henryclervals:

we’re almost in the ‘20s and dadaism is thriving, europe’s in a shambles, everyone is broke and the right wing is on the rise so i guess we really don’t learn a goddamn thing huh

(via turtleprobs)

allthingslinguistic:

“To be fluent in another language means that you can communicate with relative ease, that is, without it being a real strain on either the speaker or the listener. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, is fluent in English, despite the fact that you can hear he is not a native speaker and that he may, on occasion, use the word “delicious” when he probably meant to say “delightful”. Pretty much anyone can become fluent in pretty much any language at pretty much any age. It’s not even true that young children learn languages faster than older children or adults: if you expose different age groups to the same amount of instruction in a foreign language, the older ones invariably do better, both initially and in the long run. Learners of any age can achieve a brilliant, even nativelike, command of the vocabulary of another language, including such challenging structures as idioms or proverbs. The puzzling thing about older learners – something the authors of the new study also found – is that they seem to have more problems mastering some, but not all, grammatical phenomena. A good example for this is the fact that, in English, most verbs have to have an “s” added to them in the third person singular: so it’s I/you/we/they walk but he/she walks. Many second language learners keep getting even such comparatively simple grammar rules wrong, even though they may have an amazing command of vocabulary. However, it seems that if you learn the language at a younger age, you have an easier time mastering the kinds of structures that older learners keep struggling with, and the same is true for acquiring a native-like accent.”

Monika Schmid, You’re never too old to become fluent in a foreign language in The Conversation

(Source: allthingslinguistic, via anonymousbutpresent)

mermaidastrology:

“I can never read all the books I want; I can never be all the people I want and live all the lives I want. I can never train myself in all the skills I want. And why do I want? I want to live and feel all the shades, tones and variations of mental and physical experience possible in my life. And I am horribly limited.”

Sylvia Plath 

Quotes that remind me of Gemini

supersillyanddorky06:

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THE ONLY WALL THAT DESERVES ATTENTION GOING INTO 2019

(via campwolfes)

tvhousehusband:

“Women, we’re nurturers, that’s what’s expected of us…But we have to find personal fulfillment. We have to follow our dreams. We have to say ‘I can do that, and I should be allowed to.’”

— Glenn Close, giving the speech of the night accepting her Golden Globe for The Wife.

(via school-marm-charm)

tvhousehusband:

“Women, we’re nurturers, that’s what’s expected of us…But we have to find personal fulfillment. We have to follow our dreams. We have to say ‘I can do that, and I should be allowed to.’”

— Glenn Close, giving the speech of the night accepting her Golden Globe for The Wife.

(via school-marm-charm)