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#Toulouse Ariane
quidcrusheu · 7 months
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Parée des rayons du soleil dansant en courbes heureuses sur son front, une brise osant à peine perturber la douceur voluptueuse des cils endormis sur ses joues. Un sourire exquis sur des lèvres roses, l’oval de son visage tendrement enlacé par la sombre cascade de ses cheveux de soie.
Ainsi me revient le souvenir de la dame que j’évoque devant vous.
Elle qui de ses charmes bien des êtres ensorcela.
S’il est vrai qu’autrefois j’aimai avec ardeur,
Il n’est pourtant aucune âme que je loue avec plus de ferveur
Que celle dont le nom s’accroche à ma mémoire.
La douce dame qui brille telle l’étoile du soir.
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dangerousbutera · 11 months
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king toulouse
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remarianators · 10 months
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Ariana and her dogs ❤️
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jeanetjeannepatin · 8 months
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Mercredi 24 janvier 2023 à 19H, nouvelle émission de la Petite Boutique Fantasque sur une catastrophe maritime, le naufrage du Vespuce. il nous est raconté par Armand Silvestre dans un nouvelle éponyme. Les amateurs éclairés de Laurel et Hardy reconnaîtront dans cette histoire la trame de Sons of the desert.
Cette émission a été enregistrée et montée au studio de RadioRadioToulouse et diffusée en hertzien, Toulouse : 106.8 Mhz ou en streaming https://www.radioradiotoulouse.net/ et pour tout le reste du temps sur les podcasts de mixcloud.
Programmation musicale :
(1) Indifférence (Compagnie Lubat de Gasconha) (2) L'enlévement au sérail : ouverture  (W. A. Mozart) Mozart orchestra der operhauses de Zurich / Nikolaus  Harnoncourt (3) Caprice basque (Pablo de Sarasate) Maxim Vengerow (4) Gambade (Erik Satie) Alexandre Tharaud (5) Picadilly (Erik Satie) Alexandre Tharaud (6) Le bonheur quotidien (Anne Sylvestre)  (7) Lullaby (Ariane Moffat) (8) Espana (Emanuel Chabrier) Orchestre de la Suisse Romande / Ernest Ansermet  (9) Depending on you (Rolling Stones) (10) Dis mon amour (Martine Baujoud)
+ Le naufrage du Vespuce d'Armand Silvestre lu par Elodie et Dominique Silvestre
Pour ceux qui auraient piscine indienne, ou toute autre obligation, il y a une possibilité de rattrapage avec les podcasts de la PBF : https://www.mixcloud.com/RadioRadioToulouse/le-naufrage-dans-lindifférence-du-vespuce-la-petite-boutique-fantasque/
Sus aux Philistins !
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umichenginabroad · 1 year
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Week 4 - Toulouse, France
So I say week 4, but I think it's because I added a few days here and there to include or exclude days relevant to each location. My bad, I was just going for a nice flow. Anyway this was really my fifth week in France! It started off pretty slow, with just dinner on the town and relaxing the first few days. Tuesday was the 4th, and everyone wanted to celebrate the 4th of July with us Americans, so we went out and got a few drinks. It was just silly and fun.
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ISAE Supaero - the school and an old church we walked by after dinner.
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The Capitolium (a political building on the main square) during the day and at night.
Wednesday was when things got a little more exciting. We had a morning visit to La Halle des Machines, which is a museum for wooden and electronic machines used in these pretty interesting shows. There was the Minotaure, which is a minotaur sort of, but it’s half horse on the bottom instead of half man. It was huge and sprayed “snot” at people on the ground. We also go to take a short ride on it, if that helps give any indication of the size. There was also a track where you could slide an iron down, and when the iron passed a certain point, flames shot out around the track. In the afternoon, we got a tour of Toulouse and some of its history. There were a good number of buildings I hadn’t seen yet, so it was cool to see them around town. After the tour, we split for dinner, and later, a few of us went to a karaoke bar. The three of us Michigan kids there did Mr. Brightside again, of course, and I also did You Belong With Me by Taylor Swift with Meagan and Fran (two students from Southampton). It was a long but very fun night!
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The Minotaure, Sam pushing the iron, and Gina after we got sprayed with fake snow (bubbles).
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An abbey where monks used to stay which is now open for students to come in and relax.
Thursday, we had class in the morning then we went to Aeroscopia. It had a ton of old planes inside, including a concorde and a huge Lego X-Wing fighter. I don’t know much about planes (more of a space girl), so I mostly just ooh-ed and ahh-ed as we walked around. Friday followed like Thursday, but a visit to Cité de l’Espace. instead. It shows the history of space, including some space stations you can walk through, and it has a planetarium. I wanted to enjoy it more, but it was mostly outside and over 90 degrees, so I won’t lie, I was a little miserable at times. We did go out to the bar later that night to celebrate the last weekend in France for most of the program (all non-UMich students’ portion of the program ended on the 12th, and ours ended on the 16th).
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The concorde and the Lego X-Wing.
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A model of the Ariane 5 and part of the inside of a space station.
Saturday was the hottest day in Toulouse so far. We went out to enjoy a food festival, but it was outside. I did eat some pasta and try some free samples, but I was sweating so badly that we ended up going home after an hour or two. However! On the way back, I did get to try my very first boba, and it was delicious! A little expensive, but definitely worth it. To do something with aircon, we went back out to the movies later. The only thing playing in English at a decent time was Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, so I rewatched that (a good number hadn’t seen it before). Plus, it was super cool to catch all the clues and easter eggs I’d missed the first time!
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The food festival, the floor of the boba shop, and the boba itself.
Sunday, I slept in too late and then didn’t feel like doing anything because it was so hot and I was so tired, so I just had a lazy day in my room. It was definitely nice to have a day to myself to recuperate from the almost nonstop action of the trip.
That’s all for week 5! See you for the week 6 update soon!
Aryanna Thompson
Aerospace Engineering
Aerospace Summer Program
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liviavanrouge · 2 years
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Oc's
@minaakirarikou
Livia Vanrouge: Twisted from Maleficents Thorns
Golden: Twisted from the evil queens magic mirror
Shadow: Twisted from the black panther in jungle book
Maria Clockwork: Twisted from the white rabbit in Alice in Wonderland
Citro: Half twisted from cerberus
Sheryn: Twisted from Shenzi
Zaiyu: Half twisted from a lion king hyena, half cerbrus
Eddie: Twisted from Ed
Pagoon: Twisted from Jafars parrot
Maron: Twisted from Marie
Toroune: Twisted from Toulouse
Rio: Twisted from Berloiz
Duchess: Twisted from Duchess
Jaseem: Twisted from Jasmine
Elliot: Twisted from Cinderella
Tiana Queen: Twisted from Alice in Wonderland White queen
Allison Wonder: Based off of Alice
Arian(Deceased/reborn as Dandi Livias future son): Based off of Aurora
Baku: Based off of the tiger from Jungle book
Kit: Based off of Todd from fox and the hound
Kuro: Twisted from Maleficents crow
Vex: Twisted from Auroras sleeping curse
Aura: The new person based off of Aurora
Bandit Bandersnatch: Twisted from the Bandersnatch
Denzel Jabberwocky: Twisted from the Alice in Wonderland Jabberwocky
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troybeecham · 2 years
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Today the Church remembers St. Hilary of Poitiers, bishop.
Hilary of Poitiers (c. 310 – c. 367 AD) was Bishop of Poitiers and is a Doctor of the Church. He was sometimes referred to as the “Hammer of the Arians” and the “Athanasius of the West.” His name comes from the Latin word for happy or cheerful.
Ora pro nobis.
Hilary was born at Poitiers either at the end of the 3rd or beginning of the 4th century A.D. His parents were pagans of distinction. He received a good pagan education, which included a high level of Greek. He studied, later on, the Old and New Testament writings, with the result that he abandoned his Neo-Platonism for Christianity, and with his wife and his daughter (traditionally named Saint Abra), was baptized and received into the Church.
The Christians of Poitiers so respected Hilary that about 350 or 353 AD, they unanimously elected him their bishop. At that time Arianism threatened to overrun the Western Church; Hilary undertook to repel the disruption. One of his first steps was to secure the excommunication, by those of the Gallican hierarchy who still remained orthodox Christians, of Saturninus, the Arian Bishop of Arles, and of Ursacius of Singidunum and Valens of Mursa, two of his prominent supporters.
About the same time, Hilary wrote to Emperor Constantius II a remonstrance against the persecutions by which the Arians had sought to crush their opponents (Ad Constantium Augustum liber primus, of which the most probable date is 355 AD). Other Historians refer to this first book to Constantius as the “Book Against Valens,” of which only fragments are extant. His efforts did not succeed at first, for at the synod of Biterrae (Béziers), summoned by the emperor in 356 AD with the professed purpose of settling the longstanding dispute, an imperial rescript banished the new bishop, along with Rhodanus of Toulouse, to Phrygia.
Hilary spent nearly four years in exile, although the reasons for this banishment remain obscure. The traditional explanation is that Hilary was exiled for refusing to subscribe to the condemnation of Athanasius and the Nicene faith.
While in exile in Phrygia, however, he continued to govern his diocese, as well as writing two of the most important of his contributions to dogmatic and polemical theology: the “De synodis” or “De fide Orientalium”, an epistle addressed in 358 AD to the Semi-Arian bishops in Gaul, Germany and Britain, analyzing the views of the Eastern bishops on the Nicene controversy. In reviewing the professions of faith of the Oriental bishops in the Councils of Ancyra, Antioch, and Sirmium, he sought to show that sometimes the difference between certain doctrines and orthodox beliefs was rather in the words than in the ideas, which led to his counseling the bishops of the West to be more reserved in their condemnation.
The “De trinitate libri XII”, composed in 359 and 360 AD, was the first successful expression in Latin of that Council’s theological subtleties originally elaborated in Greek. Although some members of Hilary’s own party thought the first had shown too great a forbearance towards the Arians, Hilary replied to their criticisms in the “Apologetica ad reprehensores libri de synodis responsa”. Hilary was a firm guardian of the Trinity as taught by the Western church, and therefore saw the foreseen Antichrist in those who repudiated the divinity of the Son and thought Him to be but a created Being. “Hence also they who deny that Christ is the Son of God must have Antichrist for their Christ,” was the way he stated it.
In his classic introduction to the works of Hilary, Watson summarizes Hilary’s points: “They were the forerunners of Antichrist. . . . They bear themselves not as bishops of Christ but as priests of Antichrist. This is not random abuse, but sober recognition of the fact, stated by St. John, that there are many Antichrists. For these men assume the cloak of piety, and pretend to preach the Gospel, with the one object of inducing others to deny Christ. It was the misery and folly of the day that men endeavoured to promote the cause of God by human means and the favour of the world. Hilary asks bishops, who believe in their office, whether the Apostles had secular support when by their preaching they converted the greater part of mankind. . . .
“The Church seeks for secular support, and in so doing insults Christ by the implication that His support is insufficient. She in her turn holds out the threat of exile and prison. It was her endurance of these that drew men to her; now she imposes her faith by violence. She craves for favours at the hand of her communicants; once it was her consecration that she braved the threatenings of persecutors. Bishops in exile spread the Faith; now it is she that exiles bishops. She boasts that the world loves her; the world’s hatred was the evidence that she was Christ’s. . . . The time of Antichrist, disguised as an angel of light, has come. The true Christ is hidden from almost every mind and heart. Antichrist is now obscuring the truth that he may assert falsehood hereafter.”
Hilary also attended several synods during his time in exile, including the council at Seleucia (359 AD) which saw the triumph of the “homoion” party, which believed that God the Father is "incomparable" and therefore the Son of God can not be described in any sense as "equal" or "same" but only as "like" or "similar" (ὅμοιος, hómoios) to the Father, and so is in some sense subordinate, and the forbidding of all discussion of the divine substance. In 360 AD, Hilary tried unsuccessfully to secure a personal audience with Constantius, as well as to address the council which met at Constantinople in 360. When this council ratified the decisions of Ariminum and Seleucia, Hilary responded with the bitter “In Constantium”, which attacked the Emperor Constantius as Antichrist and persecutor of orthodox Christians. Hilary’s urgent and repeated requests for public debates with his opponents, especially with Ursacius and Valens, proved at last so inconvenient that he was sent back to his diocese, which he appears to have reached about 361, within a very short time of the accession of Emperor Julian.
On returning to his diocese in 361 AD, Hilary spent most of the first two or three years trying to persuade the local clergy that the homoion confession was merely a cover for traditional Arian subordinationism. Thus, a number of synods in Gaul condemneded the creed promulgated at the Council of Ariminium (359 AD).
In about 360 or 361 AD, with Hilary’s encouragement, Martin, the future bishop of Tours, founded a monastery at Ligugé in his diocese.
In 364 AD, Hilary extended his efforts once more beyond Gaul. He impeached Auxentius, bishop of Milan, a man high in the imperial favour, as heterodox. Emperor Valentinian I accordingly summoned Hilary to Milan to there maintain his charges. However, the supposed heretic gave satisfactory answers to all the questions proposed. Hilary denounced Auxentius as a hypocrite as he himself was ignominiously expelled from Milan. Upon returning home, Hilary in 365, published the “Contra Arianos vel Auxentium Mediolanensem liber”, describing his unsuccessful efforts against Auxentius. He also (but perhaps at a somewhat earlier date) published the “Contra Constantium Augustum liber”, accusing the lately deceased emperor as having been the Antichrist, a rebel against God, “a tyrant whose sole object had been to make a gift to the devil of that world for which Christ had suffered.”
According to Jerome, Hilary died in Poitiers in 367 AD.
O Lord our God, you raised up your servant Hilary to be a champion of the catholic faith: Keep us steadfast in that true faith which we professed at our baptism, that we may rejoice in having you for our Father, and may abide in your Son, in the fellowship of the Holy Spirit; who live and reign for ever and ever.
Amen.
#thetruefaith #standfirm #Godwins #truth #Jesus
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arigranderaresx · 2 years
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ariana & toulouse
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lm4gxne · 3 years
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Ariana grande on Instagram : 26/12/21 <3
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arigrandenewsbrasil · 3 years
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Siga nosso Instagram ↴
instagram.com/arigrandenewsbrasil
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arigbg · 3 years
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– like or reblog if you save
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girlmeetsuniverse · 3 years
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rem beauty!!!! got an ad for it today <3
please like/reblog if you wanna use icons :-)
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remarianators · 10 months
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Ariana with friend Liz Gillies and her brother and their puppy ❤️
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mrswinchestxr · 4 years
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ariana grande icons
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feedankrm · 3 years
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her eyes were so beautiful that when she raised her eyelashes,it seemed as if a new page was being opened in the history of humanity.
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softiegrande · 3 years
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Stop this is so cute 😭
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