Tumgik
#areg
Text
youtube
0 notes
bxj3rmzw2rpxxs · 1 year
Text
Latina pornstar gets jizz Woman stands naked and humiliates man in femdom scenes Heavenly ebony teen babe Brie Dawn getting stuffed Twink son asks step dad for a massage Sexy babes Lola Dita with Gia Paloma get their cunts and assholes drilled by big cock White angel is fond of having sex with hugecocked ebony dude Teenage amateur rubbing pussy in lingerie Busty Tattooed babe Ronda Strong gives Nacho Vidal a road head British MILF Angel D Plays With Big Boobs And Juicy Cunt White BBW blowjob
0 notes
Text
happy one year to our queer little leaf show….🍂🍂🍂
i think it’s safe to say that heartstopper definitely changed our lives for the better and i couldn’t be more thankful
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
990 notes · View notes
dabiconcordia · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Consolation
How agreeable it is not to be touring Italy this summer, wandering her cities and ascending her torrid hilltowns. How much better to cruise these local, familiar streets, fully grasping the meaning of every roadsign and billboard and all the sudden hand gestures of my compatriots.
There are no abbeys here, no crumbling frescoes or famous domes and there is no need to memorize a succession of kings or tour the dripping corners of a dungeon. No need to stand around a sarcophagus, see Napoleon's little bed on Elba, or view the bones of a saint under glass.
How much better to command the simple precinct of home than be dwarfed by pillar, arch, and basilica. Why hide my head in phrase books and wrinkled maps? Why feed scenery into a hungry, one-eyes camera eager to eat the world one monument at a time?
Instead of slouching in a café ignorant of the word for ice, I will head down to the coffee shop and the waitress known as Dot. I will slide into the flow of the morning paper, all language barriers down, rivers of idiom running freely, eggs over easy on the way.
And after breakfast, I will not have to find someone willing to photograph me with my arm around the owner. I will not puzzle over the bill or record in a journal what I had to eat and how the sun came in the window. It is enough to climb back into the car
as if it were the great car of English itself and sounding my loud vernacular horn, speed off down a road that will never lead to Rome, not even Bologna. By Billy Collins
76 notes · View notes
minty-bubblegum · 7 months
Text
Good thing leechy and dusky haven't seen the post yet 😀
20 notes · View notes
schiffmacher · 1 year
Text
Silvàn Areg : l'artiste sort l'EP « Pardon, Désolé » ainsi que le clip « Bouquet des roses »
L’artiste Silvàn Areg signe son grand retour avec la sortie le vendredi 19 mai 2023 du clip officiel « Bouquet des roses ». Il est issu de son EP « Pardon, Désolé ». Le site Ma Musique Communautaire vous en dit plus sur cette nouveauté musicale dans l’article suivant. Continue reading Untitled
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
harminuya · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Paradise Lost series by Valery Melnikov, 2020.
Local resident Anushavan stands in a pomegranate garden in the courtyard of his house. In his hand is an old Kalashnikov assault rifle, which he kept from the first Karabakh war.
Abovyan Hasmik cries in the doorway of her house in the village of Nerkin Sus, Nagorno-Karabakh.
Local resident Areg sits near a burning house in the village of Karegah.
868 notes · View notes
imaginal-ai · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
"Areg, Angel of Earth Magic" (0003)
(More of the Guardians of Magic Series)
0002
0001
52 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
My boys, Xander and Areg 🐈🐕
----
ooooh very mischievous energy
171 notes · View notes
orange-content-rater · 2 months
Note
heeeeey
Tumblr media
Boop!
rate the booping paw!
Grrrr… how dare you bring this into my h OW OK I GET IT. Ow
Very orange!!!
Some pink
Could ha. AREG!! DUDE PLEASE STOP FOR A BIT. Jeez people these d OW!!
8/10
12 notes · View notes
jaladwolf · 3 months
Note
I'm curious, but what is everyone's little, caregiver, daddy/ mommy, big brother/ sister status in everyone in the pizzeria
Also, a very quick question: Do the toys know about Goldie's age regression of being a little?? If so, how did they handle/ react to finding out?
I’ve been waiting for someone to ask me this!
Goldie’s a little, of course
Freddy’s a combination of a big brother, daddy and caregiver. It depends on the situation.
Bonnie’s a caregiver. He’s actually one of Goldie’s main caregivers
Chica’s a mommy/caregiver
Foxy’s a caregiver, but he doesn’t want to admit it.
Toy Freddy, Toy Bonnie and Toy Chica are caregivers + big brothers/sister
Mangle is a big sibling. (They’re gender-fluid in my AU)
Mari’s is actually a flip, meaning she’s both a caregiver and a little. (Her little age is 2-4)
I haven’t the faintest clue what B.B. could be…
Shadow Freddy’s a daddy/caregiver
Mike’s a caregiver and Henry’s a daddy. (I mean come on, Mike’s like a second parent to them and Henry is literally their dad.)
As for the second question, Toy Freddy’s not too used to it, Toy Bonnie claims it lame (he’s lying), and Toy Chica was practically ecstatic.
DNI if NSFW, K1NK/FET1SH or Anti-arege!
9 notes · View notes
mariacallous · 7 months
Text
Meduza's The Beet: Starting from scratch in Armenia
Hello, and welcome back to The Beet! 
I’m Eilish Hart, the editor of this weekly dispatch from Meduza that brings you underreported stories from across Central and Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, and Central Asia. If some kind soul forwarded this email to you, sign up here to receive future issues straight from the source. (And be sure to check out last week’s report on the uncertain fate of Georgia’s endangered languages.) Subscribers get access to all our features first — but we’re not asking you to be a gatekeeper. Quite the opposite: Tell your friends to subscribe to The Beet, too! 
This week, we’re returning to the South Caucasus to follow up on our coverage of the fall of Artsakh, the erstwhile breakaway republic in Nagorno-Karabakh. After more than three decades of bloody conflict that included two full-scale wars (fought from 1988–1994 and in 2020), Azerbaijan launched a blitz offensive on September 19–20 that forced the surrender of the separatist government and its army. Following Stepanakert’s capitulation, Baku finally lifted the Lachin Corridor blockade, opening the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia after nine long months. Fearing reprisals at the hands of Azerbaijani forces, Karabakh’s predominantly ethnic Armenian population began fleeing the region en masse. Cars and buses packed with people and what few possessions they could carry formed traffic jams that lasted days on end. By October 1, Armenia had taken in more than 100,000 displaced people — nearly the entire population of Nagorno-Karabakh. 
For many Karabakh Armenians, this was not their first evacuation from the region. But with Azerbaijan in full control of Nagorno-Karabakh, it seems unlikely that they will return. With this in mind, the Armenian government has rolled out financial assistance and is offering a “temporary protection status” for the displaced, as well as the prospect of full citizenship (a rude awakening for the many Karabakh Armenians who have long held Republic of Armenia passports but didn’t realize they were only good for international travel). In the meantime, many displaced families struggle to find adequate housing and make ends meet. For The Beet, Yerevan-based journalist Sona Hovsepyan reports on how Karabakh refugees grapple with the difficult task of rebuilding their lives from scratch. 
‘We left everything’
Uprooted and jobless, Nagorno-Karabakh refugees start from scratch in Armenia
By Sona Hovsepyan 
“My six-year-old grandson woke up in the middle of the night and cried, ‘Grandpa, I want our home,’” Areg Mirzoyan recalled, breaking down in tears.
Mirzoyan’s family is originally from Arajadzor, a village in Nagorno-Karabakh. They are among the more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians rendered homeless and unemployed after Azerbaijan’s lightning offensive drove them from the disputed enclave in late September. Mirzoyan’s family settled in Malishka, a village 130 kilometers (80 miles) south of Yerevan, Armenia’s capital. Locals provided them with temporary housing: a single bedroom for a family of six.
“I never imagined it would turn out like this. I thought we would go back to our homes,” Mirzoyan told The Beet.
But nearly two months after the exodus, finding permanent accommodations and employment are now top priorities for former Nagorno-Karabakh residents. 
On October 17, during his speech to the European Parliament, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that Armenia had accepted 100,000 displaced people in the space of a week “without establishing refugee camps and tent settlements.” He also added that Armenia needs more international assistance, including financial support.
Earlier, Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Khachatryan reported that various governments and international organizations had donated more than 35 million euros ($37 million) in aid through the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).  
Mirzoyan’s family members are struggling to find jobs in the village, where farming is the only occupation. His son, Amran, was a soldier in the Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army, but he has yet to find work and does not plan to continue serving in the military. Mirzoyan and his wife, Sevil, are both retired but have yet to receive pensions from the Armenian government. 
In late October, the Armenian government announced that displaced Karabakh Armenians would be granted “temporary protection status.” Labor Minister Narek Mkrtchyan later clarified that refugees registered at an address in Armenia may also be eligible for pensions and other government benefits. However, those who take Armenian citizenship would forfeit the social support provided to refugees.
During the interview, 63-year-old Mirzoyan pointed to the clothes on his back — the only things he could save while fleeing his home during the Azerbaijani attack. 
The family left in a rush without taking additional clothing, money, or food with them. Mirzoyan’s three-year-old granddaughter, Alice, arrived in Armenia barefoot because her shoes were broken. Neighbors and volunteers in Malishka donated new clothes and other necessities for the children.
‘The stores in Artsakh were empty’
Mirzoyan recounted how his grandson, also named Areg, was astonished upon entering a grocery store in the Armenian border city of Goris, which was the first to receive displaced people from Nagorno-Karabakh.
“He said to me, ‘Grandpa, look at how many candies there are here.’ The stores in Artsakh were already empty, with literally nothing in any of them. The child was amazed,” said Mirzoyan.
In the nine months leading up to Azerbaijan’s September 19–20 attack, Nagorno-Karabakh was under a blockade. It began when Azerbaijani activists blocked the only road connecting Karabakh to the outside world: the Lachin Corridor, or “the road of life,” as Armenians call it. As access to food, medicines, and vital services dwindled, the region descended into a humanitarian crisis. 
On the eve of the Azerbaijani offensive, Nagorno-Karabakh’s human rights ombudsman, Gegham Stepanyan, told The Beet that the region was experiencing a “humanitarian catastrophe.” 
“Nagorno-Karabakh residents had no access to basic necessities such as food and healthcare during the blockade, nor the right to free movement,” said Mariam Muradyan, the children’s rights officer for the Caucasus at Global Campus of Human Rights. The blockade and subsequent exodus have had a huge impact on children from Nagorno-Karabakh, she added. 
“The government has to look at the individual demands of Karabakh refugees, which is a challenging process,” Muradyan said. The most important thing now, she continued, is that the Armenian government provides psychological help to displaced children and their families.
UNICEF-supported social workers reported in October that Nagorno-Karabakh’s displaced children — who number more than 30,000 �� were showing “signs of severe psychological distress” and were at risk of deteriorating mental health unless they received immediate support. 
Mirzoyan said his grandson Areg remembers the recent fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh well; even weeks later, every loud noise makes the six-year-old jump out of his skin.
‘Everyone calls for peace, but nothing changes’
Despite everything they’ve been through, the Mirzoyan family still hopes to return to their homeland one day. However, they fear living under Azerbaijan’s control.“If we have the opportunity to go back, we will go back immediately, but we can’t live side by side with Azeris,” Mirzoyan said. 
After taking control of Nagorno-Karabakh in September, Baku presented a plan for reintegrating the region’s ethnic Armenian population. However, Human Rights Watch warned that Baku’s assertions are “difficult to accept at face value” given the months-long blockade of the enclave, decades of conflict, impunity for apparent war crimes, and Azerbaijan’s poor human rights record.
Seda Avanesyan, 69, fled Nagorno-Karabakh with her family on September 25 after Azerbaijan opened the Lachin Corridor. Initially, they stayed with relatives, but now they rent a house in Malishka. Avanesyan’s family members are willing to undertake any work to earn a living, but her daughter has yet to find a job. Her son-in-law, a soldier, plans to continue serving in the Armenian army. And her grandchildren, eight-year-old Anahit and 11-year-old Nare, have already started attending a local school.
Avanesyan, who is from Askeran, recalled a time when Karabakh Armenians used to interact with Azerbaijanis from a neighboring town. But now, she said, people find it difficult to trust the reintegration process.
“We had a good relationship during the Soviet Union; we used to communicate and trade with Azerbaijanis from Akna, but now it is not possible to live alongside each other,” she told The Beet. (Akna is the Armenian name for the town of Aghdam, which was left completely destroyed and deserted after the first Nagorno-Karabakh war. Yerevan ceded Aghdam to Azerbaijan under the ceasefire that ended the 2020 war.)
“We were hungry and thirsty for 10 months, but in the end, we hoped everything would be fine,” Avanesyan continued. “The opposite happened. Everyone calls for peace, but nothing changes.”
The ICRC reported that only a small number of Karabakh Armenians had chosen to stay in their homes as of mid-October, while others had been unable to leave the region. According to Red Cross teams, some of these people required medical help, food and water, or assistance securing transportation out of Nagorno-Karabakh. 
Earlier, a U.N. mission estimated that between 50 and 1,000 ethnic Armenians remained in the region.
‘We don’t have another option’
Emma Baghdasaryan, a 20-year-old student living in the town of Armavir in the west of Armenia, assisted displaced families in the aftermath of Azerbaijan’s September offensive and throughout the 2020 war. She volunteers with the Armavir Development Center, a non-profit organization providing the displaced with food, blankets, and sanitary items.
“Volunteering is a form of patriotism for me. I don’t have extra money to help families. It’s the only thing I can do for Artsakh’s people,” Baghdasaryan explained. “I believe that families from Artsakh simply need warmth, understanding, and appreciation.”
According to Naira Arakelyan, executive director of the Armavir Development Center, there is still an urgent need for volunteers. Arakelyan also emphasized that many Karabakh refugees are living in poor conditions. 
“Karabakh Armenians need social and psychological support; everyone is under immense stress right now. The living conditions in the temporary housing that people have rented are terrible,” Arakelyan told The Beet. “There are no beds, refrigerators, washing machines, or other necessary items in most of the apartments.” 
Andranik Aloyan, 44,fled Nagorno-Karabakh along with his pregnant wife, two small children, and 71-year-old father. Their journey from the town of Martuni to Armenia took an exhausting three days; at night, the family slept in their car. 
“We didn’t have bread after September 19. My children had nothing to eat for [a] few days. My wife was pregnant, and, in that condition, we left everything and fled to Armenia,” Aloyan said.
This marked the family’s second flight from Nagorno-Karabakh: they previously fled the region during the 2020 war. In the months before the exodus, the family experienced constant fear and anxiety due to the blockade, Aloyan recalled. His wife, Hasmik Antonyan, lacked access to vitamins and basic healthcare throughout her pregnancy, causing a delay in her childbirth. She was then hospitalized on September 19, during the Azerbaijani attack. She eventually gave birth to their son after the family reached Armenia.
Today, Aloyan and his family live in the village of Getap in Armenia’s Vayots Dzor province, a two-hour drive from Yerevan. Their new house, which they are renting, is unsuitable for winter. Some of the windows are broken, and the gas and water supply lines need to be replaced before the colder weather comes, Aloyan said. “The house is in terrible condition; it’s very damp. We are cleaning it so that we can move in. Right now, we don’t have another option,” he explained. 
On November 13, Aloyan told The Beet that, so far, only he had received a support payment from the Armenian government, which has promised to provide each displaced person with a one-time payment equal to $250 and an additional $125 per month to cover rent and utility costs (for a period of six months). His wife, father, and children were still waiting to receive their respective payments, he said.
Aloyan was a soldier in Nagorno-Karabakh and is still looking for a new job. His son and daughter have yet to start kindergarten in Armenia. For now, their parents’ priority is readying the rental house for winter, and afterward, they will send the children to nursery school.
Having fled Nagorno-Karabakh for the second time in three years, the family has decided not to return. “No, we don’t want to go back. I am scared for my children,” said Aloyan. “We can’t live there anymore.” 
11 notes · View notes
Text
elle and tao comic icons
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
feel free to use :)
542 notes · View notes
prettygoodnames · 1 year
Note
hey! im tryna find a first name for my oc, i already have a surname planned : ]
im tryna find a name that means something fire or sun related :]
You send this while asks were closed and you evidently didn't read my list of things to include when sending an ask but I've decided to answer this ask anyways. Do better next time though.
Adsila
Meaning: fire
Origin: Cherokee
Aelius
Meaning: sun
Origin: Latin
Related names: Aelia, Eliana, Elio, Helio, Helios, Liana
Agni
Meaning: fire
Origin: Sanskrit
Antiman
Meaning: condor of the sun
Origin: Mapuche
Antinanco
Meaning: eagle of the sun
Origin: Mapuche
Aodh
Meaning: fire
Origin: Irish
Related names: Aide, Aodhán
Areg
Meaning: sun, bright
Origin: Armenian
Arevik
Meaning: like the sun
Origin: Armenian
Arpi
Meaning: sun, ether
Origin: Armenian
Arthit
Meaning: sun
Origin: Thai
Aygün
Meaning: sun and moon
Origin: Turkish
Azar
Meaning: fire
Origin: Persian
Brandr
Meaning: sword, fire
Origin: Germanic
Cináed
Meaning: born of fire
Origin: Irish
Related names: Kenna, Kenneth
Conleth
Meaning: constant fire
Origin: Irish
Eguzki
Meaning: sun
Origin: Basque
Elanor
Meaning: star sun
Origin: Sindarin
Fajra
Meaning: fiery
Origin: Esperanto
Fiamma
Meaning: flame
Origin: Italian
Fintan
Meaning: white flame
Origin: Irish
Flaka
Meaning: flame
Origin: Albanian
Günay
Meaning: moon and sun
Origin: Turkish
Günel
Meaning: country of the sun
Origin: Turkish
Haru 陽
Meaning: light, sun, male
Origin: Japanese
Related names: Haruki, Haruko, Haruto
Haul
Meaning: sun
Origin: Welsh
Heliodoro
Meaning: gift of the sun
Origin: Greek
Heulwen
Meaning: sunshine
Origin: Welsh
Hinata 日向
Meaning: sunny place
Origin: Japanese
Hinata 陽向
Meaning: towards the sun
Origin: Japanese
Hnub
Meaning: sun
Origin: Hmong
Hurik
Meaning: small fire
Origin: Armenian
Il-Seong 日成
Meaning: sun, day + completed, finished, succeeded
Origin: Sino-Korean
Inti
Meaning: sun
Origin: Quechua
Joash
Meaning: fire of Yahweh
Origin: Hebrew
Keahi
Meaning: the fire
Origin: Hawaiian
If you want more lemme know
57 notes · View notes
poppindawgs · 10 months
Text
@kngswitch ——— july 27th 2023  /  greg sulked his way through the airport,  half thought about turning around and forgetting about the whole thing.  (  changing his name and leaving the country wasn’t completely out of the option either.  ).  areg wanted jamie, his heart yearned for him,  cried for him and it was his fault for his own torment.
he popped an edible and slept for the whole flight, thankfully.  anxious dreams ran rampant in his head.  he dreamt of being buried alive, then woke up to the ryan reynolds movie, buried. the man sitting next to him on the flight, fully enthralled … not knowing the internal torment he just caused greg.  the night sky a deep purple-ish blue,  it was late night,  and maybe greg could avoid another heartbreaking conversation.  he was scared, he told his friends. scared that he’d walk in and see jamie with his girl, starting this new life.  one that he’d be happy for him to have. but the emotional anguish too much to bare. 
he grabbed his carryon bag. and ordered his uber to jamie’s address.  he sat there, and waited and waited … contemplated taking another edible but decided against it.  instead, he popped airpods into his ears and listened to music —— avoiding any small talk, instead … engaged in small talk with jamie.  their love was so intense, the kind of love that makes your heart ache, and your head spin. which was fine … but then areg saw his house. 
it was nice, like,  too nice.  as someone who grew up with money … greg felt like a poor child going to his rich friends house. “what the fuck” he chuckles.  there was no way that he lives here alone,  still, he walked up to the door and knocked on it.  taking a deep breath in and out. as he opened the door.  “… hi” he breathed out, smiling. “your house is really nice, jamie.”  
11 notes · View notes
holdinghands · 2 months
Text
Maybe shes allgeric to tagoballs
Maybe shes aregic to gagobears
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Maybe she is allergic to Taco Bell
3 notes · View notes