And it was a BMW ๐
And it was a BMW ๐
And the photo is โฅ๏ธ
Gisele Pelicot being applauded and supported by women around the time of the trial of her husband
This popped up on my phone and I remembered the respect and awe I felt in the presence of such dignity and bravery
I hope her life is now opening up some peace and freedom to her
A comment published is a comment published
Also got a text out the blue from MHu who had to e comment and asked if it was me!!
My message was posted on bbc cricket - I wrote โRe Martin @ 11.53:1am welcoming back Gus Atkinson. He has 55 wickets in 12 tests at 22.3. I think that's probably a better average than any current England bowler.โ
Fame has come my way #thecricket
My youngest came home from 5 months travelling a week ago today and it was a beautiful thing. Letting them go is not a choice but I think of you can do it well they will come back in ways that warm and fill your heart
Motherfucking wind farmsโฆ
Songs with a groove that works whether youโre up very late and flagging or up early and flagging #JJCale open.spotify.com/track/2xijkd...
Love this and the replies
Always thought my time at Four Elms village cricket club qualified me to play for England menโs test team. But apparently not
Good eh?
Blueberry escort ๐
Birds are dinosaurs who shrugged off a couple apocalypses. Some eat bone marrow. Some drink nectar. They outswim fish in the sea. They smile politely at gravityโs demands. โฌ
โชI am grateful to see them. I am grateful to feed them. I am grateful to know them.โฌ
Happy birthday Kate Bush.
My son can be like this song describes too youtu.be/kRd2kfZO_wA?... #pi
He was the bass player with Bon Iver on โFor Emma, Forever Agoโ
Itโs of birds I heard with the Merlin app this morning - part 1
Itโs of birds I heard with the Merlin app this morning - part 2
Itโs of birds I heard with the Merlin app this morning - part 3
Itโs of birds I heard with the Merlin app this morning - part 4
Nothing new for me today but an arrowhead of 40 noisy Canadian geese was good
Discombobulated.
and donโt worry I am more than happy with my life now
Hahaha. Iโve been saved from more than that
What is weird is realising that today would have been your silver wedding anniversary but you separated 6 years ago #solitaryman
And so his business model continues #griftPLC
To my bank,
Sending me an email with the title โkeeping your money goals on trackโ is not a great way to inspire interaction from me
#Corporatebollocks
Itโs certainly confusing. What should I think about people starving to death ??
Wondering if Lucy Bronze is related to George Headleyโฆโฆ
BREAKING: At least 43 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces across Gaza since dawn today, including six aid seekers, sources in Gaza hospitals tell Al Jazeera.
๐ด LIVE updates: aje.io/kguo3g
When she was just 26 Florence Merriam wrote the first guide to birding with binoculars in 1889. And she slipped in this incredible feminist gem:
A dragoman was an interpreter, translator, and official guide between Turkish-, Arabic-, and Persian-speaking countries and polities of the Middle East and European embassies, consulates, vice-consulates and trading posts. A dragoman had to have a knowledge of Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and European languages. In the Ottoman Empire, Dragomans were mainly members of the Ottoman Greek community, who possessed considerable multilingual skills, because Greek trading communities did substantial business in the markets of the Mediterranean Sea, the Black Sea, the Atlantic Ocean and the Indian Ocean. To a lesser extent, other communities with international commercial links, notably the Armenians, were recruited. In Arabic the word is ุชุฑุฌู ุงู (tarjumฤn), in Turkish tercรผman. Deriving from the Semitic quadriliteral root t-r-g-m, it appears in Akkadian as "targumannu," in Ge'ez (Classical Ethiopic) as แตแญแแ (t-r-gw-m), and in Aramaic as targemana. Hebrew makes a distinction between ืืชืจืื (metargem)โreferring to a translator of written textsโand ืืชืืจืืื (meturgeman) referring to an interpreter of spoken conversation or speeches. The latter is obviously more closely related to the other languages mentioned, though both are derived from the same Semitic root. There has been speculation of a Hittite origin of the term. During the Middle Ages the word entered European languages: in Middle English as dragman, from Old French drugeman, from Medieval Latin as dragumannus, from Middle Greek ฮดฯฮฑฮณฮฟฮผฮฌฮฝฮฟฯ, dragoumanos. Later European variants include the German trutzelmann, the French trucheman or truchement (in post-Tanzimat French, and in modern French it is drogman), the Italian turcimanno, and the Spanish trujamรกn, trujimรกn and truchimรกn; these variants point to a Turkish or Arabic word "turjuman", with different vocalization. Webster's Dictionary of 1828 lists dragoman as well as the variants drogman and truchman in English. The plural in English is thus "dragomans" (not "dragomen").
What's the oldest word in the English language?
It's 'dragoman', a rare term that refers to professional translators (Agatha Christie used it).
English borrowed the word from the Turkish 'tercรผman', which in turn was borrowed from the Akkadian word 'targumannu', first written down 5,000 years ago.
I am moving to south Devon for a yearat the end of the week. Wonโt be using my phone as much I hope but I will still be getting this app out! I will be living much more โout of townโ and so hope to hear and notice the bird life
Always good to hear a new one.
Quiet morning for me as I got up late and didnโt loiter as it was raining, but I did add a green woodpecker to my list