Here's an Uraraka for your day!
from this one FDGHD i dont think chilchuck would call zumi a bitch i do not believe in it!!!!!!! so instead he's swearing in a language she probs doesn't know ASKSKS
Miya twins! Or Kita. Any of our fox boys! 🦊 🏮
buddy brothers
ALHAMDULILAH THAT PAPER 1 WASNT BAD AND PAPER 2 SECTION B AND C ARENT HARD. BAH A IS EH BUT MANAGEABLE
Guys I am just going to dissect myself after biology tomorrow
(Biology please be nice)
This is what misinformation + selective outrage + indifference looks like
Me: Gotdammit
Was thinking about how Leo would make a good RBC and it just kind of expanded. I wasn’t sure about making Zapp white. I kind of thought it didn’t really look like him so I just made his skin desaturated.
The great thing is that I can think of the perfect title: Blood Brain BarrierÂ
Cyno: I think I have ligma
Tighnari: What’s ligma?
Cyno: LIGMA BALLS!!! So basically, let me explain. Ligma isn’t a real disease or a real word but it sounds like one. So it’s like an easy way to get someone to ask “what’s ligma” because it sounds like you have a disease or illness. So then when someone asks you say “ligma balls” (which phonetically sounds like “lick my balls”) it’s easy to lure someone into a funny joke and then it insinuates that they want to lick YOUR balls. So this is pretty hilarious on a multitude of levels. Firstly, (obviously) the other person doesn’t want to lick your balls, so it’s funny that you made them say something which demonstrates their desire to lick your balls when they in fact do not want to lick your balls. Secondly, it’s onomatopoeic, almost an onomatopoeic pun, so it’s pretty funny that “ligma” is phonetically interchangeable with “lick my”, at least in an certain accents. It may be difficult to achieve the same result with different accents, as some accents will hard pronounce the “ck” whereas others will omit the “ck” into a “g” sound, taking slang and cultural pronunciations into account, resulting in “ligma” instead of “lick my”. This makes it easy to fool those who are used to “g” pronunciations as a replacement for the “ck” plosive, or other variances. Do you get it?
Ed: The glass is half empty. Al: I think the glass is half full. Ed: I think you’re full of shit.
I was doing fine without ya, 'Til I saw your face, now I can't erase ~The Less I Know The Better
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