#I'M DEAD. GONE. DECEASED. /POS
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s0ckh3adstudios 7 months ago
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Clover and Flo sibling moment real
@s0ckh3adstudios drew some wonderful art of my older Clover design with their Integrity OC and I simply had to contribute! Their sibling dynamic is everything to me.
Some bonus doodles from practicing drawing Flo and thinking about their hilarious dynamic.
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stalkingfriendly 6 months ago
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I'm dead . deceased . gone .
aaaaaaa I don't know why but you flustered me so much
-馃馃惥
Oh baby, if that flustered you, you're gonna blush ALL THE TIME talking to me /pos
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sayitaliano 3 years ago
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Ho visto il tuo post dello Halloween vocabolario e mi interessa se gli Italiani celebrano 1mo e 2do Novembre in modo che in inglese si chiama All Saints' Day ed All Souls' Day? Lo so che sono le feste cattoliche e volevo chiederti anche per un po' di vocabolario o le tradizioni, forse?
Ciao! Ti rispondo in inglese cos矛 anche altri possono capire meglio magari :)
The 1st of November ("Ognissanti" or "Tutti i Santi" = All Saints' Day, which means it's basically everyone's name's day) is a festivity in Italy. Most of the shops, and work offices in general, are closed (despite these recent years many are still open). We take this day (and the weekend before/after, mostly) to go to cemeteries and visit the graves of our long gone friends and family members. We might also light a few candles to commemorate them.
There are also some traditional celebrations here and there in Italy, most of them involving food: I think in Sicily kids get some candies if they behaved well; almost throughout the Nation though, candles, water and bread, or the sound of bells and tables plenty of food are used/left at home or near churches to welcome the deads in case they came back from the otherside to visit us. I think in Tuscany there's also the tradition to give a glass of wine to the less fortunate ones. Ofc, friends from these Regions, please tell me if I'm wrong! There are also typical sweets of this period, for example in my area we have "Il pan dei morti" = the "Bread of the deads": we give them to kids or left some on the tables in case the deceased came back to visit us. These biscuits are made with albumen, almonds, biscuits, cocoa, candied fruits, dried figs and rising and some spices (but the recipe can change a bit ofc).
The 2nd of November, "La Commemorazione dei Defunti" (literally: the commemoration of the deads) or as commonly called "il Giorno dei Morti" (literally: the day of the deads) = All Souls' Day, is not a festivity, so that's why we commemorate on the 1st. Everything opens again, it's a pretty normal day (unless ofc it happens on a saturday/sunday, but it would just be a regular saturday/sunday in the end).
A short vocabs list:
The 1st of November = Il primo di novembre The 2nd of November = Il due novembre La festivit脿 = Festivity Gli uffici chiusi = Closed work offices Il cimitero = The cemetery La tomba = The grave La candela = Candle I dolciumi = Candies Il pane = Bread Le tavole = Tables Il cibo = Food Le chiese = Churches Le campane = Bells Un bicchiere di vino = A glass of wine Il Giorno dei Morti = The day of the deads / All Souls' Day Commemorare = To commemorate La Commemorazione dei defunti = The Commemoration of the Deads / All Souls' Day Ognissanti / Tutti i Santi = All Saints' Day I defunti = The deceased/deads
Hope this helped!!
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