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#I want to die a natural death at the age of 102 - like the city of Detroit.: Wade Wilson aka Deadpool
ofvaporex · 2 years
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@polyhexianchicken​ said (x):
No. No you're not 
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“It wouldn’t kill me to pick up one or two shifts to help out-”
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hiddenpxpercuts · 1 year
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Was that [GEORGE SEAR]? Oh no no, that was just [CROWN PRINCE WILHELM OF SWEDEN], a [CANON CHARACTER] from [YOUNG ROYALS]. They are [NINETEEN] years old, use [HE/HIM], and [ARE] aware that they are not actually from Washington DC. Too bad they can’t stray from this city for long.
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Weilheim is the crown prince of sweden, meaning to take the crown when his mother passes away. 
He has been in D.C. for a few months now, thinking he blacked out from a party and got on the wrong train and ended up in America.
His mind has been a bit fuzzy, and that’s mostly because I’m only on the first season and don’t want to spoil shit so as i watch the seasons and all, he will ‘remember’ more.
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mainspedia · 2 years
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Deadpool airattack
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Deadpool airattack movie#
Vanessa: Who would do such a thing? Wade: Hopefully you. Pool indeed found out that every opportunity to drive him nuts. He threatens that the mercenary will finally get his sense of humor driven out of him, And the future Mr. On the other hand, he easily meets his match in Wade Wilson. They still try to wonder that it was an excellent thought to give the character a CGI costume.īy the time they meet in the story, Ajax is defined as a guy who regularly gets whatever he wants. Still, it senses like it’s when entering The Workshop that Ryan Reynolds is lawfully able to air his injustice about his experience making live-action DC Comics movies. Green Lantern picks up a quick announcement in the Deadpool’s opening sequence. Please don’t make the super-suit green… or animated! Good thing, Deadpool is notably Canadian, so it does seem right to have him take a number of potshots at one of America’s less put as one city. Single can visualize fans up in Michigan, attracting a small piece of the subject with this exacting line of conversation, other than that doesn’t stop it from being great in line. I want to die a natural death at the age of 102 – like the city of Detroit. As a result, what does he do when he gets a manacle to an X-Man challenging to get him in? Of course, he saws sour his hand and leaves it flipping the bird. Since his curing powers and general mental illness, nobody in the Marvel Universe fights rather like Deadpool. It is already known the way it entirely the particular way characters were urbanized in previous X-Men cinema, it’s simply appropriate that Deadpool would include an ideal line about timeline generated-confusion with a great situation to the recasting that happens with X-Men: original Class. McAvoy or Stewart? These timelines are confusing. Starting now on, this will be my present at the expression following smashing both of my hands and punching a giant metal misshapen in the face. There was a lot of epic, insult-filled rant on which Deadpool finds himself going away in the film, but the Merc With The Mouth’s comparison among Professor X and Marshall Apple white constructs this the greatest one in the movie. If I ever decide to become a crime-fighting shit swizzle, who rooms with a bunch of other little whiners at Neverland Mansion with some creepy, old, bald, Heaven’s Gate-looking motherfucker… on that day, I’ll send your shiny, happy ass a friend request. It is known that this is a Deadpool movie, it is all but certain that the film would get a number of severe shots at the terrible version of the quality in X-Men origins cast aside an action figure in right turn of Whams Make It Big was an ideal flash in this value.
Deadpool airattack movie#
No new superhero movie has a sex scene that can match the Calendar Girl series in Deadpool except for the vast as every celebration party is, the crown has to go to the Wade and Vanessa’s quick stint of self-discipline in the middle of the medley. Still, gratitude to the awkward quiet that follows them over the line, we may not at all know accurately what went downward in that reverse room before Wade come out to greet the pizza guy.ĭeadpool’s eponymous central character certainly gets the top lines in the movie as you will find out ong to understand this kind of piece other than Vanessa certainly get a few bright and hilarious moments of her own such as while she grabs Buck’s nut sack following he slaps her ass. Wade Wilson is precisely the type of weirdo who would shit in a cat’s litter box just to show his point. Still, the excellent information is that he makes up for that fault rather rapidly through two deadly headshots. Possessing just 12 bullets to take down a cadre of armed bad guys, managing to waste a few on a slippery motorcyclist is surely not Deadpool’s best flash in the movie. This Deadpool movie is Action/Adventure and Comedy type of Genre.Ĭheck out the best compilation of Deadpool quotes from the movie itself, movie critics, fans, and actors. Deadpool is a giddy slice of amazing packed with more twists than Deadpool’s enemies and has more action than parties. Starring God’s perfect funny comedian Ryan Reynolds and a bunch of other characters. Even passionate love is not the thought of this film, but pure fun and simple life learning you can apply every day.įrom the studio that brought all the viewers three take films comes the block-busting, fourth-wall-breaking masterpiece about Marvel comics, the sexiest anti-hero. Deadpool is not your ordinary heroic movie of honor, fame, and bravery.
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newpapercuts · 3 years
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@glvesup​ (Anyone)
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"...Guess who just stole the host's expensive tequila!" Wade grinned, having his Deadpool costume on and sneaking out of the room. “You. Come with me and we will find a place to drink this...safely.”
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Companions as Deadpool Quotes:
(Making this only furthered my love for Deadpool)
Cait:
"Blasphemy! All fights are necessary."
Curie:
"Oh, no! Don't punch me! I've never been punched before."
Danse:
"You big chrome cock goblin—you're really gonna fuck this up for me."
Deacon:
"Fourth wall break inside of a fourth wall break? That's like... 16 walls!"
Hancock:
"Don't make the same mistakes I did. Got it? Or else the whole world tastes like Mama June after hot yoga."
Gage:
"Today was about as much fun as a sandpaper dildo."
Macready:
"Okay, let's pro/con this superhero thing. Pro—they pull down a gaggle of ass, local dry cleaning discounts, lucrative film deals, both origin stories and larger ensemble team movies. Con—they're lame-ass teacher's pets!"
Maxson:
"You're about to be killed by a Zamboni."
Nick:
"I want to die a natural death at the age of 102 - like the city of Detroit."
Piper:
"His real name is Francis, he got Ajax from the dish soap!"
Preston:
"Kill's too harsh a word. I prefer "stab to death."'
X6-88:
"Guy came in here looking for you. Real Grim Reaper-type. I don't know. Might further the plot."
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argyrocratie · 3 years
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(...)
Let’s look at life expectancy:  In Italy, average life expectancies in the solidly Medieval 1200s were 35-40, while by the year 1500 (definitely Renaissance) life expectancy in Italian city states had dropped to 18.
It’s striking how consistently, when I use these numbers live, the shocked and mournful silence is followed by a guy objecting: those numbers are deceptive, you’re including infant mortality—voiced as if this observation should discredit them.  Yes, the average of 18 does include infant mortality, but the Medieval average of 35 includes it too, so the drop is just as real.  If you want we can exclude those who die before age 12, and we do get a smaller total drop then, average age of death 54 in the 1200s dropping to 45-48 in 1500, so only a 12-16% drop instead of 48%, but the more we zoom the grimmer the Renaissance half proves.  Infant mortality (within 12 months) averaged 28% both before and after 1348, so the big drop from Medieval to Renaissance Italy is actually kids who made it past the first year, only to die in years 2-12 from new diseases.  We also think of the dangers of childbirth as lowering women’s lifespans, but death from childbirth stayed steady from Medieval to Renaissance at (for Tuscany) 1 death per 40 births, while the increase in war and violence made adult male mortality far higher than female even with the childbirth threat.  If we look at the 20% of people who lived longest in Renaissance Italy it’s almost entirely widows and nuns, plus a few diehards like Titian, and poor exiled Cardinal da Costa of Portugal languishing in Rome to the age of 102, with everyone he’d known in the first 2/3rds of his life long gone.  Kids died more in the Renaissance, adults died more, men died more, we have the numbers, but I find it telling how often people who hear these numbers try to discredit them, search for a loophole, because these facts rub against our expectations.  We didn’t want a wretched golden age. (Demographics are, of course, an average, and different bits of Europe varied, but I’m using the numbers for the big Italian city-states precisely because they’re the bit of Europe we most associate with the golden Renaissance, so if it’s true there, it’s true of the Renaissance you were imagining.)
Why did life expectancy drop?  Counter-intuitively the answer is, largely, progress.
War got worse, for one.  Over several centuries, innovations in statecraft and policy (which would continue gradually for centuries more) had increased the centralization of power in the hands of kings and governments, especially their ability to gather funds, which meant they could raise larger armies and have larger, bloodier wars.   Innovations in metallurgy, chemistry, and engineering also made soldiers deadlier, with more artillery, more lethal weapons, more ability to knock a town’s walls down and kill everyone inside, new daggers designed to leave wounds that would fester, or anti-personnel artillery designed to slice a line of men in half.  Thus, while both the Middle Ages and Renaissance had lots of wars, Renaissance wars were larger and deadlier, involving more troops and claiming more lives, military and civilian—this wasn’t a sudden change, it was a gradual one, but it made a difference.
Economic growth also made the life expectancy go down.  Europe was becoming more interconnected, trade increasing.  This was partly due to innovations in banking (which had started in the 1100s), and partly, yes, the aftermath of the Black Death which caused a lot of economic change—not growth but change—some sectors growing, others shrinking, people moving around, people trying to stop people from moving around, markets shifting.  There were also innovations in insurance, for example insuring your cargo ship so if it sinks you don’t go bankrupt like our Merchant of Venice.  This meant more multi-region trade. For example, weaving wool into fine-quality non-itchy thread required a lot of oil, without which you could only make coarse, itchy thread.  England produced lots of wool but no oil (except walnuts), so, in the Renaissance, entrepreneurs from England, instead of spinning low-profit itchy wool, started exporting their wool to Italy where abundant olive oil made it cheap to produce high-quality cloth and re-export it to England and elsewhere.  This let merchants grow rich, prosperity for some, but when people move around more, diseases move more too.  Cities were also growing denser, more manufacturing jobs and urban employment drawing people to crowd inside tight city walls, and urban spaces always have higher mortality rates than rural.  Malaria, typhoid, dysentery, deadly influenza, measles, the classic pox, these old constants of Medieval life grew fiercer in the Renaissance, with more frequent outbreaks claiming more lives.
The Black Death contributed too—in school they talk as if the plague swept through in 1348 then went away, but the bubonic plague did not go away, it remained endemic, like influenza or chickenpox today, a fact of life.  I have never read a full set of Renaissance letters which didn’t mention plague outbreaks and plague deaths, and Renaissance letters from mothers to their traveling sons regularly include, along with advice on etiquette and eating enough fennel, a list of which towns to avoid this season because there’s plague there.  Carlo Cipolla (in the fascinating yet tediously titled Before the Industrial Revolution) collected great data for the two centuries after 1348, in which Venice had major plague bursts 7% of years, Florence 14% of years, Paris 9% of years, Barcelona 13% of years, and England (usually London) 22% in the earlier period spiking to 50% in the later 1500s, when England saw plague in 26 out of 50 years between 1543 and 1593.  Excluding tiny villages with little traffic, losing a friend or sibling to plague was a universal experience from 1348 clear to the 1720s, when plague finally diminished in Europe, not because of any advance in medicine, but because fourteen generations of exposure gave natural selection time to work, those who survived to reproduce passing on a heightened immune response, a defensive adaptation bought over centuries by millions of deaths.
Today thousands of cases of Y. pestis (the plague bacterium) still occur each year, largely in sub-Saharan Africa and East Asia where it was not endemic so immunities didn’t develop.  And if geneticist Mihai Netea is correct that the immune mutation which helps those of European descent resist Y. pestis also causes our greater rate of autoimmune disorders, then the Black Death is still constantly claiming lives through the changes it worked into European DNA over 400 years (and literally causing me pain as I type this, as my own autoimmune condition flares).  While the 1348 pandemic was Medieval, most of the Middle Ages did not have the plague—it’s the Renaissance which has the plague every single day as an apocalyptic lived reality.
Economic growth also made non-military violence worse.  Feuds (think Montagues and Capulets) were a Medieval constant, but the body count of a feud depends a lot on how wealthy the head families are, since the greater their wealth and the larger their patronage network, the larger the crowd of goons on stage in the opening scene of Romeo & Juliet when partisans of the two factions are biting their thumbs at each other, and the larger the number of unnamed men who also get killed in the background while Romeo fights Tybalt.  In Italy especially, new avenues for economic growth (banking and mercenary work) quickly made families grow wealthy enough to raise forces far larger than the governments of their little city states, which made states powerless to stop the violence, and vulnerable to frequent, bloody coups.  The Bentivoglios of Bologna and Sforza of Milan (whose marriage alliance produced Ercole who wrote that letter to Machiavelli) had risen by force, ruled by force, and were in turn overthrown by force, several times each, in fact, as rulers were killed, then avenged by returning sons or nephews, and cities flip-flopped between rival dynasties every few years
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I watched deadpool recently, and here are a few quotes I can remember for you! "House blowing up builds character" "Who's kitty litter did I just shit in" "Say the magic words, fat Gandalf" "This is my most prized possession..." "All the dinosaurs feared the T-Rex." "I want to die a natural death at the age of 102 - like the city of Detroit." "You will die alone, if you could die - ideally, for others sake." "You were droning on!" "You look like an avocado had sex with an older avocado"
Thank you!!! You are helping my family mess with my brother while he's in basic training 🤣
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steves-on-a-plane · 7 years
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The Volatile Waynes
Words: 1384 Pairing: None Cast Of Characters: Bruce Wayne, Sister!O.C., Alfred Pennyworth Summary: Bruce Wayne has had enough of his younger sister wasting her life sneaking into clubs and partying all night. Things finally come to a head during lunch one afternoon. 
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"Maddi? Are you still asleep?" Bruce Wayne whispered from just outside his sister's bedroom door. She didn't answer, so he cracked the door open. "Mad, it's the middle of the afternoon." There was still no response. He swung open the door to find his sister sleeping soundly in her bed. "C'mon, you can't sleep all day." He strode across the room and nudged her gently. She just swatted his hand away and rolled over.
"Madeline Wayne, get up!" In one swift motion, he pulled layers of blankets off his younger sister. She shivered.
"What do you want from me, Bruce?" She groaned.
"I want you to get out of bed." He stared down at her, still in the dress she had worn out that night. Most of her make-up had rubbed off, but there was a track of mascara running down her cheek. Madeline rolled over and rubbed her eyes.
"But it's so early." She blinked up at him. He was wearing one if his best suits. Expensive and grey, it made his eyes look stormy. He typically saved that suit for important business deals because of the intensity it brought out in him.
"It's one in the afternoon, Madeline." He told her through gritted teeth.
"Then shouldn't you be at work?" She dragged herself into a sitting position and ran a hand through her hair.
"I was at work. Until I got a phone call from Alfred asking if I wouldn't mind stopping by the house to make sure you weren't dead."
"So dramatic." Madeline giggled. This wasn't the first time they had this conversation, though coming home from work in the middle of the day was a new variant. She looked over at her nightstand where she knew a glass of water and a few ibuprofen would be waiting. "Just go back to work." She said, reaching for the medicine.
"I'm not just going back to work. Clean yourself up and come down to lunch."
"Sure thing, Dad!" Bruce had been on his way out of the room when his sister shot off her mouth. He paused in the doorway but decided against opening up that old wound again.  
It took a great deal of effort for Madeline to get herself out of bed. It wasn't as if she didn't already realize she was the sole disappointment of the Wayne legacy. All of Gotham knew about Thomas and Martha's efforts to restore Gotham to its former glory. When they died, the eyes of the city were turned to their children. Eight-year-old Bruce and four-year-old Madeline. She had tried fit into the mold that had been laid out for her. In school, she studied hard and it paid off with exceptional grades. She was active too with her hands in nearly every social club possible. But as she flourished, Bruce only seemed to become more successful. Like their father, Bruce was a natural with business.
Unaware of the pressure his sister was putting on herself, he was also trying to leave a legacy his parents would be proud of. Bruce and Maddi were once very close despite their four-year age difference. As they got older a schism seemed to form. He barely knew who she was now. Nineteen years old sneaking into clubs and getting so drunk she could barely find her way home at night. Alfred had thought it was simply a phase at first. After all, Bruce was known to have his fair share of rough nights, Especially at that age. But now, even the family butler was worried.
Freshly showered and dressed in leggings and an oversized t-shirt, Madeline made her way downstairs. From the base of the main staircase she could hear Bruce on the phone, most likely on a work-related call. He can't lecture me, if he's on the phone with someone else. She decided, and made her way into the dining room.
"Ah Ms. Wayne, you've decided to join the land of the living at last." Alfred quipped as his youngest charge slid into her usual place at the table.
"Only the good die young, Alf." She replied with a smirk.
"I should appreciate it if you would keep that sentiment to yourself Miss Wayne. In truth, it is the foolish who die young."
"So Mom and Dad were foolish then?" The smirk disappeared from her face. Alfred knew better than to engage with Madeline on the subject of her parents. Aside from the fact that she thoroughly enjoyed arguing any point to exhaustion, the subject of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne always sparked a disagreement between the siblings. Across the table Bruce was still on the phone. He was talking, it seemed, to his secretary.
"Caroline, the man is the CEO of a toy company! If he doesn't understand that family comes first, I'm not sure Wayne Enterprises should be doing business with him any way. Yes, please do tell him that I said that...No, I don't know when I'll be available to reschedule...Caroline, please just work your magic alright? Thank you." Bruce ended his call with a frustrated tap.
"My apologies Miss Wayne. It was not my intention to make light of your tragedy. Lunch will be served momentary." Alfred excused himself from the room, leaving Bruce alone to glare at his sister.
"Why do you have to say things like that to him?" He groaned. "You know as well as I do, it tortures him to hear you talk about them like that." Maddi didn't have an answer. Of course she knew it tortured Alfred. He had been a part of the family long before the death of her parents. He always seemed to know the right thing to say and he was always around when he was needed. There was no logical reason for her to torment the butler the way she had for the past fifteen years.
"I don't know what you expect from me, Bruce. I was four years old. I was home with the butler because I had the flu."
"So now you blame Alfred? Same old Madeline," Bruce folded his arms over his chest. "Nothing is ever your fault!"
"Let me make something perfectly clear, I still blame you for what happened to them!" She pointed a well manicured finger at his heart. "If you hadn't made such a big deal about me getting 'all of the attention' Mom wouldn't have taken you out for a special trip to the movie theater and they would both still be here."
"I was eight years old Maddi!" Bruce exclaimed jumping to his feet. "You can't hold a grudge over the petty jealousy of an eight-year-old!"
"I was four!" She snarled, now standing up as well. "Four years old. I had a fever of a 102! Alfred woke me up in the middle of the night, but I was too sick to understand what was even happening! At least you were old enough to remember them!"
"You forget them on purpose!" Bruce burst out. "Drinking away your problems! Squandering responsibilities! Be glad that you can't remember them, because you're such a disappointment to their memory, the guilt alone would crush you!"
A beat past and neither spoke. There they stood, the volatile Waynes; each glaring at the other from across the table. Fists clenched, lines drawn. Hate mounting with every new churning thought. Too long the pressure had been building, childhood pettiness had grown into adult resentment. It was a recipe for disaster.  
"I despise you." Madeline spat. She turned on her heels and stormed out of the room. Bruce chased after her.
"Where are you going?"
"The movies! Ha, wouldn't that be ironic?" She said, ascending the main staircase. "Maybe I'll head over to the Iceberg Lounge? Or maybe Disneyland! Anywhere's better than here!" She disappeared from view when she reached the top of the stairs.
"You are actually the worst person in the entire world!" He hollered, not caring if she could hear him or not. But she reappeared at the top of the staircase with her purse and a jacket in her hands.
"That's rich considering the man who murdered our parents is probably still running around somewhere!" She scoffed, climbing down the stairs. "Have a nice life!" She called over her shoulder as she stepped out the front door.
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musingcompany · 7 years
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hello, world!! as always, I come back with the most random resources in the world. this time I’m presenting you all a list of #225 latin words/saying that can be used as tags, slogans (admins!!) and whatever else you find this useful for. if you guys want it in any other language, just let me know because I love words. hope y’all find this useful!
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1. ab incunabulis: from the cradle 2. a bon chat, bon rat: to a good cat, a good rat (retaliation in kind) 3. a bouch ouverte: with open mouth (eagerly, uncritically) 4. ab ovo usque ad mala: from egg to apples (from beginning to end) 5. a bras ouverts: with open arms 6. ab uno disce omnes: from one learn to know all 7. a coup sur: with sure stroke (surely) 8. acte gratuit: gratuitous impulsive act 9. ad arbitrium: at will (arbitrarily) 10. ad extremum: to the extreme (at last) 11. ad majorem Dei gloriam: to the greater glory of God 12. ad patres: to his fathers (deceased) 13. ad unguem: to the fingernail (exactly) 14. ad utrumque paratus: prepared for either event 15. aegri somnia: a sick man’s dreams 16. aequam servare mentem: to preserve a calm mind 17. aequo animo: with even mind (calmly) 18. aere perennius: more lasting than bronze 19. a huis clos: with closed doors 20. a l’abandon: carelessly 21. a la belle etoile: under the beautiful star (in the open air at night) 22. a la bonne heure: at a good time (all right) 23. a la page: at the page (up to the minute) 24. alter idem: another self 25. a maximis ad minima: from the greatest to the least 26. a marveille: marvelously 27. amicus humani generis: friend of the human race 28. amicus usque ad aras: a friend as far as to the alters (a friend to the last extremity) 29. ami de cour: court friend 30. armamentum ad baculum: argument of the staff (appeal to force) 31. arrectis auribus: with ears pricked up 32. a torte et a travers: wrong and crosswise (without rhyme or reason) 33. au bout de son latin: at the end of one’s Latin (at the end of one’s mental resources) 34. au fait: to the point (socially correct) 35. au grand serieux: in all serious 36. au mieux: on the best terms (on intimate terms) 37. aurea mediocritas: the golden mean 38. auspicium melioris aevi: an omen of a better age 39. ausssitot dit, aussitot fait: no sooner said than done 40. autres temps, autres moeurs: other times, other customs 41. aut vincere aut mori: either to conquer or to die 42. bellum omnium contra onnes: war of all against all 43. bien-pensant: right minded (orthodox) 44. bon gre, mal gre: whether with good grace or bad (willy-nilly) 45. bonis avibus: under good auspices 45. brutum fulmen: insensible thunderbolt (futile threat of display of force) 47. cadit quaestio: the question drops (the argument collapses) 48. capable de tout: capable of anything (unpredictable) 49. cause sine qua non: an indispensable cause or condition 50. cheval de bataille: war-horse (argument constantly relied on) 51. comedie humaine: human comedy (the whole variety of human life) 52. comedie larmoyante: tearful comedy (sentimental comedy) 53. comagnon de voyage: traveling companion 54. compte rendu: report 55. concordia discors: discordant harmony 56. confessio fidei: confession of faith 57. contemptus mundi: contempt for the world 58. coup de maitre: masterstroke 59. coup d’essai: experiment 60. coute que coute: cost what it may 61. cri de coeur: cry of the heart 62. crise de conscience: crisis of conscience 63. crise de nerfs: crisis of nerves 64. crux criticorum: crux of critics 65. cum grano salis: with a grain of salt 66. custos morum: guardian of morals (censor) 67. de bonne grice: with good grace 68. de l’audace, encore de l’audace, et toujours de l’audace: audacity, more audacity, and ever more audacity 69. de mal en pis: from bad to worse 70. Deo favente: with God’s favor 71. de profundis: out of the depths 72. desipere in loco: to indulge in trifling at the proper time 73. Deus absconditus: hidden God (unknowable God) 74. dies faustus: lucky day 75. dies infaustus: unlucky day 76. dies irae: day of wrath 77. esprit d’le escalier: the wit of the staircase 78. faux bonhomme: false friend 79. faux-naif: affectedly simple or childlike 80. festina lente: make haste slowly 81. feux d’artifice: fireworks, or show of wit 82. folie de grandeur: delusion of greatness, megalomania 83. furor loquendi: rage for speaking 84. furor poeticus: rage for poetry 85. furor scribendi: rage for writing 86. gens du mond: fashionable people 87. guerre a outrance: war to the uttermost 88. haut gout: slight taint of decay 89. hic illae lacrimae: hence these tears 90. homme d’esprit: witty man 91. in omnia paratus: ready for all things 92. in partibus infidelium: in the land of the infidels 93. in statu quo ante bellum: just like before the war 94. januis clausis: behind closed doors 95. jeu de mots: play on words 96. ktema es ai: a possession for ever (enduring art or literature) 97. la belle dame sans merci: the beautiful lady without mercy 98. lacrimae rerum: tragedy of life 99. lapsus calami: slip of the pen 100. lapsus linguae: slip of the tongue 101. laudatory temporis acti: one who praises past times 102. lusis naturae: freak of nature 103. magni nominis umbra: the shadow of a great name 104. malade imaginaire: imaginary invalid 105. malis avibus: under evil auspices 106. mauvais quart d’heure: uncomfortable but brief experience 107. meden agen: nothing in excess 108. mens sana in corpore sano: a sound mind in a sound body 109. metteur et scene: (stage or film) director 110. meum et tuem: mine and yours 111. mirabile visu: wonderful to behold 112. mole ruit sua: it collapses from its own size 113. monumentum aere perennius: a monument more lasting than bronze 114. multum in parvo: much in little 115. mysterium tremendum: overwhelming mystery 116. ne quid nimis: not anything in excess 117. nil admirari: equanimity 118. nolens volens: willy-nilly 119. nostalgie de la boue: attraction to what is unworthy, crude, or degrading 120. novus homo: upstart 121. novus ordo seclorum: a new cycle of the ages 122. nuit blanche: sleepless night 123. obscurum per obscurius: explaining the obscure by means of the more obscure 124. onus probandi: burden of proof 125. ore rotundo: eloquently 126. otium cum dignitate: leisure with dignity 127. outre-mer: overseas 128. pallida Mors: pale Death 129. panem et circenses: bread and circuses 130. pater patriae: father of his country 131. paucis verbis: in a few words 132. pax vobiscum: peace be with you 133. peine forte et dure: strong and hard punishment 134. per angusta ad augusta: through difficulties to honors 135. peu a peu: little by little 136. peu de chose: a trifle 137. peu d’occasion: piece for a special occasion 138. piece justificative: document serving as evidence 139. piece montee: set piece (said of decorative food) 140. pleno jure: with full right 141. plus royaliste que le roi: more royalist than the king 142. pocas palabras: few words 143. point de repere: point of reference 144. police verso: with thumb turned (down) 145. pour rire: for laughing (not to be taken seriously) 146. pro aris et focis: for alters and firesides 147. pro bono publico: for the public good 148. pro hac vice: for this occasion 149. pro patria: for one’s country 150. pro rege, lege, et grege: for the king, the law, and the people 151. pro re nata: as needed 152. quantum mutates ab illo: how changed from what he once was 153. quantum sufficit: as much as suffices 154. quoad hoc: to this extent 155. quod erat demonstrandum: which was to be proved 156. quod erat faciendum: which was to be done 157. quod semper, quod ubique, quo dab omnibus: what (has been held) always, everywhere, by everybody 158. quorum pars magna fui: in which I played a great part 159. raison d’etat: reason of state 160. reculer pour mieux sauter: to draw back in order to make a better jump 161. re infecta: the beusiness being unfinished 162. religio loci: religious sanctity of a place 163. ruse de guerre: war strategem 164. rus in urbe: country in the city 165. saeva indignatio: fierce indignation 166. sal Atticum: Attic salt (wit) 167. salon des refuses: salon of the refused (exhibition of officially rejected art) 168. salto mortale: deadly jump (dangerous or crucial undertaking) 169. sancta simplicitas: holy simplicity (naivete) 170. sans doute: without doubt 171. sans gene: without embarrassment or constraint 172. sans peur et sans reproche: without fear and without reproach 173. sans souci: without worry 174. scene a faire: obligatory scene 175. secundum artem: according to the art (according to the accepted practice) 176. secundum naturam: according to nature (naturally) 177. se defendendo: in self-defense 178. semper eadem: always the same (feminine form) 179. semper fidelis: always faithful 180. semper idem: always the same (masculine form) 181. semper paratus: always prepared 182. simpliste: naive 183. splendide mendax: nobly untruthful 184. spolia opima: rich spoils (spoils of the victor) 185. status quo ante bellum: the state existing before the war 186. suaviter in modo, fortiter in re: gently in manner, strongly in deed 187. suo jure: in his own right 188. suo loco: inits proper palce 189. suo marte: by one’s own exertions 190. sur place: in place (on the spot) 191. suum cuique: to each his own 192. tant mieux: so much the better 193. tant pis: so much the worse (too bad) 194. tempus edax rerum: time, that devours all things 195. totidem verbis:: in so many words 196. totis viribus: with all one’s might 197. toto caelo: by the whole extenet of the heavens 198. toujour perdix: always partridge (too much of a good thing) 199. tour d’horizon: circuit of the horizon (general survey) 200. tous frais faits: all expenses defrayed 201. taut au contraire: quite the contrary 202. tout a vous: wholly yours (at your service) 203. tout bien ou rien: everything well (done) or nothing (attempted) 204. tout court: quite short (simply) 205. tout de meme: all the same (nevertheless) 206. tout de suite: Immediately 207. tout ensemble: all together 208. tout le monde: everybody 209. trahison de clercs: treason of the intellectuals 210. tanche de vie: slice of life 211. tristesse: melancholy 212. ultima ratio regum: the final argument of kings (war) 213. uno animo: with one mind 214. urbi et orbi: to the city and the world (to everyone) 215. utile dulci: the useful with the agreeable 216. va et vient: coming and going (traffic) 217. ventre a terre: belly to the ground (at very great speed) 218. verbatim ac litteratim: word for word, and letter for letter 219. vieux jeu: old game (old hat) 220. vin du pays: wine of the locality 221. virgo intacta: untouched virgin 222. virtute et armis: by valor of arms 223. vis medicatrix natureae: the healing power of nature 224. vita nuova: new life 225. vox et praeterea nihil: voice and nothing more
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papitofitness · 6 years
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“I want to die a natural death at the age of 102, like the city of Detroit.” -#deadpool #marvel #xmen #marvelunderarmour #marvelcomics #superheroes #papito🇵🇷
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ofvaporex · 1 year
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❗ Do you think you're not worthy of taking care of yourself or why do you neglect your health?
Send a “❗” to force the truth out of my muse.
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"I don't think I'm not worthy. I just... know others need the assistance more than I do. I'm old. I've lived a very long life.
I don't want to take care someone else might need more just to keep this damn old frame ambulating. My medics and patients came before me during the war. It's the way things are.
...I suppose it's just a hard habit to break."
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ofvaporex · 2 years
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👏 Lay it on me
Send 👏 for my muse to deliver a harsh truth to your muse
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"People care about you, are going to continue to care about you, and have cared about you, regardless of the past or future. More people than just the handful closest, too. And those people are going to fuss over you, even when you don't want them to."
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ofvaporex · 2 years
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@polyhexianchicken said (x):
Crawls underneath all of those blankets
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He just offers Whirl some sweet grade, with a curly straw should he need it.
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hiddenpxpercuts · 1 year
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Was that [OLIVIA HOLT]? Oh no no, that was just [STEPHANIE TANNER], a [CANON CHARACTER] from [FULL HOUSE]. They are [TWENTY FIVE] years old, use [SHE/HER], and [ARE] aware that they are not actually from Washington DC. Too bad they can’t stray from this city for long
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Stephanie is known for her perky personality. She was a blabbermouth in the earlier seasons, but got over that eventually, though her younger sister Michelle received that trait as well (but she also grew out of it at an earlier age than Stephanie). Stephanie is often defiant with her sister D.J. in the earlier seasons, but they eventually become much closer and bicker less as the series progresses, though her nosy habit of reading D.J.'s diary never really faded, though her snooping on D.J.'s phone calls was gone by then; the diary reading habit was already gone by the final season. Stephanie is the most excitable of the girls—a trait she inherited from her mother, and the most talkative—a trait from her father. She often struggles with being the middle child and wanting attention (as seen in season 2's "Middle Age Crazy").
Still, she is quite well-behaved and very hard on herself whenever she did something wrong. For example, in season 3's "Honey, I Broke the House", after accidentally crashing Joey's car into the kitchen, she considers running away from home, and after being punished, is still hard on herself that she hides under the covers of her bed. Danny assures her that there's always the chance of building a new wall or even buying a new car, but there's only one Stephanie Judith Tanner that can never, ever be replaced.
Although often noble and trustworthy, Stephanie has her weaknesses, which include being able to be swayed by her peers into dangerous situations, and prying. Like D.J., Stephanie is a good student. Her favorite color is pink. Stephanie is very athletic, as she also loves to dance and she performs ballet very well. Like D.J. and eventually Michelle, Stephanie is a member of the "Honey Bees" (an organization similar to Girl Scouts) in the first few seasons. Stephanie shares a room with D.J. until season five, when D.J. moves into Michelle's room and Michelle moves in with Stephanie.
Throughout the series, Stephanie has gone through many tough issues (possibly more than her sisters), such as smoking (in "Fast Friends"), "make-out parties" ("Making Out is Hard to Do"), joy riding ("Stephanie's Wild Ride"), witnessing child abuse (of a friend in "Silence is Not Golden"), as well as the death of her mother when she was only five years old.
Stephanie has struggled with drugs, eating disorder and her sexuality. 
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ofvaporex · 2 years
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😶 How's it going, retired life?
Send 😶 + a really uncomfortable question and my muse has to answer it
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"Just about as exciting as you'd expect it to be.
I'm getting used to the pattern of not having work to wake up to, at least, but it's still... a lot more nothing than I was ready for.
It's doing wonders for my health, of course- a few too many brushes with death from external and internal sources at this point in my life. But I've really got to find a good hobby.
Already finished my damn memoir."
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ofvaporex · 2 years
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they're a 10 but stubbornly selfless
Send “They’re ’s a 10, but..” and fill in the rest to call out my muse!
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He huffs indignantly and grumbles a bit, but really, he can't deny the accusation very well.
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