
Welcome to Misha's corner of the internet. Please enjoy your stay. Misha. She/They. '97 liner
769 posts
Muse | Painter AU! Taeyong (M)
Muse | Painter AU! Taeyong (M)

Description: “You are the apple of my eye, the stars in my sky; you are my muse, and most importantly, you are mine.”
Safe. In all ways, you have always played it safe, never taking risks. However, your stagnant world is shaken up when abstract painter Lee Taeyong propositions to you in the middle of an art galley.
Genre: angst | fluff | humor WC: 18.8k Warnings: graphic smut (virginity loss, rough sex, oral sex, unprotected, 69, etc), profanity
Keep reading
-
i207 liked this · 11 months ago
-
bamtoriie liked this · 11 months ago
-
minsugahh liked this · 1 year ago
-
butterfly-lies-chase-them-away liked this · 1 year ago
-
callsignini liked this · 1 year ago
-
aaavvv liked this · 1 year ago
-
blackoddeyes liked this · 1 year ago
-
enhasrii liked this · 1 year ago
-
purpleskies-2dmen liked this · 1 year ago
-
myzennie liked this · 1 year ago
-
tuancore liked this · 1 year ago
-
starbcrnes liked this · 1 year ago
-
myentireuniverse liked this · 1 year ago
-
damned-baby-girl liked this · 1 year ago
-
toothfa-1-ry liked this · 1 year ago
-
makhe-97 liked this · 1 year ago
-
cl41rsblog liked this · 1 year ago
-
nymphetintown reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
nymphetintown reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
nymphetintown liked this · 1 year ago
-
1kutepup2001-blog liked this · 1 year ago
-
kzuhana liked this · 1 year ago
-
alsofaith liked this · 1 year ago
-
hshshess liked this · 1 year ago
-
rcsehriatlty liked this · 1 year ago
-
honeeeyymoonn liked this · 1 year ago
-
adorewo0 liked this · 1 year ago
-
prettylookingroad liked this · 1 year ago
-
bagthononnari liked this · 1 year ago
-
floatingflyingdreamingdying liked this · 1 year ago
-
rbf-aceu liked this · 1 year ago
-
wnterbear liked this · 2 years ago
-
phantomyouth liked this · 2 years ago
-
jimcricket liked this · 2 years ago
-
introvertedsin liked this · 2 years ago
-
ehovocrown liked this · 2 years ago
-
mariaelizabeth21-blog1 liked this · 2 years ago
-
viciousdarlings liked this · 2 years ago
-
haesteria liked this · 2 years ago
-
doyons liked this · 2 years ago
-
haseulsz liked this · 2 years ago
-
ionlyneedmycoffee liked this · 2 years ago
-
savluvsmingi reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
savluvsmingi liked this · 2 years ago
-
untilsunset liked this · 2 years ago
-
unsweettae liked this · 2 years ago
-
dtjhkclovaa31 liked this · 2 years ago
More Posts from Ladymashamiki
i love this girl and she is coming home after a long trip she is summer sunsets; brilliant, fiery, she is both the calm before the storm and the storm and i would weather her, whatever the weather
i love this boy and he is the destination and the journey he is winter skies; soft, breathtaking, comforting he is that moment right before waking up that fuzzy, peaceful feeling with dreams still in reach and even when i am awake, i dream of him
her name on my lips like a prayer and a curse should i be damned for who i love if i don’t beg for forgiveness first? i don’t know - i don’t care her love is the only savior i need
his name on my lips like a song i heard long ago but will never forget the words to when i kiss him, we make music and the world does not mind how loud we sing together
i hold her hand and the world stares a silent question in their eyes “are you gay?” (is that all i can be?)
i hold his hand and they wave their flags away the gust of wind whispering “what are you doing here?” (i am so much more than you see)
(cc, 2019)
Blind people gesture (and why that’s kind of a big deal)
People who are blind from birth will gesture when they speak. I always like pointing out this fact when I teach classes on gesture, because it gives us an an interesting perspective on how we learn and use gestures. Until now I’ve mostly cited a 1998 paper from Jana Iverson and Susan Goldin-Meadow that analysed the gestures and speech of young blind people. Not only do blind people gesture, but the frequency and types of gestures they use does not appear to differ greatly from how sighted people gesture. If people learn gesture without ever seeing a gesture (and, most likely, never being shown), then there must be something about learning a language that means you get gestures as a bonus.
Blind people will even gesture when talking to other blind people, and sighted people will gesture when speaking on the phone - so we know that people don’t only gesture when they speak to someone who can see their gestures.
Earlier this year a new paper came out that adds to this story. Şeyda Özçalışkan, Ché Lucero and Susan Goldin-Meadow looked at the gestures of blind speakers of Turkish and English, to see if the *way* they gestured was different to sighted speakers of those languages. Some of the sighted speakers were blindfolded and others left able to see their conversation partner.
Turkish and English were chosen, because it has already been established that speakers of those languages consistently gesture differently when talking about videos of items moving. English speakers will be more likely to show the manner (e.g. ‘rolling’ or bouncing’) and trajectory (e.g. ‘left to right’, ‘downwards’) together in one gesture, and Turkish speakers will show these features as two separate gestures. This reflects the fact that English ‘roll down’ is one verbal clause, while in Turkish the equivalent would be yuvarlanarak iniyor, which translates as two verbs ‘rolling descending’.
Since we know that blind people do gesture, Özçalışkan’s team wanted to figure out if they gestured like other speakers of their language. Did the blind Turkish speakers separate the manner and trajectory of their gestures like their verbs? Did English speakers combine them? Of course, the standard methodology of showing videos wouldn’t work with blind participants, so the researchers built three dimensional models of events for people to feel before they discussed them.
The results showed that blind Turkish speakers gesture like their sighted counterparts, and the same for English speakers. All Turkish speakers gestured significantly differently from all English speakers, regardless of sightedness. This means that these particular gestural patterns are something that’s deeply linked to the grammatical properties of a language, and not something that we learn from looking at other speakers.
References
Jana M. Iverson & Susan Goldin-Meadow. 1998. Why people gesture when they speak. Nature, 396(6708), 228-228.
Şeyda Özçalışkan, Ché Lucero and Susan Goldin-Meadow. 2016. Is Seeing Gesture Necessary to Gesture Like a Native Speaker? Psychological Science 27(5) 737–747.
Asli Ozyurek & Sotaro Kita. 1999. Expressing manner and path in English and Turkish: Differences in speech, gesture, and conceptualization. In Twenty-first Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 507-512). Erlbaum.




Guys I love Beedle please appreciate this hardworking, crop top wearing man that is only ever kind and deserves every beetle I ever find.




(1, 2, 3, 4)

























Remember, it’s not a competition