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January 26, 2020

• Dồng hồ cúc cu • 1er Doug Meet • YouTube Studio • Premiere • Twitter— @mrjyn insight deprecation • declension cheeseburger • 14 janvier 2020


"Một vươn lên mút đồng hồ cúc cu. Tôi sẽ đọc các bài viết từ ống thứ năm"


1er screening • YouTube Studio • Premiere •

Doug Meet • Shawn Michelle Lewis



" 13 - ITALY - Criminali - IT-WIKI criminal portal - mafia - vandal (Black bloc) - thief and pirate or Warlord

Video scheduled:

đồng hồ cúc cu

will be sent to public school

January 21, 2020

12:00 AM 

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Twitter @mrjyn Audience insights

Your current follower audience size is 1,386

That's 5 more than the same time 30 days ago. You've gained around 0 new followers per day



https://scontent-atl3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/48917560_1249171421890871_6910612055825317888_n.jpg?_nc_cat=100&_nc_eui2=AeFOh92M-INvD6O7T3COAYgcPkHn-NUVHFd1iLC6acmnTs5DwXY4ln0I5jk2rtH7dJBc0sJtIARKYyMTKejlby6p9W4dcYr-avazx8IUOzyO2g&_nc_ohc=LLFn5ToEb0wAX9x6xDu&_nc_ht=scontent-atl3-1.xx&oh=a58b1ba14f03200f87bd9ea4be693b54&oe=5EA0DE7D


"Một vươn lên mút đồng hồ cúc cu.

Tôi sẽ đọc các bài viết từ ống thứ năm"


—1er screening • YouTube Studio • Premiere • Video Analytics •





Semi-transparent opalescent butcher's twine willy-nilly hand-binds him to his handiwork then unlooses his grasp in varying vicegrips from intrusive daydreams, while vehicles disadvantage valetudinarian vanities vociferously vented by venerable vegans, varyingly venerating vegetal vespers and volleying villeinage vans while vieing vaingloriously their venal visages vaporousently concupiscent, their destination an occasion for a lurid luncheon and forecast repast.

Meatpacking district comes it to me.  I reaches in a greasy bag, fishes some and passes it after popping its covert surprise. 

"Now, mayor, a sandy #nubiferous ball of fried spleen for you."

He is
gone vela through noisome Vosne vintages from whom growers volubly compete in overvalued volatility for self-sipping oenophiles, half-high and vaulting visibly inviable at half noon ...

Not me, but maybe others:

"This, they said, wrongly in 1911," I said.

I make them think that that which is said is that which said that, said that which alleviates the unspoken inequality of silence.


(1911) ... steamy, #nubiferous, stuffy. smoky, #fumid, dark, dirty. #semitransparent, milkiness, #opalesce


The Backwards Я



https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/red_heat.png

Who is this Lyaiold Schwlyazeieggeya?!

Richie: It's in Russian.
Eddie: You just put the Rs the wrong way round!
Richie: THAT'S WHAT RUSSIAN IS!

In a lot of Western posters, you see something that could be called "Faux Cyrillic" — replacing Latin characters with visually similar Cyrillic ones, to make something look more Russian. Don't expect them to be consistent with it, though.

This is because Cyrillic is based on medieval Greek completed with Glagolitic (sometimes inspired by Hebrew — ц, ш) letters, but due to reforms by Peter the Great, it has the same basic design principles as the Latin alphabet (stroke thickness and placement, etc.). This has resulted in an alphabet with letters that range from deceptively familiar to the strikingly different. The Latin alphabet itself is based — via the Etruscan/Old Italic one — on the archaic (pre-classical) Greek one, and Hebrew and Greek scripts are based on Phoenician script, so they are all related. Where the (English form of the) Latin alphabet has twenty-six letters, the (Russian form of the) Cyrillic alphabet has thirty-three.

The perpetrators ignore the fact that these letters are, in actual Russian, pronounced completely differently from the Latin characters they are supposed to represent, which results in unintended hilarity for members of the audience who can read Cyrillic script.

Below is a list of popular letters used with this trope, and their proper pronunciations:

Latin letters and the Cyrillic letters incorrectly substituted for them:

  • R: 'Я' (ya). The Trope Namer.note 

  • r: 'Г' (g) (as in Gamma)

  • N: 'И' (i), sometimes even 'Й' ("short И", equivalent of j/y)

  • n: 'П' (p) (as in Pi)

  • A: 'Д' (d)note 

  • O: 'Ф' (f)

  • W: 'Ш' (sh), 'Щ' (shchnote )

  • X: 'Ж' (zh) (pronounced like 'pleasure')

  • B: 'В' (v), 'Б' (b), 'Ь' (soft sign), 'Ъ' (hard sign)

  • E: 'Э' (æ), 'З' (z), 'е' (ye/e)

  • U: 'Ц' (ts)

  • Y: 'Ч' (ch) (said as in church)

The number of Cyrillic letters that look similar or identical to Latin letters or numbers but represent slightly or entirely different phonemes doesn't help either:

  • "А": (always short a, as in father)

  • "В": (v)

  • "Н": (n)

  • "Р": (rolled R)

  • "С": (s)

  • "У": (oo)

  • "Ё": (yo; not just a fronted/raised Е with a Heävy Mëtal Ümlaut)

  • "Х": (guttural "kh", like the 'ch' in the Scottish 'loch', or the hard 'ch' in German 'Buch')

  • "Ъ": (hard sign 'yer' slurs the previous (consonant) and following (iotized vowel) letter — the sound between the k and y in "thank you" is a good comparison. In Bulgarian, however, it just represents the schwa sound)

  • "Ы": (no solid equivalent, roses comes close)

  • "Ь": (soft sign 'yer' makes previous consonant soft. Also slurs the previous and following letter like hard sign if following letter is a iotized vowel — in this case difference between them is subtle or maybe just spelling.)

  • "б": (b)

And that's only the letters that exist in the Russian Alphabetnote  specifically. If you go to other languages written in Cyrillic, you'll find gems such as:

  • "І": (i in Ukrainian and Belarusian)

  • "Ј": ("y", like in "yes", in Serbian and Macedonian)

  • "Ѕ": (dz in Macedonian)

  • "Ү": (German Ü in Turkic Languages, such as Kazakh)

  • "Ғ": (French R in Turkic Languages)

This can also happen with alphabets other than Cyrillic, such as the use of the Greek letter sigma (Σ) as an E or delta (Δ) or lambda (Λ) as an A, even though "Ε" and "Α" are actually perfectly good Greek letters themselves. (Sigma, delta, and lambda are actually the analogues of S, D and L, respectively, although delta is a "th" as in "then" in modern Greek.) Sometimes Greek letters are also used more or less correctly to write English as a substitution of real Greek language.



People also ask:

What do you mean by other than?

Is 'other than' exactly the same meaning as 'not nice'?

What does not like?

How do you use other than?

What is the difference between not and not nice?

Can you start a sentence with other than?







The words not and not nice are similar in the sense that they are both antonyms of the word, as, if you use the word as verb * or noun, the opposite is not nice... (Fun and dislike are nouns with opposite meaning.)


When you use the word as, as a preposition, or an adjective, the opposite is December 19, 2014,

Really gone then.

Demographic information • Prisoner detail


Fleetwood, Richard Mac

January 18, 2020

— mrjyn @mrjyn 14 janvier 2020


Video scheduled

đồng hồ cúc cu


January 21, 2020
12:00 AM

i felt weird








2:34

đồng hồ cúc cu

Uploaded Jan 18, 2020



@mrjyn

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January 30, 2020.


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  • mrjyn @mrjyn Jan 14 i felt weird (what they said in 1911) ... vaporous, nubiferous, muggy. smoky, fumid, murky, dirty. Semitransparent, milkiness, opalesce ...

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