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#plews
awholeclxwn · 2 years
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*stares at you judgmentally* DARTH VADER?
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HE IS HOT
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puppyboypatrick · 22 days
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okay fall out boy 2ourdust is over lets get back on the grind. so much for tourdu3t. maybe even so much 4 tourdust. am i hearing 5o much for tourdust anyone
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darkestmad-er · 3 months
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Let me be the light in your storm -Erin Plewes
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salsflore · 2 years
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we should make fanart of
zhongli with his rex lapis horns
childe’s back profile or w/o a jacket
diluc in a high ponytail
illegal. sign my petition and together we can stop my insanity
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beast-feast · 2 years
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should i draw creep........ - omori-headspace
YES???????????? PELASE????????????
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robinmark64 · 6 months
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Pushing Your Own Narrative - An Aspiring Music Historian Tries to Get Sam Phillips to "Confess" - Nope
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mychameleondays · 9 months
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Elvis Costello And The Attractions: Punch The Clock
F-Beat ZL25464/XXLP 19/ZL 70026
Released: August 5, 1983
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itsrockinronnie · 2 years
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Clock books added to the library
Clock books added to the library
Whether you are working on your first clock movement or have repaired dozens, resources, I believe, are essential. There is only so much information gained from a YouTube video, antique clock information site or how-to instructional resources online. Sadly some information is just plain wrong. There comes a point in time when you simply must have more detailed information that one can reference…
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View On WordPress
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smalliishbeanss · 2 years
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*sighs* I’ll make sure to guard your body properly this time buddy…-blaze anon(ooc:y’all hear something?/jk)
...
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usafphantom2 · 4 months
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MN Air National Guard F-16. (MSgt. Matthew Plew)
@kadonkey via X
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scotianostra · 2 months
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On the 17th of February 1598 there was a total eclipse of the sun.
Commonly called the Black Saturday or The Black Hour, whereon the people of all sorts ran to the churches to "deprecate God’s wrath," supposing then the world’s last moments were at hand! Dates differ due to the calendar changes etc.
The Reverend Law of Easter Kilpatrick near Dumbarton recalled:
‘In February 1652, there was a great ecclipse of the sun about 9 hours in the forenoon on a Monday; the earth was much darkened, the lyke, as thought by astrologers, was not since the darkness at our Lord’s passion. The country-people teeling loused their plews, and thought it had been the latter day [i.e., the Apocalypse]: Some of the Starrs were seen, it fell so dark; the birds clapt to the ground.*
[In the editor’s notes: * The day of this eclipse is still denominated by the common people of Scotland “the Mirk Mounday.”’ (Law, Memorialls, 6.)
There are clear errors in Law’s recalled account (he finished writing in 1684). According to NASA’s total eclipse database, the Scottish eclipse was on THURSDAY 8 April, 1652. The eclipse reached maximum in Scotland at just after 10.30 GMT/UT in the morning.
We will not see a total eclipse in our lives from Scotland.
Pic and info from jardine's book of martyrs
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Daily French Etymology #48
Pluie (rain)
Pluie came from the Middle French pluye, from the Old French pluie, of the same meaning and which originated from the Vulgar Latin *ploia. *Ploia came from the Latin pluva, also meaning rain, from the verb pluo, meaning to rain. Pluo was derived from the PIE root *plew, meaning to wash or float.
* Indicates a reconstructed word
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planesawesome · 2 years
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(9/4/2022) A U.S. Air Force B-52H Stratofortress, assigned to the 5th Bomb Wing, Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota, conducts aerial operations during a Bomber Task Force mission within the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility,. U.S. bombers offer a rapid response capability for the USCENTCOM theater to deter conflict while credibly demonstrating the U.S.'s ability to address a global security environment. (U.S. Air Force photo by Master Sgt. Matthew Plew)
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fatehbaz · 2 years
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The headlines for our stories down here in the Caribbean always come in graphic type, written by the wind, and sung by the sea, with that murmuring in the water over Kick-Em-Ginny reminding us that Not all skin teeth is good grin.
I often think that a popular history of Grenada, or of Trinidad and Tobago, might have a title like Flight of the Sparrow: From Jean and Dinah to Capitalism Gone Mad. Now, since Hurricane Ivan swoop down and dekatche (destroy) Grenada in September 2004, I’m thinking that Grenada’s history for the half century from 1955 to 2005 might be titled, From Janet to Ivan: Tout Moun ka Plewe ["Everybody Bawling"] and this, of course, could also be the title of a calypso, the sung history of the land. [...]
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When Hurricane Janet hit Grenada in 1955, I was four years old. In fact, it was seven days before my fifth birthday. [...] That morning, after Janet, I remember seeing a tall coconut tree in the yard [...]. I remember how they hold up the lantern when people coming inside; I remember the sound of the wind howling [...]. Janet made a lot of things possible. [...] Next morning, [...] the family across the road found their galvanize covering some nutmeg trees in my grandaunt’s little piece of land [...]. Covering nutmeg, not cocoa trees, because although everybody say under the cocoa, meaning down through the bush or up through the bush, sometimes “the bush” is not cocoa at all, but mango, or nutmeg, or some other something. So even nutmeg who, with her red mace petticoat, come to claim such a place in the heart of the land, have to humble sometimes and bow to the history of cocoa. Cocoa must have really made an impression in the country for it to be carrying the blame -- or the praise -- for every story that happen under the cocoa. [...]
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The 1950s was a special time. People just get the vote in 1951. [...] When you really think about it, so much was happening in Grenada in the 1950s that it not surprising Janet decide to come and punctuate the story. Everything around was like hurricane touching it. People voting for the first time in their life, poor black man in the legislative council, union organizing and standing up to the Queen and the Governor who was in charge of the country at the time. The whole land upset [...].
And you look round Grenada and see the rivers and the waterfalls and the sunflower and the crater lake in Grand Etang that people say is bottomless so that if you drown in Grenada you come out in St. Vincent, and Kick-Em-Ginny the underwater volcano near Carriacou that we always sailing over -- you just have to watch all of that -- to know that Nature is a prize-winning writer, so is no surprise that Janet appear right in time to punctuate and put in figure of speech to the story that developing in Grenada.
And while Janet doing she do, people getting used to the idea of other hurricane hurrying come over the Atlantic. And hurricane forming right inside Grenada self, hurricane coming back from other Caribbean country too, from Aruba, from Trinidad, from America, from England [...]. In 1951, Gairy appear from Aruba and take charge. Then right after the 1954 elections, John Watts come back from the US and form party. And Grenada moving on -- progressing. Early in 1955, the Grenada legislature vote for the start  of a system with ministers and everything [...].
So things changing, and naturally nature is part of the changing. How people going change and land stay the same? The people who get dragged across the Atlantic and crushed into the ground for so long, now rising up and looking around and walking toward the future and thing stirring like crazy. That Atlantic always have something to say in we story. Who could forget how much stirring up that Atlantic Ocean get with people jumping overboard, and song floating across it, and people walking back to their homeland across all of that raging, and things of the sort? [...]
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After Janet, was raymabuddy (total confusion -- colloquial) in Hermitage. Hermitage is a nutmeg place, and nutmeg is not like cocoa. When hurricane hit cocoa, it lie down flat. The wind twist it an twist it, and it would look like it good and dead, like it gone for true, but it only making yangoo (pretending -- colloquial) and after a while it will lift its head and look around, shake up its shoulders and then spring back up quick. But nutmeg take things to heart. Nutmeg would break it neck over the kind of punishment that Janet give. Oh nutmeg! Is not by accident you come and make you home on the flag after a time. Nutmeg need time to get over the disappointment and the hurt and the embarrassment and then begin to come back. Like we always say, it will come back, eventually, because the seeds in the ground and the root there, but it have to take time. Ah, nutmeg, we know you so well. Wherever you come from to make you life here, you become we major crop. All over the world we boasting how, small as we is, we supplying one-third of all nutmeg the world need -- the WORLD, you know! Ah, nutmeg. We know. You don’t like hurricane and Grenada never without hurricane, whether people know it or not, whether the wind blowing so we could hear it or not, so nutmeg, we know you life can’t be easy. This Janet time, there, Hermitage is nutmeg place, so Hermitage bawl amway, (oh my -- colloquial) and Grenada conclude, Ay! Crapaud smoke we pipe! [...]
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So that was that. Time moving on, and now nature taking notice. In 1963, a hurricane come that really make people lift their head and remember Janet. That one was Flora. Flora was born first of October, nine days after Janet but in a different year, 1963. [...] So time come and pass. Janet was still king -- well, queen -- the memory of Grenadians. Although Hurricane Flora pass in between, Janet still had the throne. The old people who were the young people in 1955 were talking about Janet like she was a warrior woman that reign for a time in the land. [...]
Other hurricane happening. 13 March 1979, I was out of the country. Just gone out. Somebody call me in America and say to me, Put on the television. And is so I live it, on the radio and on television. But still I remember it. You walk with you country in you pocket. 5 a.m. Radio Grenada taken over; 6:15 a.m. Army barracks attacked; Between 6:30 and 10:30 a.m., senior police officer broadcast statement of surrender. The Gairy government overthrown -- strange word in that area of the region people call the English-speaking Caribbean [...]. The nearest friend Grenada had in those days was Cuba, who wasn’t friend with America and not friend with plenty people, so the yard right around exposed. With 20/20 hindsight you have to know that was not safe! Anyway, revolution come, last four years, and revolution go. Not simple like that, but it happen. [...]
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And is so Ivan come and find us. [...]
And is so it happen. Ivan drag us kicking and screaming into the twenty-first century, drop us down with nothing and say, wake up! This is where you is! Start to build!
They tell me the house was plastered with leaves as if Ivan strip the trees and plaster the leaves from bois canot and mango and mortelle across the door and the windows and the walls of the house to tell us something. So is that I remember. Ivan leave the leaves from Mount Gozo plastered right around the house. Over the doors and the windows and the walls. Ivan say, you don’t have to wait till they cut the tree, make paper, put in book, write things for you to read. Read the leaves. [...]
[P]erhaps at last people have their eyes on who is really causing the damage. Ivan is the man people thinking about now, and watching. And perhaps people asking, how come hurricane didn’t know where we was before, and hurricane know so good now? And perhaps people wondering, so this one come across the Atlantic, over the sea? What about the hurricane they call volcano, brewing up under the sea? How to watch that one and know what it planning? What about other hurricanes around us, working and not always showing their intention? So we here under the mountains, watching Mount Gozo and all other mountains, reading the stories that they leave us. [...] I say, well, some of the story have to wait for the telling. But I remember Morne Delice yard after the storm, and I thinking, Hmmm; Ivan leave message on leaf for everybody to read.
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Text by: Merle Collins. “Tout Moun ka Plewe (Everybody Bawling).” Small Axe Number 22 (Volume 11, Number 1), pp. 1-16. February 2007. [Bold emphasis and some paragraph breaks/contractions added by me.]
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dreamystarcroc · 1 month
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John Dory is overrated I spit on your love for him *hack plew*
OH FUCK YOU BARRY, YOURE JUST MAD YOU CANT PULL A MAN WHO STILL THINKS PARKOUR IS STILL RELEVANT AND SMELLS LIKE AXE BODY SPRAY AND MULCH
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Heya lil fartdoodles
Im Jordan, the other mod is Yuri, so yeah, (we both love msm so we decided to make this)
Let's get introduced to the roster, shall we?
On Yuris side we have
Braynid (Theremind Human Hybrid)
Burçin (Baby Rare Theremind, adopted son of Braynid)
Kortex (Theremind, Father of Braynid)
Zephyr (Attmoz, bio sister of Euros, Phaladdons lover)
Euros (Attmoz, bio brother of Zephyr)
Hinata (Yellow attmoz baby, adopted son of Zephyr and Phaladdon)
Triage (Common Wubbox, sister of Genesis, Anglotricity, and Monchinwub)
Genesis (Rare Wubbox, sister of Triage, Anglotricity, and Monchinwub)
Sylvan (PlEW, Adoptive sibling of Triage and Genesis)
Cognis (PsEW, same relationships as above)
Aquaria (WaEW, same relationships as above)
Evitan (Mangle but if it were a Wubbox)
On My side we have
Aloerescent (Potbelly, now Potbelly "Chloro-Glowbe" Hybrid, gonna warn you now his love for artaniF is intense. [Slight NSFW Warning])
artaniF (PhanglerrelgnahP [something happened lol])
Trawglayson (Rare Rootitoot, Epic Potbelly, Human Hybrid)
MegWubs (Monculus inhabiting a Wubbox like body)
Monchinwub (Plew, specifically one based off the Manchineel tree)
Anglotricity (WaEW)
Dephex (Rare Wubbox, warning you all now, if you ask him something he may get into sensitive topics like death n all)
Guillis (Common Wubbox)
Nocktrussk (WaEW)
Tch-Deaculu (Frankensteins monster esque hybrid of Epic Deedge, Epic Pummel, and Epic Cybop, and same warning as Dephex)
Faust (Thwok with no legs)
Hexodius (Rare Poewk with less feathers than a normal Poewk)
Ceresass (Theremind)
The Project (Hybrid of every monster)
Phaladdon (Loodvigg, Hornacle, Syncopite, and Attmoz hybrid)
Snoozle-Thoongle (Xyster with Cherubble coloring, Conjoined twin of Uri'reid)
Uri'reid (Cherubble with Xyster coloring, Conjoined twin of Snoozle-Thoongle)
Iggy-Aggy-Oggy (Hyehehe, RGB & CYM colors)
Floobierbox (Wheezel with no hand)
Bujuu (Bowhead, Brother of the next 4)
Burniskalia (Candelavra, Sister of the one above and the 3 below)
Skeiska-Skoso (Tuskski, Brother of the 2 above and 2 below)
Eartiliuas (Drummidary, brother to the three above)
Weedzozilo (Gnarls, brother of the 4 above)
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