Nintendo Switch! #freegame
- CLICK HERE TO WATCH! Â