brunhiddensmusings:

reiikiki:

feralcatman:

a dilf is not a dilf if he’s shitty to his children

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the sexiest qualities of a man are compassion and responsibility

nyansense-the-nyanbinary:

balaclava-trismegistus:

balaclava-trismegistus:

I really need to do more studying and write an essay on how Americanism is a genuine folk religion which reveres capital and the vague concept of “the free market” as a god of providence to be pleased in order to lead a prosperous life, also that the founding fathers are prophetic, perhaps even messianic figures who basically gave birth to this god through the revolutionary war, and that the vast majority of conservative Christians in America revere capital more than the god they claim to serve in an ironic sort of golden calf situation.

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I think you’re just stupid, bro

no no this is very much a real phenomenon I think in academic settings it’s called American Civic Religion americans are taught from a young age to essentially worship things like the flag and the constitution and the founding fathers and a lot of people basically still think like that it’s fucked up man

(via @doubleca5t​)

ararexic:

today i offered nothing. good night everyone!!!

briefcasejuice:

i miss him (fictional character that i can rewatch or reread at any time i want)

lucarleigho:

they call it gacha bc they gacha money

dlrk-gently:

suspendnodisbelief:

dokteur:

bonbonlanguage:

You know what I think is really cool about language (English in this case)? It’s the way you can express “I don’t know” without opening your mouth. All you have to do is hum a low note, a high note, then another lower note. The same goes for yes and no. Does anyone know what this is called?

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These are called vocables, a form of non-lexical utterance - that is, wordlike sounds that aren’t strictly words, have flexible meaning depending on context, and reflect the speakers emotional reaction to the context rather than stating something specific. They also include uh-oh! (that’s not good!), uh-huh and mm-hmm (yes), uhn-uhn (no), huh? (what?), huh… (oh, I see…), hmmn… (I wonder… / maybe…), awww! (that’s cute!), aww… (darn it…), um? (excuse me; that doesn’t seem right?), ugh and guh (expressions of alarm, disgust, or sympathy toward somebody else’s displeasure or distress), etc.

Every natural human language has at least a few vocables in it, and filler words like “um” and “erm” are also part of this overall class of utterances. Technically “vocable” itself refers to a wider category of utterances, but these types of sounds are the ones most frequently being referred to, when the word is used.

Reblog if u just hummed all of these out loud as you read them

Pussy check?

fragilefaerie:

yep shes still where i left her

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