(via @itssylviaplath)
"Cornell, who never felt at home in his own body or in his own house, makes his boxes as a nest for himself." --Gabriel Josipovici, Hotel Andromeda (2014)
Sanskrit loanwords in Indonesian.
"The idea of using a written apostrophe before the 's' to identify a genitive singular was not adopted until the seventeenth century, and the idea of using it after the 's' to identify a genitive plural was not adopted until the eighteenth century." --Culpepper, History of English
your enslaving yon a
lousy ravening yon a
gravely noisy noun a
runny lion's voyage a
slung ivory anyone a
over us annoyingly a
snarling envoy you a
loony rev unsaying a
noisily nervy guano a
gunnery ivy saloon a
royal ninny's vogue a
ninny argosy ovule a
nosegay a runny viol
only a yang souvenir
(via @SaladinAhmed)
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