mulberrytea
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broken hearts hurt but they make you strong
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Yongil Kim - Samsoon's House, 2024 - Acrylic on canvas
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2000's Usagi no Mimi-chan holographic stickers
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STAY SAFE!! [ID: the Gilbert Baker pride flag with the words “Happy pride to all those who are unable to celebrate openly and safely. You are loved and seen!” in all-caps black text over it. /end ID]
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as a native american i consider english french and spanish as foreign colonial languages even if theyre the ones i heard most growing up
"Anything other than my country's official languages": for example, the official languages of Belgium are Dutch, French, and German. Someone who lives in Belgium but does not fluently speak any of these might consider any language other than these, including their own native language, to be "foreign."
"Anything other than my area's most common languages": for example, the US does not have an official language, but someone who speaks only English and lives in Southern California might be surrounded by so much Spanish that they don't consider it "foreign."
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Anon is from England, and they had a non-English friend once who told anon that she distinguished between English and foreign languages - that English was so common that she didn't consider it foreign, even though it wasn't her native language (so her choice on this poll below would have been "Any language other than my first/native language, except English"). Anon is curious how common this perspective is.
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We ask your questions anonymously so you don’t have to! Submissions are open on the 1st and 15th of the month.
#so other/more complex answer it is!#💬#i'd love to choose the 1st but unfortunately anishinaabemowin isnt my first language. im trying to teach myself tho.
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