(...) Neymar’s son plays with Messi’s children, their families are close – Says Ramiro Pérez, from the Spanish’s Newspaper “Marca”.
Source:
TAEKOOK'S QUOTES. ♡
"we're taekook"
"ah taekook? best unit"
"taekook forever"
"taekook is a cute word"
"we make a good match"
"in a way we're partners in crime"
"look at me, just me"
"he's sleeping next to me"
"v hyung is my safe place"
"the mole under your eye is pretty"
"the mole under your lips inspire me"
"you can't live without me"
"you can't get away from me"
"jungkook i don’t know what i’d do without you"
"jungkookie and I didn't sleep right?"
"my eyes are always on you"
"my baby might smell something weird at night"
"you are the world's #1 most handsome guy!"
"when im with v hyung im happy no matter where we go"
"me and jungkookie never fight with each other, but always got scolded together"
"i’m gonna be in taehyung room after concert tomorrow"
"i ate the same food with jungkook and we had an adult conversation asking how we are. he's happy these days"
"you’re no matter what, the best of all the best, in my opinion"
"no matter what anyone says, in my opinion, you are the best of all the best"
"i thought you'd be beyond my imagination, but then I think again and you are way beyond my imagination"
Haven't watched a game in forever; but this makes me fucking heartbroken
❝The truth is my idea has been to always stay at Barcelona and see out the rest of my career here. Like I always say, one doesn’t know what can happen in the future, but if it were up to me to decide, I would stay at Barcelona for the rest of my career.❞ thank you, lionel messi 💖
TAEHYUNG Grammys 2022
soulmates
emily brontë, wuthering heights // nfwmb, hozier // madeline miller, the song of achilles // rumi // louis tomlinson, habit // plato, the symposium // sarah perry, the essex serpent // sleeping at last, turning page // leo tolstoy, anna karenina // percy shelley, prometheus unbound
kdramaspace 2021 year in review: ride or die (favorite character dynamics)
I've been obssesing over MHA recently. Finished all 4 seasons; and currently finishing the 2nd movie. Waaah I cannot wait for s5!!!
Kirishima & Bakugou
I will say it again WHAT A KING
what a king alves my beloved i’ve missed you
“This is a subtle truth, whatever you love, you are”
— Rumi
they’re not even trying to hide the parallels anymore
Happy International Women’s Day! Here’s a list of TED-Ed Lessons to watch as you celebrate all of the world’s women, past and present.
The genius of Marie Curie: Marie Skłodowska Curie’s revolutionary research laid the groundwork for our understanding of physics and chemistry, blazing trails in oncology, technology, medicine, and nuclear physics, to name a few. But what did she actually do? Shohini Ghose expounds on some of Marie Skłodowska Curie’s most revolutionary discoveries.
The contributions of female explorers: During the Victorian Age, women were unlikely to become great explorers, but a few intelligent, gritty and brave women made major contributions to the study of previously little-understood territory. Courtney Stephens examines three women – Marianne North, Mary Kingsley and Alexandra David-Néel – who wouldn’t take no for an answer (and shows why we should be grateful that they didn’t).
Equality, sports and Title IX: In 1972, U.S. Congress passed Title IX, a law which prohibited discrimination against women in schools, colleges, and universities — including school-sponsored sports. Before this law, female athletes were few and far between, and funding was even scarcer. Erin Buzuvis and Kristine Newhall explore the significance and complexity of Title IX.
The true story of Sacajawea: In the early 19th century, a young Agaidika teenager named Sacajawea was enlisted by explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to aid her husband Toussaint Charbonneau as a guide to the Western United States. Karen Mensing debunks some of the myths that surround the familiar image of the heroic woman with a baby strapped to her back and a vast knowledge of the American wilderness.
Why should you read Virginia Woolf?: How best can we understand the internal experience of alienation? In both her essays and her fiction, Virginia Woolf shapes the slippery nature of subjective experience into words, while her characters frequently lead inner lives that are deeply at odds with their external existence. Iseult Gillespie helps make sense of these disparities to prepare you for the next time you read Virgina Woolf.
The pharaoh that wouldn’t be forgotten: Hatshepsut was a female pharaoh during the New Kingdom in Egypt. Twenty years after her death, somebody smashed her statues, took a chisel and attempted to erase the pharaoh’s name and image from history. But who did it? And why? Kate Green investigates Hatshepsut’s history for clues to this ancient puzzle.
psychology student • football fan • bookworm • wannabe artist/photographer/writer • animal lover • and a bunch of other things. • welcome. 🌱
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