
i’m so happy to live in an age in which journalists argue that emoji ‘lack the wit and imagination of memes’


sasuke should’ve returned to konoha after defeating itachi and then the k12 could have began to uncover the truth of the massacre and naruto’s parents and stuff like the new scooby doo gang i mean they even have akamaru you had ONE JOB kishi
"ALRIGHT BETTER USE THESE EXPENSIVE HEALING ITEMS BEFORE ENTERING THE NEXT ROOM"
*the next room is a save point that completely heals your health*


i have no idea which is my first language, i think i learned cantonese and english at the same time, but im way more fluent in english so i tell everyone thats my first language but it probably isnt
Principles of Language Learning and Teaching, H. Douglas Brown (via raincium)
This is such an interesting quote.
Living a bilingual life really affects …everything. I dream and I think in English, although I don’t live in an English speaking country. Curiously enough — especially since I live in my native country — my struggle is to keep a meaningful relationship with my first language, beyond the obvious means of everyday communication.
I often feel I live in a linguistic exile. To find a healthy balance between the two languages in my life is difficult. I admire people so much who juggle three or more languages.How do you do that? I already find it difficult to live with two languages in my mind, and they are common and comparatively easy languages.
(via etharei)
Think in English, at home everything is in English, internet in English, read in English. Work, school, surroundings, healthcare & therapy, all Finnish. Family/extended family apart from inlaws, old school friends: Swedish. It’s not confusing, but it takes some compartmentalisation. also losing a bit of contact with my minority culture. what’s my first language anymore? my Finnish is sometimes a bit limited, I have a noticeable non-native accent in English, but I hardly use Swedish.
(via dirtydirtychai)
Principles of Language Learning and Teaching, H. Douglas Brown (via raincium)
This is such an interesting quote.
Living a bilingual life really affects …everything. I dream and I think in English, although I don’t live in an English speaking country. Curiously enough — especially since I live in my native country — my struggle is to keep a meaningful relationship with my first language, beyond the obvious means of everyday communication.
I often feel I live in a linguistic exile. To find a healthy balance between the two languages in my life is difficult. I admire people so much who juggle three or more languages.How do you do that? I already find it difficult to live with two languages in my mind, and they are common and comparatively easy languages.
(via etharei)
Think in English, at home everything is in English, internet in English, read in English. Work, school, surroundings, healthcare & therapy, all Finnish. Family/extended family apart from inlaws, old school friends: Swedish. It’s not confusing, but it takes some compartmentalisation. also losing a bit of contact with my minority culture. what’s my first language anymore? my Finnish is sometimes a bit limited, I have a noticeable non-native accent in English, but I hardly use Swedish.
(via dirtydirtychai)
fuck: kakashi b c WE L L…
marry: naruto?? ?? ? if i had to marry anyone then itd be him
get drunk with: sasuke. maybe hes more tolerable when inebriated, i think hed be a quiet drunk