ur hot :3
Posts by Sophie
omg haaaaiiiii π₯Ίπ₯Ίπ₯Ί
"and then Rodya said he wants a lawyer and that he's not gonna talk to the pigs and everybody lived happily ever after"
Yoda s captionom "dokaz o uplati novcane kazne, dostavlja se"
Hi, my name is Sophie and my specialty is I'm the Ultimate Procrastinator :3
if rantaro danganronpa was a girl :3
prettyyyy!!
whoa, hot π³
literally 1987
good lord π΅βπ«π΅βπ«π΅βπ«π΅βπ«
for an embarrassingly long time i used to think the schengen area was named after shenzhen and it always confused me why π
"if electrons are so attracted to protons, why don't they just hug (fall into the nucleus)?"
*starts making out aggressively*
shush >.<
get in line :p
cute :3
cute! :3
yup, just like the first sentence of your original post :3
which is why you don't really hear the continuous version of those 2 verbs very often.
what really confuses me is that "like" is another such verb and yet it seems completely irregular to say "like ice cream" or even "adore ice cream", whereas "love ice cream" is totally normal to say
and the present participle seems to follow the same rule, "going to the store in 5 mins", "eating lunch rn", etc.
now I haven't found a single example where this is done in simple present other than the verbs hate and love, which I assume both work because they express a state rather than an action
okay so the past participle can definitely be used without the pronoun, "went to the store", "ate some burgers", "talked about communism" etc.
here the assumed pronoun, absent any context, is I in statements and you in questions. if you ask "went to the store this morning?" the you is implied
jet fuel is tastier than percolator coffee ππ
the real torture is drinking coffee from a percolator
no thoughts π΅βπ«π΅βπ«π΅βπ«
wouah π³π³
me me meeeeeee :3
literally me
yes pls!
holy fuck π΅βπ«π΅βπ«
whoa, TWO swords?? π³