Look at her collar. Is it frilly, high-necked, brightly colored, and/or heavily accessorized? Congratulations! You’ve found the character on whom the writer has projected his or her own fears about femininity and materialism — or as I call her, the Little Fancy Bitch. Above all, Little Fancy Bitch is stylish as hell. From books to films, her fashion sense has remained astonishingly consistent, combining traditional notions of old money with maximalist femininity. Think frilly, over-accessorized pinafores, steam-cleaned pea coats, blindingly white knee socks, and hair that behaves exactly how it’s supposed to.
Fancy Little Bitch is a term of endearment, by the way, because I believe this trope to be woefully misunderstood. The funny thing about the Little Fancy Bitch is that often she isn’t really a villain at all — most of the time, she’s actually a friend or acquaintance of the protagonist, written into the story solely to show how cool and chill said protagonist is. But to me, she just illustrates how overrated being cool and chill is.
But I’ve had a fondness for this sort of character that’s only grown over the years, and I think I know why. In a world of bookworms and tomboys, the Little Fancy Bitch is an unapologetic try-hard who has more important things to take care of than worrying about what everyone else thinks of her. It’s also important to mention, I think, that the Little Fancy Bitch is ultimately a comedic device. She’s there because the things she says are hilarious, and in children’s books, the girls don’t often get to be the ones delivering the jokes. - "In Praise of the Little Fancy Bitch Aesthetic," Rebecca Jennings (x)
it's always "what you doing" and never "Juli. MY Juli. With Eddie Trulock. She's laughing. What is she laughing about? How could she sit there, and laugh, and look so beautiful?"
Have you ever read the stories Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Alice Through the looking glass ?
Yes but not recently
I had this like class reading app (it had robots?!?) n it had both the first and second books (unabridged) so I read it in like grade 5/6 (idk which grade lol) but I don’t remember much
I also read the first one in French 2 years ago but honestly my French classics (literally just like victor hugo was French and everything else was a translation) was such a bad era, I don’t remember any plots from those books (Jane eyre was such a bitch to read)
I do plan on rereading them though because my wonderland knowledge could definitely use some more source material
Mortal Kombat 3 (SNES) - online game | RetroGames.cz
Hi this is Steven Moore no way I repeat no way kids cannot play the video game called Mortal Kombat 3 in 1995 that's why the computer game called Mortal Kombat 3 is Rated M because that's why the computer game called Mortal Kombat 3 has too much violence and it does have a lots of blood and gore in it too much blood and gore that's why the computer game called Mortal Kombat 3 is Rated M for super Nintendo that's why kids cannot play the computer game called Mortal Kombat 3 because that's why the computer game called Mortal Kombat 3 has too much violence and it does have a bunch of blood and gore in it that's why the computer game called Mortal Kombat 3 is Rated M for super Nintendo from Steven Moore.