Saz94
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I guessed that from your username.Ohh!! A fellow HP fan!
I am a massive HP nerd.
I guessed that from your username.Ohh!! A fellow HP fan!
I guessed that from your username.
I am a massive HP nerd.
Ravenclaw! Though I'm also a bit of a Hufflepuff.Yay what house are you in? And what’s your favourite book of the 7??
Ravenclaw! Though I'm also a bit of a Hufflepuff.
Favourite book - 7.
And yourself?
I love Luna Lovegood!
Aww yeah. I was pretty young (8) when I read OotP, so I didn't really appreciate the grief thing, but now I cry whenever I read that scene with Harry in Dumbledore's office at the end.lunarainbows said:I would have to say book 5. It really left an impression on me - I remember reading it well into the night and crying so much when Sirius died. But the book was so long and so detailed, I loved it. The whole order of the Phoenix, room of requirement!
I guessed.
Aww yeah. I was pretty young (8) when I read OotP, so I didn't really appreciate the grief thing, but now I cry whenever I read that scene with Harry in Dumbledore's office at the end.
My daughter has to " do something" when listening , she can't simply listen. ( Ironically she says it doesn't go in if she just listens)For the last 2 days I've been trying to get audio books to 'work'.
I don't mean technically, I can get them to play.
They were just annoying, irrelevant noise through my phones speakers, so I tried headphones, which were no better.
Maybe it's coz I find headphones uncomfortable I thinks, so today I had a little bluetooth speaker turn up.
It is much better, but audiobooks still don't do anything, it's still just noise.
I remember, sort of, when books were 'fun' but it seems now, even when I remove the difficulty with reading, they do nothing.
This is 'disappointing'.
Me too, ‘it doesn’t go in if’ I ‘just listen’.My daughter has to " do something" when listening , she can't simply listen. ( Ironically she says it doesn't go in if she just listens)
Anyone got any recommendations for Science Fiction audio books? I enjoyed the Martian, and suspect I would enjoy Ted Chiang ( he wrote the short story on which the film "Arrival" was based) if only he did audio books.
Just a few of the topics, the range is wide and the concept of 'language' interpreted loosely:Language unites and divides us. It amuses and mystifies us. We care deeply about it, whether it’s apostrophe abuse, speech discrimination, or the sweetness of a mother tongue. Subtitle tells stories of our obsessions with language, from comedians, writers, and researchers; from speakers of endangered languages; from speakers of multiple languages; from anyone who shares these obsessions.
"Subtitle" is part of the Hub & Spoke stable of podcasts (https://www.hubspokeaudio.org). Some of the other podcasts there sound interesting, too. I've already subscribed to "The Constant: A History of Getting Things Wrong". How could I not, with this description:Are you repelled by certain words? Do you get that fingernails-on-chalkboard feeling when someone says ‘moist,’ ‘dollop’ or ‘fascia’?
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Gullah Geechee is a creole language developed by enslaved Africans and still spoken today.
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Susanna Zaraysky, speaker of nine languages [...] is she cognitively predisposed to attaining fluency in so many languages? We follow her to an MIT lab where researchers put her through a series of tests.
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Many ecologists now believe that trees are in constant communication with their surroundings. Linguists may roll their eyes at claims of ‘talk,’ or ‘language.’ But observing how trees interact helps us understand the limits of language.
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The COVID-19 wave of anti-Asian harassment has made things [racist taunts] worse. Also, Stanford professor Seema Yasmin tells us why pandemics bring out the language of war.
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If there are extraterrestrials out there, what kind of messages might they be sending us? How might we decipher those messages? And should we hit reply?
Did you know that Europeans used to believe that sheep grew from Mongolian trees? Have you heard about the army that lost a battle against itself? Ever seen the gleaming Las Vegas hotel that accidentally shoots heat rays at poolside guests?
The Constant is a science and history podcast about getting things wrong. From ancient science to contemporary blunders, we take you on journeys of misadventure and misapprehension, filling your brain with juicy nuggets of the sometimes comical, sometimes tragical and always fascinating ways people mess things up.
Just what I need, thanks Ruth, bookmarked.Boring Talks
https://www.s4me.info/threads/music-and-other-videos.16/It isn't included here, but I want to mention that since I'm so severe I can't concentrate on neither audio books nor shows/movies, music is the only thing that keeps me alive, and specifically hip hop and electronic for the most part! Seriously don't know how I'd survive without it.