Starry Sky Moth Kitten - Sketchbook 2022
I’m on Patreon, I have an Etsy Shop and I sell Prints!
fugking love it here!!!!!!!!!
its so funny when people expect system alters to be distinct and obvious. like what do you want, a magic girl transformation?
I love her sm I'm so glad I grew up reading and obsessing over Earthsea
ursula k le guin was right
I work in retail and one day in the afternoon a customer said to me "Have a nice end of your shift!" while leaving. I said "You too!"
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Something like this would be so colossally helpful. I'm sick and tired of trying to research specific clothing from any given culture and being met with either racist stereotypical costumes worn by yt people or ai generated garbage nonsense, and trying to be hyper specific with searches yields fuck all. Like I generally just cannot trust the legitimacy of most search results at this point. It's extremely frustrating. If there are good resources for this then they're buried deep under all the other bullshit, and idk where to start looking.
This looks amazing, saving for later reference
okayy maybe i'm exceptionally late to the party as usual but i just found this website called Glottolog
and what it is is basically a language catalogue. you can look up a specific language's family tree and this is useful etc etc but the real reason i'm showing you this is the following:
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so i just looked up kazakh via the "languages tab". you can search languages by name, top-level family, macro area, number of child dialects, latitude, longitude, and, if you happen to know it, ISO-639-3 or glottocode (the website's own code).
I searched via language name, and when I clicked Kazakh, I got this:
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a handy tree that shows me where exactly the language is located within its language family. if I scroll down it'll tell me whether or not that language is endangered, AND, IF I SCROLL FURTHER DOWN:
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it gives an entire list of resources for that specific language!!! I cropped the screenshot for readability purposes but the columns in this table are name (as in author), title (of the resource), any field (idk what that's supposed to be sorry), year, pages (as in how many pages does the resource have), doctype (e.g. grammar, dictionary etc.), and provider. the latter refers to the source bibliography that the resource was taken from.
now, this list won't conveniently link you to free pdfs of these resources, but it does give you the exact citation of the work if you click on 'citation' right next to the resource:
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so I think it's a great start for research, especially for languages that don't have many learners.
happy researching!!!
※ Kiran, Wing ※ se/hir, ae/aer, he/him ※
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