Hello! I hope you have a wonderful day, or at least not a bad one! Pass the happy! š»š When you receive this, list 5 things that make you happy and send this to the last ten people in the notifications.
1. Puppy's (and dogs in general)
2. Jackseptickeye (this man's positive energy is contagious)
3. Video games
4. Sweets
5. Writing
stop making fanfics about characters raping and sexually assaulting y/n, you are fucking disgusting people who romanticize a serious crime that happens every day to children and women
"but that's just reading dark romance" that's not a dark romance, that's just the stuff of a horrible fetish, IF YOU HAVE A RAPE FETISH, GO SEEK FOR FUCKING PSYCHIATRIST HELP!!!!!!!!!!
It really is
BILL NYE canāt stress the importance of Climate Change enough
Muriel...
You are so precious, you sweet giant. I just want to hug you and kiss you and make love to you as if there was no tomorrow.
So... in the newest chapter of The Arcana (Lucio's route) it was pretty much confirmed that BOTH Lucio and MC are The Fool.
Bonus:
Scout can talk!
in spanglish you donāt switch by word, you switch by phrase.
itās not:
ā[first part of the sentence in english], [second part of the sentence in english], mi amor.ā
ā[full english sentence], querida.ā
itās:
ā[first part of the sentence in english], [segunda parte de la frase en espaƱol], mi amor.ā
-
also miles is boricua, miguel is mexican. they have two different accents and use different vocabulary for certain words.
also miles is ānyouricanā - a puerto rican native to new ļæ¼york - while his mom is directly from the island, so there are differences there, too, because his spanish is more influence by new york english. ļæ¼
hereās some good references that arenāt google translate (which usually pulls from spain, a country that speaks vastly differently from latin america)
SpanishDict
WordReference
here have some random videos on different slang/spanish accents:
Puerto Rico
Mexico (1) (2)
-
in spanish most words are gendered, so most feminine words end in a and masculine/gender neutral words end in oļæ¼. adding ito/ita makes something cuter, smaller and more affectionate.
spanish nicknames that arenāt āmi amorā
āquerido/aā - darling
ācariƱoā - dear (always masculine regardless, of who its being said to)
āmi princesa/prĆncipeā - my prince/princess
āmi rey/reinaā - my king/queen
āpapĆ/mamĆā - can be used in any way; romantic, sexual, familial for oneās parent or child, ļæ¼or just platonically
ātesoroā - treasure
also spanish is a language that uses adjectives as terms of affection ļæ¼both cute ones and ones that might sound insensitive in english
gordo (fat), flaco (skinny), negro (black), blanco (white), linda (pretty), bella (beautiful), morena (brown skin), etc.
and like most languages that are not english, spanish has multiple ways of saying i love you.
āte amoā - romantic
āte quieroā - familial, platonic (although thereās nothing wrong with using it romantically)
see also:
te adoro - i adore you
te deseo - i want you
te necesito - i need you
 and, of course, they can vary regionally too.
please use this because i have read a lot of really well written things that take me out of it because the use of spanglish is terrible. donāt just go on your presumptions that spanish/spanglish works in the same way that english does.
- signed your friendly neighborhood afro-latina
Writing and reading fanfic is a masterclass in characterisation.Ā
Consider: in order to successfully write two differentĀ āversionsā of the same character - let alone ten, or fifty, or a hundred - you have to make an informed judgement about their core personality traits, distinguishing between the results of nature and nurture, and decide how best to replicate those conditions in a new narrative context. The character you produce has to be recognisably congruent with the canonical version, yet distinct enough to fit within a different - perhaps wildly so - story. And you physically canāt accomplish this if the character in question is poorly understood, or viewed as a stereotype, or one-dimensional. Yes, you can still produce the fic, but chances are, if your interest in or knowledge of the character(s) is that shallow, youāre not going to bother in the first place.Ā
Because ficwriters care about nuance, and they especially care about continuity - not just literal continuity, in the sense of corroborating established facts, but the far more important (and yet more frequently neglected) emotional continuity. Too often in film and TV canons in particular, emotional continuity is mistakenly viewed as a synonym for static characterisation, and therefore held anathema: if the character(s) donāt change, then whereās the story? But emotional continuity isnāt anti-change; itās pro-context. It means showing how the character gets from Point A to Point B as an actual journey, not just dumping them in a new location and yelling Because Reasons! while moving on to the next development. Emotional continuity requires a close reading, not just of the letter of the canon, but its spirit - the beats between the dialogue; the implications never overtly stated, but which must logically occur off-screen. As such, emotional continuity is often the first casualty of canonical forward momentum: when each new TV season demands the creation of a new challenge for the protagonists, regardless of where and how we left them last, then dealing with the consequences of whatās already happened is automatically put on the backburner.
Fanfic does not do this.Ā
Fanfic embraces the gaps in the narrative, the gracenotes in characterisation that the original story glosses, forgets or simply doesnāt find time for. Thatās not all it does, of course, but in the context of learning how to write characters, itās vital, because it teaches ficwriters - and fic readers - the difference between rich and cardboard characters. A rich character is one whose original incarnation is detailed enough that, in order to put them in fanfic, the writer has to consider which elements of their personality are integral to their existence, which clash irreparably with the new setting, and which can be modified to fit, to say nothing of how this adapted version works with other similarly adapted characters. A cardboard character, by contrast, boasts so few original or distinct attributes that the ficwriter has to invent them almost out of whole cloth. Note, please, that attributes are not necessarily synonymous withĀ details in this context: we might know a characterās favourite song and their number of siblings, but if this information gives us no actual insight into them as a person, then itās only window-dressing. By the same token, we might know very few concrete facts about a character, but still have an incredibly well-developed sense of their personhood on the basis of their actions.Ā
The fact that ficwriters en masse - or even the same ficwriter in different AUs - can produce multiple contradictory yet still fundamentally believable incarnations of the same person is a testament to their understanding of characterisation, emotional continuity and narrative.Ā
i think about this video a lot
⤠Xena ā” She/They ā Bi ā§ 23 ⤠Masterlist and Request Rules: https://the-bookworm-queen.tumblr.com/post/628358174374772736/my-masterlist
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