The Mechanisms have so many genders going on, and most of these genders are waistcoat
You know what. I’m starting a new aesthetic, population me.
Romantic Science, AKA Dark Academia for STEM people.
Thrifting a lab coat and embroidering it with your initials and a little insignia, whose significance is known to you and your lab partner only
Watching The Theory of Everything and The Imitation Game and Hidden Figures and basically every movie about historical scientists and mathematicians you can find
Decorating your desk with old slide rules and vintage lab equipment. Your prize possession is a set of vintage lenses you found at a thrift store
Wanting an articulated human skeleton far, far too much
Getting a set of (brand new, NOT thrifted, be safe ppl) beakers to drink from, and putting them directly onto your stovetop to boil water for tea or coffee, because borosilicate glass can survive anything.
Secretly relating far too much to Henry Jekyll and Victor Frankenstein, because you too want to do a gay little science experiment that challenges god.
Thunderstorms and late nights in the lab, the light of the Bunsen burner glistening off of your flasks and scribbled chalkboard equations
Papering your walls with vintage scientific diagrams; even if you know that our understanding of the world has evolved since they were made, looking back at scientific history is amazing
Writing code late at night and feeling, in some metaphysical way, as though Ada Lovelace herself is with you in spirit
Being far, FAR too obsessed with the concept of emergent ai sentience and how it has the potential to be Frankenstein irl
Looking through a telescope on clear nights, whispering the names of the constellations and stars, painting a star chart on your ceiling in a burst of creative inspiration
Collecting and mounting samples from everywhere you can think of to pore over in an antique microscope
Bringing a field journal wherever you go, learning how to draw and label botanical samples, preserving plants and flowers for study later
Dreaming of what undiscovered mysteries lie in the deepest depths of the sea, feeling the thrill of discovery whenever you learn about a new species and one day hoping to discover one yourself
Just. Romanticise STEM.
no ❤️ vember
*as recommended by my professor this semester. I honestly love it. It’s helpful*
Also Include: APA Citation
Include: 50-100 words about your first impression of the text, what you already know, what you hope will be answered, etc. The purpose is to get your mind in a place where you’re thinking about the topic.
Include: Bullet point for chapter sub-section & bullet points under that for notes relevant to the sub-section title. Repeat for each section.
Include: Create a 3 column table. Include the word, definition, and page you found it on. Include words that are new to you, key terms, etc.
Note any statistics found in the text, what page it was on, and summarize it in your own words
Include: Direct quotes and summaries of direct quotes, page number you found it on. Will help a lot when you have to cite things for essays and projects.
Include: An italicized thesis that sums up the entire text. 3-7 sentences that summarize the text.
Include: A few sentences describing who the author is, to get an idea about where they were coming from & their perspectives
Include: Questions you have, questions the text raised for you, or answer homework/textbook questions.
these french words are also used in english (mostly older english), maybe to indicate someone who uses pompous dialogue, and the sentences below are examples of the usage of the words in english.
1. En ami (“as a friend”): “I confide in you en ami.”
2. En arrière (“behind”): “Discretion is the better part of valor, I reminded myself as, letting my more valorous friends go before me, I marched en arriere.”
3. En attendant (“meanwhile”): “I entertained myself en attendant by thumbing through a magazine while she troweled on her makeup.”
4. En avant (“forward”): “En avant, comrades. Fortune awaits us through that door.”
5. En badinant (“in jest”): “Relax, my friend — I meant what I said en badinant.”
6. En bagatelle (“in contempt”): “He glared at me en bagatelle, as if I were vermin.”
7. En banc (“with complete judicial authority”): “I sentence you en banc, as judge, jury, and executioner, to death.”
8. En bloc (“in a mass”): “We can depend on them to vote en bloc in support of the proposal.”
9. En clair (“in clear language, as opposed to in code”): “The spy’s telegram was carelessly written en clair.”
10. En deshabillé (“undressed, or revealed”): “She opened the door to find me standing there en deshabille, and immediately retreated.”
11. En échelon (“in steps, or overlapping”): “The flock of geese flew overhead en echelon.”
12. En effet (“in fact, indeed”): “You see that I am, en effet, in control of the situation.”
13. En famille (“with family, at home, informally”): “Let us now return to that happy household, where we find the denizens lounging en famille.”
14. En foule (“in a crowd”): “He had the remarkable ability to blend in en foule.”
15. En garçon (“as or like a bachelor”): “I have separated from my wife and am now living en garcon.”
16. En grande (“full size”): The bouncer approached and, with a scowl, reared up en grande.”
17. En grande tenue (“in formal attire”): “She arrived, as usual, en grande tenue, and in consternation that everyone else was dressed causally.”
18. En grande toilette (“in full dress”): “The opening-night crowd was attired en grande toilette.”
19. En garde (“on guard”): “She assumed a defensive position, as if en guard in a fencing match.”
20. En haute (“above”): “From my perspective — en haute, as it were — I’d say you are both wrong.”
21. En masse (“all together”): “The members of the basketball team arrived en masse at the party.”
22. En pantoufles (“in slippers, at ease, informally”): “He had just settled down for a relaxing evening en pantoufles when the doorbell rang.”
23. En passant (“in passing”): “She nonchalantly mentioned the rumor en passant.”
24. En plein air (“in the open air”): “We celebrated by venturing en plein air.”
25. En plein jour (“in broad day”): “They boldly rendezvoused en plein jour.”
26. En poste (“in a diplomatic post”): “Though he was a friend, I decided to send the memorandum en poste.”
27. En prise (“exposed to capture”): “He found himself en prise, beset on all sides.”
28. En queue: (“after”): “I bided my time and followed en queue.”
29. En rapport (“in agreement or harmony”): “I’m delighted that we are all en rapport on the subject.”
30. En régle (“in order, in due form”): “I believe you will find the documents en regle.”
31. En retard (“late”): “Typically, they arrived en retard for dinner.”
32. En retraite (“in retreat or retirement”): “After uttering the verbal blunder, she ducked her head and exited the parlor en retraite.”
33. En revanche (“in return, in compensation”): “En revanche, I invite you to attend my upcoming soiree.”
34. En rigueur (“in force”): “We have arrived en rigueur to support you.”
35. En route (“on the way”): “En route to the post office, she passed by the derelict house.”
36. En secondes noces (“in a second marriage”): “The community was so conservative that she found her matrimonial state, en secondes noces, to be the topic of gossip.”
37. En suite (“connected, or in a set, as a bedroom with its own bathroom”): “She was pleased to see that the room was en suite.” (Also spelled ensuite.)
38. En tasse (“in a cup”): “I’ll take some en tasse.”
39. En tout (“in all”): “We’d like to use your banquet room, please — we are a score or more en tout.”
40. En vérité (“in truth”): “En verite, I am the one responsible.”
Source: http://www.dailywritingtips.com/40-french-expressions-en-tout/
~True Love~
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~Reigh Lynne
Making this for my fellow broke passionate people
https://www.coursera.org/learn/astro
https://www.teachastronomy.com/
https://www.youtube.com/user/astropedia/videos
(these first 3 are basically the same shit but different platforms)
I will keep reblogging each time I find something new
“if i told you about the darkness inside of me would you still look at me like i am the Sun?”
-𝘏𝘢𝘳𝘮𝘢𝘯 𝘒𝘢𝘶𝘳
i got a C in maths then and was pissed
feel this anger, darling? preserve it. keep it. never let it go. give it a room inside your heart. make it part of your soul. bury it deep inside of yourself and never show it to anyone. it's your secret. It's what keeps you going. it's your dearest friend and your worst enemy. keep being angry. keep standing up for yourself. steal everyone's anger. it is yours now.
I watched half of Bad Samaritan so I had to pause and watch Davd Tennant compilations otherwise I think I would have just been left scarred for life
So, let me guess– you just started a new book, right? And you’re stumped. You have no idea how much an AK47 goes for nowadays. I get ya, cousin. Tough world we live in. A writer’s gotta know, but them NSA hounds are after ya 24/7. I know, cousin, I know. If there was only a way to find out all of this rather edgy information without getting yourself in trouble…
You’re in luck, cousin. I have just the thing for ya.
It’s called Havocscope. It’s got information and prices for all sorts of edgy information. Ever wondered how much cocaine costs by the gram, or how much a kidney sells for, or (worst of all) how much it costs to hire an assassin?
I got your back, cousin. Just head over to Havocscope.
((PS: In case you’re wondering, Havocscope is a database full of information regarding the criminal underworld. The information you will find there has been taken from newspapers and police reports. It’s perfectly legal, no need to worry about the NSA hounds, cousin ;p))
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Tim | it/they/he | INFJ | chaotic evil | ravenclaw | here for a good time not for a long time
184 posts