I'm pretty sure the "man wearing a kippah is about to enter a temple, but covers his wheelchair wheels with a cover to keep the inside of the temple as clean as possible." Is probably man actually entering a mosque, and it's quite common for men to wear a headcap of some kind for prayer. The architecture also implies it's a mosque (though you may have a synagogue in that style, especially if you are looking in the MENA region), the collective connotation I see is of a Muslim individual.
There is also not to my knowledge a concept you can't specifically bring dirt with you into a synagogue (i.e., walking with shoes/wheeling in a chair), though I suppose you shouldn't come caked in mud. However, you might see this concept of not tracking dirt specifically in a mosque both for practical reasons (carpeting) or generally as a sign of respect.
Music is gorgeous
Cécile Chaminade Thème varié, Op.89 (1898?)
Marc-André Hamlin, piano
[Franz von Stuck, Dancers]
I’ve had this idea for a while, and I finally made it! If you have any more extensions that you use, feel free to add them to this post!
Momentum
Night Mode Pro
Readism
Honey
Palette Creator
Whatfont
Chrome IG Story
RIP, if it's any comfort there was once a spider on my light fixture and it fell on my head as I was watching it.
therr’s a fucking spider in my room and i don’t know where it went it was nice knowing you guys
Have fun with ur mum! McDonalds will miss u tho 🌼
my moms coming back to seoul tmrw..goodbye to my late night trips to mcdonalds
Word Counter - Not only does it count the number of words you’ve written, it tells you which words are used most often and how many times they appear.
Tip Of My Tongue - Have you ever had a word on the tip of your tongue, but you just can’t figure out what it is? This site searches words by letters, length, definition, and more to alleviate that.
Readability Score - This calculates a multitude of text statistics, including character, syllable, word, and sentence count, characters and syllables per word, words per sentence, and average grade level.
Writer’s Block (Desktop Application) - This free application for your computer will block out everything on your computer until you meet a certain word count or spend a certain amount of time writing.
Cliche Finder - It does what the name says.
Write Rhymes - It’ll find rhymes for words as you write.
Verbix - This site conjugates verbs, because English is a weird language.
Graviax - This grammar checker is much more comprehensive than Microsoft Word, again, because English is a weird language.
Sorry for how short this is! I wanted to only include things I genuinely find useful.
100 year old abandoned Masonic castle located in upstate New York [980x490]
“Lady who has a Bible Verse for every situation.”
Underrated books?
the naturals by jennifer lynn barnes
the fixer by jenniger lynn barnes
penryn and the end of days by susan ee
the archived by victoria schwab
we are the ants by shaun david hutchinson
at the edge of the universe by shaun david hutchinson
all our yesterdays by cristin terrill
the lost girl by sangu mandanna
an ember in the ashes by sabaa tahir
the illuminae files by amie kaufman and jay kristoff
the star-touched queen by roshani chokshi
the diviners by libba bray
graceling realm by kristin cashore
cyclone series by courtney milan
poison study by maria v. snyder
wolf by wolf by ryan graudin
letters to the lost by brigid kemmerer
starbound trilogy by amie kaufman
into the blue by pene henson
mermaids of eriana kawi by tiana warner
timekeeper by tara sim
gallagher girls by ally carter
dangerous girls/dangerous boys by abigail haas
everything by patrick ness/adam silvera/natalia jaster
Step 1: begin at the beginning
read the title
get excited for cool science
note the authors
get mad at them for having more papers than you
spend ten minutes wondering if you’d have been better off going to whatever institution they’re at
die a little inside
Step 2: the abstract and introduction
read the abstract
skip right to the introduction because you’re not completely sure what they’re talking about and maybe that will clear it up
alright now we’re talking
understand the entire first paragraph of the introduction
mostly get the second and third paragraphs
skip over the technical bit at the end because boring
Step 3: the results (aka the good stuff)
read the first paragraph
really not get what’s being said
skip right to figure 1
read the figure caption
call it good, you got the jist
repeat for the remaining figures
Step 4: give up
this paper really isn’t answering the question you had in the first place
you’ll just cite it later it’s fine
Step 5: keep doing science!
fail because of some unexpected and puzzling problem
spend 2-6 weeks troubleshooting and getting nowhere
decide to do another literature search to see if anyone else has had this issue
find the same paper you read before cited a bunch
Step 6: reread
actually like read it this time
get to the end
find the answer to your question
die a little inside
wonder why you didn’t just read it fully to begin with and save yourself weeks of work
Step 7: follow citations to another paper that looks relevant
repeat entire cycle
wonder why science is so hard