Memories (1995)
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porsche 2030 lemas LMP1 on Behance by seokun lee
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LYCHNOBITE
[noun]
one who labors at night and sleeps in the day.
Etymology: Greek lychnos - a lamp + bios - life.
[Pete Mohrbacher - Leliel, Angel of Night]
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HRP
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[ Ghost in the Shell 攻殻機動隊 - Major Motoko Kusanagi 草薙 素子 ]
Illustration by Masamune Shirow (士郎 正宗)
found via Emmanuel Olarewaju
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Ungodly Close.
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SUPINE
[adjective]
1. lying on the back or having the face upward.
2. having the palm upward (of the hand).
3. inactive, passive, or inert, especially from indolence or indifference; lethargy.
4. Inclined; sloping.
Etymology: from Latin supīnus, “lying face up, inactive”.
[Miles Johnston - Jellies]
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By Daniel Silvestre
Tumblr l Facebook
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source
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ELDRITCH
[adjective]
unearthly, alien, supernatural, weird, spooky, eerie.
Etymology: of uncertain origin. Possibly from Middle English eldrich, from earlier elrich, equivalent to Old English el- (or Elf), “foreign, strange, other” + rīċe, “realm, kingdom”; hence “of a strange country, pertaining to the Otherworld” or “Fairyland”; compare Old English ellende, “in a foreign land, exiled” (compare German Elend, “penury, distress” and Dutch ellende, “misery”), Runic Norse alja-markir, “foreigner”.
[Saeed Ramez - Queen]
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VORAGINOUS
[adjective]
pertaining to something which devours everything
Etymology: Italian voragine, “chasm, abyss”, from Latin vorare, “devour” + -ous, a suffix forming adjectives that have the general sense “possessing, full of” a given quality”.
[Rovina Cai - Devourer]
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Animals Metal Sculptures by Taiichiro Yoshida
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FLAGITIOUS
[adjective]
1. shamefully wicked, as persons, actions, or times.
2. heinous or flagrant, as a crime; infamous; villainous.
Etymology: Old French flagitieux or Latin flāgitiōsus, both ultimately from flāgitium, “shameful crime”.
[Marc Simonetti - Darshiva]
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