Italian Navy, destroyer Luigi Durand de la Penne and tall ship Amerigo Vespucci.
Some one add the post about the USS Independence having a crush on the Vespucci
Love to see a butch and femme holding hands.
Words to describe facial expressions
- Absent: preoccupied
- Agonized: as if in pain or tormented
- Alluring: attractive, in the sense of arousing desire
- Appealing: attractive, in the sense of encouraging goodwill and/or interest
- Beatific: blissful
- Black: angry or sad, or hostile
- Bleak: hopeless
- Blinking: surprise, or lack of concern
- Blithe: carefree, lighthearted, or heedlessly indifferent
- Brooding: anxious and gloomy
- Bug eyed: frightened or surprised
- Chagrined: humiliated or disappointed
- Cheeky: cocky, insolent
- Cheerless: sad
- Choleric: hot-tempered, irate
- Darkly: with depressed or malevolent feelings
- Deadpan: expressionless, to conceal emotion or heighten humor
- Despondent: depressed or discouraged
- Doleful: sad or afflicted
- Dour: stern or obstinate
- Dreamy: distracted by daydreaming or fantasizing
- Ecstatic: delighted or entranced
- Faint: cowardly, weak, or barely perceptible
- Fixed: concentrated or immobile
- Gazing: staring intently
- Glancing: staring briefly as if curious but evasive
- Glazed: expressionless due to fatigue or confusion
- Grim: fatalistic or pessimistic
- Grave: serious, expressing emotion due to loss or sadness
- Haunted: frightened, worried, or guilty
- Hopeless: depressed by a lack of encouragement or optimism
- Hostile: aggressively angry, intimidating, or resistant
- Hunted: tense as if worried about pursuit
- Jeering: insulting or mocking
- Languid: lazy or weak
- Leering: sexually suggestive
- Mild: easygoing
- Mischievous: annoyingly or maliciously playful
- Pained: affected with discomfort or pain
- Peering: with curiosity or suspicion
- Peeved: annoyed
- Pleading: seeking apology or assistance
- Quizzical: questioning or confused
- Radiant: bright, happy
- Sanguine: bloodthirsty, confident
- Sardonic: mocking
- Sour: unpleasant
- Sullen: resentful
- Vacant: blank or stupid looking
- Wan: pale, sickly
- Wary: cautious or cunning
- Wide eyed: frightened or surprised
- Withering: devastating
- Wrathful: indignant or vengeful
- Wry: twisted or crooked to express cleverness or a dark or ironic feeling
Reading the Lufulu (elf Luck) vs. Black Bulls chapters again, I realized that while Lufulu has his older sister, Charla, at the same time Luck also has his own older sister all along… Vanessa!
She’s not his blood sister, but since when this ever matters to found families?
its Ass of Dawn O’clock in the Underworld and everyone is watching Morris get his ass beat through Lucifero’s tv
LEVERAGE 5.09 “The Rundown Job”
LEVERAGE : REDEMPTION 1.16 “The Harry Wilson Job”
The atomic structure of copper appeared on all devices capable of displaying it. 27 minutes later, all traces of copper are eliminated. Pennies, wiring, the Statue of Liberty, and water pipes all vanished at the same time. Even bronze and brass objects were affected. We noticed the power first.
why is this the funniest gif I’ve ever seen
Does a gay little shove to piss you off
You post this without a video.
you POST this without.a.video
YOU POST THIS WITHOUT A VIDEO
@that-house this has your vibes
Oh to be excavator operator taking an aircraft for one last ride while probably doing plane noises
they used to delete my blog every 2 weeks now they just straight up steal my posts. you wish to destroy me yet you are me
to be honest there has never been a fictional character i’ve actually wanted to date. like. i want them to date each other. i don’t want myself as a person to be involved in this scenario whatsoever. what would i add to this narratively? what’s my thematic purpose in the narrative? immersion breaking.
All of you people in the tag talking about how you dont want to burden your favorite characters with dating you or being aromantic or whatever you’re missing the point this isnt about that this is about one thing and one thing only: narrative cohesion
my perma slouch and chapped lips make women flock to me as soon as winter comes around. they want to wrap me up in blankets like some kind of small rodent and buy me a humidifier
I love how all of the Batman villains are like “ah he’s not at the manor, it’s defenseless! and then alfred just racks an AK-47 and is like pull up bitch
Batman’s Villains: The butler will be easy prey!
He’s just an old man…he doesn’t have any of the Batman’s gadgets or training or fighting skills!
Alfred: Oh my you’re right
There’s something else of Master Bruce’s I don’t have as well
(Cocks a shotgun) A CODE AGAINST KILLING
Batman’s Villains: Wayne isn’t here to save you old man!
Alfred:
Alfred is the original “Call an ambulance — but not for me”
@dragonpuppies I spent way too long on this
Bruce: I have a code.
Alfred: And I have a gun.
Bruce: time to remove the guns.
Alfred: good fucking luck.
I’ve peer reviewed @ebonyheartnet’s addition and found that it deserves a reblog.
YOU HAVE ENTERED
RADICAL SATURDAY
Today’s Friday, though.
The “Necromancy is evil“ we see in most fantasy worlds stems from a christian view of having to honor the body after death in a certain way to ensure the soul’s safety in the afterlife. And while I encourage you to explore societies that don’t see necromancy as evil, I also encourage you to explore societies that see necromancy as evil for different reasons.
Drow might believe that after death, your body belongs to Lolth and must be fed to spiders. Reanimating a body means stealing from Lolth and must therefore be punished.
A Zoroastrian inspired society might believe that with death, evil starts infesting the body, so dead bodies must be kept away from the community, and reanimating them keeps them in the community and is therefore bad.
Ooh, sounds fun! Let me come up with some more.
- necromancy is associated with the culture’s traditional enemies, and is the same level of frowned-upon as using certain symbology or weapons or languages etc which are also linked to those enemies
- once someone has died, it is severely disrespectful to look upon their corpse, so anything which is VISIBLE as being an undead is Very Bad, because it means you can see that person’s dead body
- the reanimated dead have historically been used to spread plague and do other biological warfare type stuff; if you create something like that, a) gross b) unsanitary c) this is interpreted as the intent to commit war crimes
- A society of druids that uses the dead to grow sacred gardens, and reanimation deprives the dead of their part in the cycle
- A society where each plot in the cemetery is used to grow vegetables/herbs for community use, to ensure that everyone is fed and the dead are visited/remembered. Necromancy deprives the community of the food that person would have grown and disconnects the dead person from their community
- A society obsessed with history/recordskeeping/memory, and necromancy prevents the dead from being properly catalogued
- A totalitarian society wherein the citizens are property of the state and necromancy is stealing
- Death is nirvana and reanimation deprives the dead of this experience
- The dead are ritually eaten by friends/family to allow them to live on, and reanimation ends their time prematurely
- The finest jewelry is made of the bones of the dead, so there’s a lucrative trade in grave robbing, and the bone jewelry lobby has convinced the public that necromancy is worse than the expensive jewelry made from the bones
- when someone dies, their death is considered a “sacrifice” to the deity who presides over their cause of death; how exactly you deal with the body, that doesn’t matter so much, but USING the body to your OWN benefit, that’s an insult to the god of warfare / disease / ocean / etc. Like stealing the offerings from a shrine.
~~a culture that recognizes the effort and emotional strain their people go through in life, and when someone dies they throw a huge wake and celebrate their break from life before joining their god/reincarnating/guarding something/etc. Reanimating someone or trying to bring them back to life is seen as a huge taboo because it’s like asking someone who constantly works and finally gets a time of rest to go straight back to work before they’ve recovered. Except it’s the hardest job/adventure ever. For the same reason, motherhood, illness, leadership, recreation, personal growth, and winter are all highly venerated concepts/times in the culture, as times of rest or things in need of a period of rest eventually. To honor these times as sabbats is commanded by one of their gods after a great catastrophe. The whole community is involved with these things, and so too are is the whole community involved with death and picking up the physical or emotional slack of the person who died. If permission is given from the person who is being reanimated, then maybe maaaaaybe it’s ok, but that’s only happened once when a guardian was once needed, and it’s pretty hard to verify if it really was the person.
- reanimation is seen as asserting “ownership” over that being; so while it’s okay to have an undead animal (so long as it wasn’t someone ELSE’S animal, as that would be theft), reanimating a HUMAN counts as “slavery”
- necromancy is considered “lazy”; like, dude, do the work yourself, or pay/convince someone else to do it, what kind of loser has to resort to CORPSES
- only the divine can raise the dead; reanimating the dead is a poor mockery of the gods’ ability, and you are liable to be punished for your hubris, and that kind of punishment tends to have a lot of collateral damage so it’s best for mortals to solve the problem before the gods take notice
This is a good follow up to the post about necromancy and enchantment a few days ago.
heinous criminals who die before they’ve served their sentence MUST be reanimated for a period of no longer than the remainder of their sentence



















