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study-sapphire · 1 year
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Missed Time, Ha Jin [transcript in ALT ]
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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Things people who only like weird bad modern art say. This is about thomas kinkade btw. Modern art consoomer types HATE him with vitriol
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These are his paintings. Absolutely beautiful and stunning. These people think its Low Brow.
Just bc u have a degree does not mean u know art… if all art school taught u was that a rothko is somehow more artistically valid than any of these beautiful paintings….. you would easily join scientology.
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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— Mary Oliver, Summer Morning
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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 What is Occitan?
Occitan is a Romance minority language closely related to Catalan spoken across four sovereign states: Southern France, Spain, Italy and Monaco. Although it has never been legally recognised as a political entity, this area is historically known as Occitania. 
Occitan is called both occitan and lenga d’òc by its native speakers, and it is currently split into six main varieties (or dialects):
Gascon, which includes Bearnese and Aranese, spoken in France and Spain respectively
Languedocien (spoken in France)
Limousin (France)
Auvergnat (France)
Provençal, which includes Nissart, spoken in Nice, France
Vivaro-Alpine (Occitan Valleys and Guardia Piemontese, Calabria, Italy)
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It should be noted that, because Catalan has a high degree of mutual intelligibility with Occitan, it was considered a dialect of Occitan until the 19th century. At any rate, the two languages are sometimes grouped together in the Occitano-Romance subgroup of Romance languages.
Occitan resources
Occitan
Standard Occitan grammar (in Occitan)
Occitan orthography (in Occitan)
Descriptive Occitan grammar (in English)
Occitan sense peine (in French)
Brief Occitan grammar (in French)
Occitan for beginners (in Italian)
Introduction to Occitan grammar (in Catalan)
Introduction to Occitan literature (in Catalan)
Online Occitan course (Vivaro-Alpine variety) (in Occitan and Italian)
Occitan literature from the Occitan Valleys (in Occitan and Italian)
Occitan-Catalan dictionary
Provençal
Modern Provençal: Part 1 (in English)
Modern Provençal: Part 2
Modern Provençal: Part 3
Modern Provençal: Part 4
Basic grammar & common phrases (in French)
Nissart classes by Doc Tiblon (Youtube channel in French and Nissart subs)
Aranese (Gascon subdialect, official in Catalonia)
Standard basic Aranese grammar (in Aranese)
Basic dictionary (in Aranese)
Phonetic dictionary (in Aranese)
Orthographic dictionary (in Aranese)
Aranese verbs (in Aranese)
Famous literary works translated into Aranese
Aranese and General Occitan - Four studies (in Occitan)
Online official Aranese course (in Aranese)
Conselh Generau d’Aran
Online dictates of different levels
Institut d’estudis aranesi
Aranese TV
Aranese-Catalan / Aranese-Spanish dictionary
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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Parlem en Occitan- Los salutacions (prumiere setmana: 5/1/2022)
Salut tot lo monde! Qu’es l’òra d’aprendre de l’occitan!
Cette semaine, on va garder les choses simples avec les salutations en occitan! Si vous avez de l'expérience avec le français (donc oui si vous pouvez lire ça), c’est pas très différent. On y va!
(This week, we’re gonna keep it simple with greetings in Occitan! If you have some experience with French, it’s not too different! Let’s get started!)
VA= Vivares | LD= Lengadocian | FR= Francais | EN= English
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Per commancar una conversacion | To start a conversation
(VA / LD) Bonjourn - Bòn ser!/Bòn vespre [bunʤur] - [b’un s’e]/[b’un v’ɛspɾe]
(FR) Bonjour - Bonsoir | (EN) Hello / Good morning/evening
(VA / LD) Salut [sal’yt]
(FR) Salut | (EN) Hey
C’est simple, oui? Continuons.
(It’s easy, right? Let’s keep going.)
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Per demandar la condicion de quauqu’un | To ask someone’s condition
(VA) Coma vas? [k’umo va] | (LD) Cossí  va? [kus’i va]
(FR) Comment vas-tu? | (EN) How are you?
(VA) Coma anètz? [k’umo anɛ] | Cossí anatz [kus’i ana]
(FR) Comment allez-vous? | (EN) How are you?
En occitan, a l’instar de français, il y a une différence de conjugaison du deuxième personne, soit tutoyer soit vouvoyer. Mais c’est pas obligatoire d’utiliser les pronoms, que les bonnes conjugaisons. Le verbe qu’on utilise ici est ANAR, un mot apparenté du verbe ALLER.
(In Occitan, like in French, there is a difference in conjugation of the second person, either informal singular [friends, family, casual social equals] or formal singular [strangers, professional colleagues, formal social equals]/ plural. But it is not necessary to use pronouns in occitan, just the right conjugations. The verb we’re using here is ANAR, which means “to go”)
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Deuxième partie du leçon sortira la semaine prochaine!
(Second part of the lesson will be posted next week!)
Josca mai!
~Estienne
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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I start my 2nd semester of college in 5 days and I'm in a program wirh a heavy workload of 6 classes (19/20 of the allotted credits). i got an infection that is so bad I was hospitalised for a day and now i have daily trips back for IV antibiotics that are expected to last >3ish days and then oral antibiotics after that. I have never been this sick. I'm anxious about school starting and I can't prepare for the new semester. I'm worried I might miss the 1st days. Do you have any tips or ideas?
Hey there! I’ve actually been asked similar questions before, so check out my posts here, because being hit with a bad sickness, you basically have to do a lot of effective and efficient studying during the few times in which you are well enough to do work:
Studying in the Worst Case Scenarios
Cramming Tips That Actually Work
Catching Up with Your Studies
Dealing with Bad Results
Being Realistic about your Results
Finishing an Assignment While Sick
Thinking Differently to Prevent Stress 1 and 2
Dealing with Guiltiness when You Haven’t Studied
Dealing with Mental Health at University
Studying With Depression
Studying With Anxiety
Studying When You’re Sick
Additionally, you may find these guides about studying content-heavy courses useful even after you recover:
Studying Content-Heavy Subjects
Content Heavy Courses Study Guide
Self Studying Advice - when you have to study a lot by yourself
Staying Productive No Matter How Much Time You Have
The Blank Paper Method - for rote learning lots of information
Part 11 Adapting to Uni Study - university basically mandates studying a large amount of info in a short period, so you’ll find this post useful for balancing 6 heavy courses!
Hope that helps! Get better soon!! ^_^
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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I love you
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With all my bruised heart.
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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tuesday mood
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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Autumn Night, Cambridge University, Cambridge England
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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Hi quotes on ocean / sea / drowning?
I combined this with your previous ask about sea / sirens x
'Siren Song' & 'This Is a Photograph of Me' by Margaret Atwood
"The sea is incommensurable."
— Nick Lantz, We Don’t Know We Don’t Know; from ‘What We Know of Death by Drowning’
"One day I would drown, radiant with joy."
— Roberto Bolaño, from ‘2666’, tr. Natasha Wimmer
"I thought of the sirens in their bloody meadow surrounded by the clean white bones of the men they had seduced and devoured–the heaps of shinbones, the pelvises like bows, the femurs like arrows."
— Erica Jong, from 'Sappho's Leap'
"Like a deep woman, it hid a good deal; it had many faces, many delicate, terrible veils. It spoke of miracles and distances; if it could court, it could also kill."
— Sylvia Plath, Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams; from ‘Ocean 1212-W’
"I held my drowning / in my palm like a giant pearl."
— Nick Lantz, We Don’t Know We Don’t Know; from ‘What We Know of Death by Drowning’
"The sea, silver — dreadful, like death."
— Anna Akhmatova, The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova: Uncollected Poems and Fragments 1957-1966, tr. Judith Hemschemeyer
"This August I began to dream of drowning."
—Anne Sexton, Live or Die; from ‘Imitations of Drowning’
"How to explain the irresistible compulsion to join the sea, to be part of it, to sink into the solace of its company?"
— Brian Masters, from ‘Killing for Company: The Case of Dennis Nilsen’
"Now the Sirens have a still more terrible weapon than their song, namely their silence. Though it has never happened, it is perhaps conceivable that someone might have escaped from their singing, but from their silence certainly not."
"But they – lovelier than ever – craned and twisted, let their gruesome hair float free in the wind, stretched their claws wide on the rocks; they wanted to allure no more, all they wanted was to catch for as long as possible the reflected radiance from the great eyes of Odysseus."
— Franz Kafka, The Great Wall of China and Other Short Works; from 'The Silence of the Sirens', tr. Malcolm Pasley
"I'll adore you, as a drowned person does the sea."
"Come, I'll draw you the bitter water, / To love your death there in the sea's night"
— Renée Vivien, The Yale Anthology of Twentieth-Century French Poetry; from 'Ransom', tr. Mary Ann Caws
"Each wave-tip glitters like a knife."
— Sylvia Plath, The Colossus & Other Poems; from ‘A Winter Ship’
"His drowning never seemed to have affected him as much as I thought it should, he couldn’t even remember it. If it had happened to me I would have felt there was something special about me, to be raised from the dead like that; I would have returned with secrets, I would have known things most people didn’t."
— Margaret Atwood, from ‘Surfacing’
"I am happiest / near the ocean, / where the changing light / reminds me of my death"
— Erica Jong, from At the Edge of the Body; from 'I Live in New York'
"You ask the sea, what can you promise me / and it speaks the truth; it says erasure."
— Louise Glück, A Village Life; from ‘March’
"The sea has undone me."
— Anne Sexton, from ‘A Self-Portrait in Letters’: Alfred Sexton, 7th September 1963
"The waves pulse and pulse like hearts."
— Sylvia Plath, Collected Poems; from 'Whitsun'
"The sea gets into your head [...] once you let it in, it doesn’t leave you alone."
— Hannah Kent, from 'Burial Rites'
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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ℭ𝔞𝔪𝔟𝔯𝔦𝔡𝔤𝔢
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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sylvia plath’s notes to self from her first year at cambridge university, april 1956
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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a sunny day in magdalene college
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study-sapphire · 2 years
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A long overdue update!
I’m going to revive this blog as one about my journey at Cambridge :)) I switched my course to HSPS and I’m now in Michaelmas Term of my first year again. Can’t wait to post more on here!!
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