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Thursday, October 5, 2017

Today~

EPL- INFORMATION FOR YOUR BUILDING SOUL


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Wednesday, October 4, 2017

Strange Things About the Las Vegas Massacre



EPL-INFORMATION FOR YOUR BUILDING SOUL

A.I. Artificial Intelligence - the significance of Teddy (film analysis)



EPL-INFORMATION FOR YOUR BUILDING SOUL

Empty hand~

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I ceased to except a role, until I had none~




role


/rōl/

noun
  • 1. an actor's part in a play, movie, etc.: "Dietrich's role as a wife in war-torn Paris"synonyms: part, character, cameo
EPL- INFORMATION FOR YOUR BUILDING SOUL

vernacular; a condition of disease



ver·nac·u·lar


/vərˈnakyələr/

noun
  • 1. the language or dialect spoken by the ordinary people in a particular country or region: "he wrote in the vernacular to reach a larger audience"synonyms: language, dialect, regional language, regionalisms, patois, ... more
  • 2. architecture concerned with domestic and functional rather than monumental buildings:"buildings in which Gothic merged into farmhouse vernacular"
adjective
  • 1. (of language) spoken as one's mother tongue; not learned or imposed as a second language.
  • 2. (of architecture) concerned with domestic and functional rather than monumental buildings.

EPL- INFORMATION FOR YOUR BUILDING SOUL

as·sim·i·late


/əˈsiməˌlāt/

verb verb: assimilate, 3rd person present: assimilates, gerund or present participle: assimilating, past tense: assimilated, past participle: assimilated
  • 1. take in (information, ideas, or culture) and understand fully: "Marie tried to assimilate the week's events"
  • absorb and integrate (people, ideas, or culture) into a wider society or culture: "pop trends are assimilated into the mainstream with alarming speed"synonyms: subsume, incorporate, integrate, absorb, engulf, ... more
  • (of the body or any biological system) absorb and digest (food or nutrients): "the sugars in the fruit are readily assimilated by the body"synonyms: absorb, take in, acquire, soak up, pick up, ... more
  • 2. cause (something) to resemble; liken: "philosophers had assimilated thought to perception"
  • come to resemble: "the churches assimilated to a certain cultural norm"
  • make (a sound) more like another in the same or next word.
Word Originlate Middle English: from Latin assimilat- ‘absorbed, incorporated,’ from the verb assimilare, from ad- ‘to’ + similis ‘like.’

Today~

EPL- INFORMATION FOR YOUR BUILDING SOUL


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