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The Dark Side of Fashion
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Look ya’ll, I don’t get caught-up, and I don’t bullshit – this is literally the most beautiful person I’ve ever seen in my entire life. And this isn’t some superficial shit. Trinity Bree is on some outerspace, evolutionary shit. Goddamn.
Tips to learn a new language
The 75 most common words make up 40% of occurrences
The 200 most common words make up 50% of occurrences
The 524 most common words make up 60% of occurrences
The 1257 most common words make up 70% of occurrences
The 2925 most common words make up 80% of occurrences
The 7444 most common words make up 90% of occurrences
The 13374 most common words make up 95% of occurrences
The 25508 most common words make up 99% of occurrences(Sources: 5 Steps to Speak a New Language by Hung Quang Pham)
This article has an excellent summary on how to rapidly learn a new language within 90 days.
We can begin with studying the first 600 words. Of course chucking is an effective way to memorize words readily. Here’s a list to translate into the language you desire to learn that I grabbed from here! 🙂
EXPRESSIONS OF POLITENESS (about 50 expressions)
- ‘Yes’ and ‘no’: yes, no, absolutely, no way, exactly.
- Question words: when? where? how? how much? how many? why? what? who? which? whose?
- Apologizing: excuse me, sorry to interrupt, well now, I’m afraid so, I’m afraid not.
- Meeting and parting: good morning, good afternoon, good evening, hello, goodbye, cheers, see you later, pleased to meet you, nice to have met.
- Interjections: please, thank you, don’t mention it, sorry, it’ll be done, I agree, congratulations, thank heavens, nonsense.
NOUNS (about 120 words)
- Time: morning, afternoon, evening, night; Sunday, Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday; spring, summer, autumn,
winter; time, occasion, minute, half-hour, hour, day, week, month,
year.
- People: family, relative, mother, father, son,
daughter, sister, brother, husband, wife; colleague, friend, boyfriend,
girlfriend; people, person, human being, man, woman, lady, gentleman,
boy, girl, child.
- Objects: address, bag, book, car, clothes, key,
letter (=to post), light (=lamp), money, name, newspaper, pen, pencil,
picture, suitcase, thing, ticket.
- Places: place, world, country, town, street, road,
school, shop, house, apartment, room, ground; Britain, name of the
foreign country, British town-names, foreign town-names.
- Abstract: accident, beginning, change, color,
damage, fun, half, help, joke, journey, language, English, name of the
foreign language, letter (of alphabet), life, love, mistake, news, page,
pain, part, question, reason, sort, surprise, way (=method), weather,
work.
- Other: hand, foot, head, eye, mouth, voice; the
left, the right; the top, the bottom, the side; air, water, sun, bread,
food, paper, noise.
PREPOSITIONS (about 40 words)
- General: of, to, at, for, from, in, on.
- Logical: about, according-to, except, like, against, with, without, by, despite, instead of.
- Space: into, out of, outside, towards, away from,
behind, in front of, beside, next to, between, above, on top of, below,
under, underneath, near to, a long way from, through.
- Time: after, ago, before, during, since, until.
DETERMINERS (about 80 words)
- Articles and numbers: a, the; nos. 0–20; nos. 30–100; nos. 200–1000; last, next, 1st–12th.
- Demonstrative: this, that.
- Possessive: my, your, his, her, its, our, their.
- Quantifiers: all, some, no, any, many, much, more, less, a few, several, whole, a little, a lot of.
- Comparators: both, neither, each, every, other, another, same, different, such.
ADJECTIVES (about 80 words)
- Color: black, blue, green, red, white, yellow.
- Evaluative: bad, good, terrible; important, urgent, necessary; possible, impossible; right, wrong, true.
- General: big, little, small, heavy; high, low; hot,
cold, warm; easy, difficult; cheap, expensive; clean, dirty; beautiful,
funny (=comical), funny (=odd), usual, common (=shared), nice, pretty,
wonderful; boring, interesting, dangerous, safe; short, tall, long; new,
old; calm, clear, dry; fast, slow; finished, free, full, light (=not
dark), open, quiet, ready, strong.
- Personal: afraid, alone, angry, certain, cheerful,
dead, famous, glad, happy, ill, kind, married, pleased, sorry, stupid,
surprised, tired, well, worried, young.
VERBS (about 100 words)
- arrive, ask, be, be able to, become, begin, believe, borrow,
bring, buy, can, change, check, collect, come, continue, cry, do, drop,
eat, fall, feel, find, finish, forget, give, going to, have, have to,
hear, help, hold, hope, hurt (oneself), hurt (someone else), keep, know,
laugh, learn, leave, lend, let (=allow), lie down, like, listen, live
(=be alive), live (=reside), look (at), look for, lose, love, make, may
(=permission), may (=possibility), mean, meet, must, need, obtain, open,
ought to, pay, play, put, read, remember, say, see, sell, send, should,
show, shut, sing, sleep, speak, stand, stay, stop, suggest, take, talk,
teach, think, travel, try, understand, use, used to, wait for, walk,
want, watch, will, work (=operate), work (=toil), worry, would, write.
PRONOUNS (about 40 words)
- Personal: I, you, he, she, it, we, they, one; myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves.
- Possessive: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.
- Demonstrative: this, that.
- Universal: everyone, everybody, everything, each, both, all, one, another.
- Indefinite: someone, somebody, something, some, a few, a little, more, less; anyone, anybody, anything, any, either, much, many.
- Negative: no-one, nobody, nothing, none, neither.
ADVERBS (about 60 words)
- Place: here, there, above, over, below, in front, behind,
nearby, a long way away, inside, outside, to the right, to the left,
somewhere, anywhere, everywhere, nowhere, home, upstairs, downstairs.
- Time: now, soon, immediately, quickly, finally,
again, once, for a long time, today, generally, sometimes, always,
often, before, after, early, late, never, not yet, still, already, then
(=at that time), then (=next), yesterday, tomorrow, tonight.
- Quantifiers: a little, about (=approximately), almost, at least, completely, very, enough, exactly, just, not, too much, more, less.
- Manner: also, especially, gradually, of course,
only, otherwise, perhaps, probably, quite, so, then (=therefore), too
(=also), unfortunately, very much, well.
CONJUNCTIONS (about 30 words)
- Coordinating: and, but, or; as, than, like.
- Time & Place: when, while, before, after, since (=time), until; where.
- Manner & Logic: how, why, because, since (=because), although, if; what, who, whom, whose, which, that.
Oh i love this concept!
I love it too! I love it mostly because it makes me feel less overwhelmed. When you break it down like this, everything seems so much more manageable. Like, hey, I could memorize 20 words at a time (even if ‘at a time’ varies wildly for me), and just do that like ten times. That’s a HUGE chunk of a language.
(And since I have the habit of doing languages that are similar to ones I’m already familiar with, the grammar part usually comes pretty easy, too.)

Sindar Spellweaver 🌫
Check out my gorgeous new dreads from @morrockmoon 😻😻 they’re sooooo well made and detailed with braids and silver beads and even quartz crystals ✨she’s so talented!!! 💜💜
Dreads – Morrockmoon
Necklace – Vespermoth
Socks – Sock Dreams
Everything else is second hand (dress is Allsaints, boots are Free People)Instagram (please don’t delete caption)

Evening Dress
Yves Saint Laurent
Spring/Summer 1980
While a long, lean body remained the ideal in the 1980s, a new, wide shoulder began to be appended to the silhouette. Ornately rendered here by Yves Saint Laurent, the shoulder provided a foundation from which fabric could be draped down to a contrastingly narrow waist. In the hands of some 1980s designers, shoulders were padded out to absurd widths. To a degree, this was a revival of 1940s fashion. Toward the end of the 1980s and into the ‘90s, historicist revivals by fashion designers have created such a multiplicity of silhouettes that finding the defining one will have to wait.
Marguerite Duras wrote in appreciation of Saint Laurent’s synthesizing imagination, “I tend to believe that the fabulous universality of Yves Saint Laurent comes from a religious disposition toward garnering the real—be it man-made—the temples of the Nile—or not man-made—the forest of Telemark, the floor of the ocean, or apple trees in bloom. Yves Saint Laurent invents a reality and adds it to the other one, the one he has not made.” In this case, Saint Laurent invents a mysterious East and adds it to the Stendhalian valor of formal military dress.
The MET

