Here's the second piece I did for the Risk It All BNHA bang, this time for @oniifans fic with @castershellwrites as beta. The fic is super fun and I got to experiment a lot with the coloring of the drawing.
You can find the fic here
https://archiveofourown.org/works/56707765
Fukuzawa is one of the few privileged people to get candy from Ranpo (mostly because he bought it)
I flipping love them ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️😫😫😫😫
for once again. two devastating earthquakes happened in turkey and people need your help. it's been 3 days and there are still people buried alive and about to die any minute but you can save them.
1. DON'T DONATE to kızılay.org (red cross) > why? because although they're a legit government organization, they've been pocketing donations and earthquake taxes since 1999 gölcük earthquake. there are thousands of articles about them on the internet and every turkish people asks the same question: "what happened to the earthquake special taxes in turkey?"
2. DONATE TO
Ahbap Charity (charity of Turkish singer and philanthropist Haluk Levent, very reliable person) > https://ahbap.org/disasters-turkey
Haytap Animal Rights Federation (for animals affected by the earthquake) > https://fonzip.com/haytap/bagis
AFAD (Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency) > https://en.afad.gov.tr/earthquake-donation-accounts
1 dollar = 18 liras / 1 euro = 20 liras
:D
Bowser revolution, either the best or the worst that can happen to you in Mario party
bowser reacting to mario’s tux vs bowser reacting to mario’s dress
I say the words with the proper pronunciation yet I don't change intonation as I would if having a conversation in English, most English words that I don't translate are just a natural part of my day to day live now so they don't sound foreign anymore
So if I’m speaking Spanish, and I need to say an English word — like a name, brand, website, etc — I say it like a Spanish speaker
However, I hear a lot of speakers drop into a very native English accent in the middle of a sentence to say “el Starbucks” and whatnot (I love hearing it. Just a random completely English-sounding word in a Spanish sentence)
So I’m wondering…
From my personal observations I think native bilinguals do this more, but I’m interested in more data. Feel free to reply or reblog for a more detailed answer!
“Everybody put your hands UP!”
My take on a casual Present Mic/Yamada Hizashi.