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2025 is not ready for me !! (a chill november vlog) ❄️🎀
#i absolutely love her vibe i'm so happy she posted again#alice guen#pizza4alice#vlog#fashion#cosmetics#qt#vlogs#sanrio
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Angers sporting club Saïd Chabane Gérald Baticle, Bordeaux Football Club des Girondins Gérard Lopez Vladimir Petkovic, Brest Stade brestois Denis Le Saint Michel Der Zakarian, Clermont-Ferrand Clermont Foot Ahmet Schaefer Pascal Gastien, Lens Racing Club Joseph Oughourlian Franck Haise, Lille LOSC Olivier Létang Jocelyn Gourvennec, Lorient Loïc Féry Christophe Pélissier, Lyon OL Olympique lyonnais Jean-Michel Aulas Peter Bosz, Olympique de Marseille OM Pablo Longoria Jorge Sampaoli, Metz Football Club Bernard Serin Frédéric Antonetti, Monaco AS Association sportive Monaco FC Dmitri Rybolovlev Niko Kovac, Montpellier-Herault Sport Club Laurent Nicollin Olivier Dall'Oglio, Nantes Football Club Waldemar Kita Antoine Kombouare, Nice OGC Jean-Pierre Rivère Christophe Galtier, Paris PSG Nasser Al-Khelaifi Mauricio Pochettino Kylian Mbappé Lionel Messi Neymar da Silva, Reims Stade de Reims Jean-Pierre Caillot Oscar Garcia, Rennes Stade rennais Football Club Nicolas Holveck Bruno Genesio, Saint-Étienne ASSE Association sportive Roland Romeyer Bernard Caïazzo Claude Puel, Strasbourg Racing Club de Strasbourd Alsace Marc Keller Julien Stephan, Troyes Simon Cliff Laurent Battles Ajaccio AC Athletic Club Ajaccien Christian Lecat Olivier Pantaloni, Amiens Sporting Club Football bernard Joannin Philippe Hinschberger, Auxerre James Zhou Jean-Marc Furlan, Bastia SC Sporting Club Claude Ferrandi Mathieu Chabert, Caen Stade Malherbe Olivier Pickeu Stéphane Moulin, Dunkerque Union Sportive du Littoral Jean-Pierre Scouarnec Romain Revelli, Dijon Football Côte-d'Or Olivier Delcourt David Linares, Grenoble Foot 38 Stéphane Rosnoblet Maurizio Jacobacci, Guingamp En Avant Fred Legrand Stéphane Dumont, Le Havre Athletic Club Football Vincent Volpe Paul Le Guen, Nancy Association Sportive Nancy-Lorraine Jacques Rousselot Daniel Stendel, Nîmes Olympique Rani Assaf Pascal Plancque, Niort Chamois Niortais Football Club Guy Cotret Sébastien Desabre, Paris FC Pierre Ferracci Thierry Laurey, Pau Football Club Bernard Laporte-Fray Didier Tholot, Quevilly-Rouen Union Sportive Michel Mallet Bruno Irles, Rodez Aveyron Football Club Pierre-Olivier Murat Laurent Peyrelade, Sochaux Football Club Frankie Yau Omar Daf, Toulouse Football Club Damien Comolli Philippe Montanier, Valenciennes Football Club Eddy Zdziech Olivier Guegan 24h du Mans Alice Pérésan-Roudil Amazon Avatar Barbie Batman Beyonce Black Mirror Bordeaux Boulevard Voltaire Cannes Champion League Chargé de création graphique Chat GPT Château Circuit Bugatti Coupe du Monde Damien Bridonneau Didier Deschamps Didier Raoult Disney Dua Lipa Elon Musk Emmanuel Macron Eurovision Fasting Féminicide Football Gérald Darmanin Gérard Depardieu Gilbert Bordes Guillaume Musso Incendie Inflation Instagram Jean-Luc Mélenchon Jeux olympiques Johnny Depp Jordan Bardella Justine Triet Keto diet Ligue 1 Liverpool Lizzo Margo Robbie Marine Le Pen Marseille Marvel Mediapart Monster energy Mylène Farmer Netflix Nicolas Sarkozy Novak Djokovic NUPES Olivier Dussopt Olivier Véran Olympic games Olympics Olympique de Marseille OMAD Paris Paris 2024 Paris Saint-Germain PSG Qatar Rodez Roman Polanski Retraites Russia Russie Sandrine Rousseau Sécheresse Star Wars Succession Taylor Swift The Office Tik Tok Ukraine Union Unionizing Virginie Grimaldi Woke Wokiste
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Nivea “Shadow Jumper” from Vincent Gibaud on Vimeo.
Client: Nivea
Director: Vincent Gibaud
Agency: Publicis Hamburg
Production: Jungler Artistic Director: Matthieu Méron Executive Producer: Amandine Bruneau Producer: Sebastien Pribile Production Manager: Lisa Hieblot, Baptiste Legois Animation supervisor: Alice Blaskevic Layout Posing: Juliette Danesi, Camille Prot Animator: Louai Benadda, Juliette Danesi, Alexis Giraud, Camille Prot, Camille Sallan Color: Merve Noskan Compositing: Vincent Gibaud
Sound: Capitaine Plouf, Maris Albaladejo, Guillaume Le Guen Music: Yannis Dumoutiers
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alice guen icons
like or reblog if u use or save.
#models site icons#icons site girls#girls icons#site girls icons#icons site models#no psd icons#icons ginger girls#red hair icons#alice guen icons#twitter icons
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Luem special for METAL 41 by Guen Fiore. Styling by Julie Liu. Starring Cadi, Alice (The Squad) and Danielle (Viva London). https://ift.tt/2Sdru5U https://ift.tt/2xQ1ap2
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#NotJustAGirl Flash Day: The sisterhood of mutual support and empowerment of Australian female tattoo artists
This article is part of a series. Part Four.
Q: Are there any female tattoo artists whom inspire you that you would like to share with us?
Sasha Mezoghlian: “Oh god so many. It’s so hard to name them all. I think these days any tattooist who is also a mum really has my respect and I definitely learn a lot from them being a mum now myself. Massive game change.”
[Above: Tattoo art by Sasha Mezoghlian (Instagram: @sashimi_roll_tattooing) (The Darling Parlour, Balmain: https://www.thedarlingparlour.com/)]
Siarn Engels: “I’m constantly being inspired by the wonderful women I work with at FLT Tattoo Studio. Eddy Lou, Sophie Lewis and Brooke Steele are amazing artists who are so unique and talented in their own ways, I love working with them so much. Some other artists I really look up to (in no order) are Shannan Meow, Sam Rulz, Emily Rose Murray, Onnie O’Leary, Anna Day and Deryn Twelve.”
[Above: Tattoo art by Siarn Engels (Instagram: @siarnthecatwitch) (FLT Studio, Newcastle: https://www.flttattoostudio.com.au/)]
Onnie O’Leary: “Oh, only about a million of them! Eddy Lou and Melanie Milne both do such solid work, and their passion and work ethic makes me weep. Sam Rulz is a very dear friend and inspires me not just as an artist but as a person in general. Last time I saw her she came back from the second-hand store with a silver shorts and jacket combo. People stare at her in the street because her style is so unique, and her tattoos don't hurt at all. Guen Douglas kills it, as a tattooer, world's cutest dog owner and wine expert. Wendy Pham, who tattooed me when I was still an apprentice, makes me laugh with her hilarious snail comics and immaculate tattoos. I hope I get tattooed by all of them eventually because I've seen a lot of their pieces healed up and they're as perfect as tattoos can be. This isn't an exhaustive list of course, but they're all artists I've worked with before and hope to work with again. I'd just like to thank my bf Kenny for all his help on the day too, driving me and Sophie Beans back from the Darling Parlour, getting me enough coffee to keep me going (5), making me take a lunch break and selling a ton of raffle tickets and just being an all-around good guy. Behind every event like this there has to be some supportive partners and they definitely deserve a mention.”
[Above: Tattoo art by Onnie O’Leary (Instagram: @onnieolearytattoo) (TLD Studio, Gymea: https://tldtattoo.com/)]
Amy Unalone: “Heaps!!! Eddy Lou. Teniele Sadd. Jenna Bouma. Tahlia Undarlegt.”
[Above: Tattoo art by Amy Unalome (Instagram: @amy_unalome_tattoo)]
Rosie Roo: “I love all the women at Wonderland Tattoo in Portland Oregon, where I just visited! I love working in female run shops! Alice Kendall, Kirsten Holliday and Savannah Trevino all do amazing botanical work, and are also really rad humans.”
[Above: Tattoo art by Rosie Roo (Instagram: @rosieroo_tattoo)]
Sandra Saar: “There are SO many women in this industry that inspire me from all parts of the world! Just to mention a few - all the beautiful girls at FLT in Newcastle, the stunning girls I work with at Adorned Empire in Fremantle every day. The list obviously does not stop there, but NJAG event showed us just a small percentage of the inspiring hard work that girls put into their work around the globe.”
[Above: Tattoo art by Sandra Saar (Instagram: @sannisaartattoo) (FLT Studio, Newcastle: https://www.flttattoostudio.com.au/)]
Tahlia Undarlegt: “The list is way too long I pretty much feel inspired by every kick ass female tattoo artist I meet!”
[Above: Tattoo art by Tahlia Undarlegt (Instagram: @tahliaundarlegt)]
Shell Valentine: “Mimsy @mimswah Mimsy is like one of the foremothers of the girly traditional style of tattooing. I don't think she ever stops developing her style and art. Watching her drive, her constant creations, drawings, paintings, comics is just inspiring. She's just amazing and hosted the NJAG event in Brisbane. Ashley Love @ohashleylove I've been following Ashley’s work since (I'm gonna be showing my age here) Livejournal days where she would post photos of her tattoos and paintings (wayyyy before I was tattooing) and I just loved them, they were bold and beautiful, and nothing has changed, her work is still so amazing. She also uses her talents as a tattooist to help raise money and raise awareness for prevention and recovery from sexual violence. Please follow @stillnotaskingforit_flashevent and www.stillnotaskingforit.gives/ to learn more. Clare Hampshire @ clareclarity I don't think it's possible for Clare to do a bad tattoo. Her work is flawless and perfect, her design and execution are just amazing, and she is just an all-round awesome human. This list could be endless however, every day I am inspired by my amazing friends and colleagues in tattooing who are constantly blowing my mind with their incredible talents. Check out @ladytattooers on Instagram for an inspiring page full of inspiring artists.”
[Above: Tattoo art by Shell Valentine (Instagram: @shell_valentine_tattoo
By: Bethany Laura
#women tattooists#female tattoo artists#women tattoo artists#female tattooists#women artists#tattoos#tattooists#female tatooists#charity#fundraising#Not Just A Girl#flash day#feminism#feminist#art#feminist tattoos#tattoo art
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Are Romance languages becoming more gender neutral?
New Post has been published on http://khalilhumam.com/are-romance-languages-becoming-more-gender-neutral/
Are Romance languages becoming more gender neutral?
Languages reflect a divided society
Image from Pixabay, under Pixabay License, remixed by Global Voices.
In the coming months, Global Voices will explore non-binary language initiatives, initially known as “inclusive language”. This first collective story begins with an exploration of gender in Romance languages. Language can be seen as a form of magic that impacts the world. What we say and how we use language affects our thinking, imagination, and our reality. In most Romance languages, there are feminine and masculine gender marks for pronouns, nouns, adjectives, determiners, and demonstratives. In situations where a person's gender is unknown or when referencing a mixed-gender group, current Romance language conventions prioritize the masculine form as the generic standard. Unlike Romanian, which has preserved the neuter gender from Latin, the French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, and Catalan languages only have binary gender forms and, therefore, pose special difficulties for gender neutrality. Activism for gender neutrality in language is part of a larger movement to question, resist, and dismantle sexism conveyed through language. Activists claim that the dominance of the masculine gender in languages is not neutral, as purported, but rather has been imposed historically through ideological and political processes. During the past few decades, movements have pushed for the increased visibility of women and other genders in language by promoting the use of neuter pronouns and inflections with different combinations of symbols or vowels.
In French, old rules are called into question
Photo by Chabe01, Wikimedia Commons, under CC BY-SA 4.0
Children who study French quickly learn the oft-repeated grammar rule: “masculine takes over feminine”. This means that in plural sentences with different genders, the masculine form dominates. Among French-speaking communities, an orthography known as inclusive writing has gained prominence in recent years to address this linguistic gender bias. The first way of adopting inclusive writing is to use existing neutral forms where possible, for example, “lectorat” (‘the readership’) instead of “les lecteurs” (m.) or “les lectrices” (f.). The second technique explicitly includes both masculine and feminine endings. For example, the “e” and “ice” endings, often used for feminine forms, would follow the masculine form, for example, “lecteur·ice·s” (‘readers’). Although this orthography has been adopted by some media outlets, universities and a few companies, it remains highly controversial, most notably in France, where critics argue that it is unnecessary. The most common new pronoun used to refer to non-binary people or to a mixed-gender group is “iel” — a contraction of “il” and “elle” (‘he/she’). Yet, there is still no consensus as to how to mark a neutral gender in other parts of speech. For example, if “iel” is used, speakers might still be forced to pick, later on, one of the binary gender options for adjectives’ or nouns’ endings. So far, pronouns and gender-neutral alternatives have no institutional stamp of approval and are not widely used outside of queer, LGBTQI+ and feminist circles.
Active debates in Spanish and Portuguese
“No kid is born a macho” sign in a march for women's rights in Santa Fe, Argentina, 2017. Photo from Wikipedia, under CC BY-SA 4.0
Movements in the Spanish-speaking world have been pushing hard for gender neutrality. Language activism has been especially strong in Argentina, where it has become a powerful rhetorical and political tool in public discourse: President Alberto Fernández has used some forms of gender-neutral language in his speeches, several universities have allowed it in academic papers, and public offices like the Central Bank have included it in formal communications. Several attempts at gender neutrality have been implemented over the past decades in Spanish; the earliest included the use of “x” and “@” to replace the vowel that marks gender such as ‘tod@s’ (‘everyone’). More recently, activists started using the “e” as a generic, neutral alternative, and the neuter pronoun “elle” emerged as an alternative for “él/ella” (‘he/she’). While these forms are predominantly used within LGBTQI+ and feminist communities, a recent report by fact-checking news site Chequeado shows that some gender-neutral words are already being accepted (or tolerated) by Argentine speakers. Also, a new survey by the Spanish organization Fundéu highlighted the increasing use of “x”, “@”, or “e” by Spanish speaking Twitter users in each country. Portuguese is similar to Spanish regarding alternatives for gender neutrality. In 2015, Andrea Zanella, a Brazilian psychologist, created a manifesto for “radically inclusive communication” in Portuguese in partnership with a company called Diversity Box. Since then, Diversity Box has been creating gender-inclusive guides for companies. Like in Spanish, the use of “x” or “@” has become popular on the internet, especially among feminist groups, despite not being part of Portuguese language grammar rules which requires legal changes in the Brazilian Congress. The matter is not currently on the legislative agenda in Brazil.
Italians hesitate on the schwa
IPA vowel chart, from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 3.0
In Italy, even though debates about gender neutrality are not as prevalent as they are in Spanish-speaking communities, there is a discussion led by Italian linguist Vera Gheno about the schwa or scevà (ә), an International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) symbol. The schwa stems from dialects of Central and Southern Italy and can be used to refer to multiple people in a gender-neutral way. It could replace the * or “@” at the end of gendered words, which is very common online but not pronounceable in spoken Italian. In August 2020, Italian blogger Alice explained how to pronounce the schwa. This proposal was made five years ago by the citizen-led project “Italiano Inclusivo” (‘Inclusive Italian’), although the official language authority, Accademia della Crusca, still refuses to accept the schwa (and any other form) as an evolution towards a neutral Italian language.
Feminists and LGBTQI+ communities take the lead in Catalonia
In Catalan-speaking territories, an adaptation of the non-binary language solutions developed in the Spanish-speaking world is gaining momentum within feminist and LGBTQI+ communities. “Elli” and “ellis” become alternatives to “ell/ ella” (‘he/she’) and the plural forms “ells/elles” (‘they’ m., ‘they’ f.). Though many institutions — including Catalonia's local government — have been recommending the use of non-binary language for decades, guidelines from the Autonomous University of Barcelona focus on strategies like giving preference to existing neutral alternatives such as “el professorat” (a group of professors) or double-gender forms like “els professors i les professores” (‘the professors’ m. and ‘the professors’ f.), or feminine generics.
Non-binary language challenges in Romanian
Non-binary language is particularly challenging in Romanian. Forms such as “@” or “e” do not work for Romanian since “o” is not usually a masculine ending and feminine nouns are traditionally formed by adding a suffix to the masculine (“activist“>”activistă“). Sometimes the alternative “X” ending is used, for example, “activistX” instead of “activiști”/”activiste“, masculine and feminine for “activists”. However, gender activists use the pronouns “ei” or “ele” (as a rough translation to the English “they”) to avoid carrying gender marks. Unlike the aforementioned languages, Romanian has preserved the neuter gender from Latin, but it is mostly used for objects or collective entities. All neuter nouns are masculine in the singular form and feminine in the plural, hence grammatical neuter does not necessarily equal neutrality from a non-binary language perspective. So, despite the apparent linguistic advantage, gender neutrality in Romanian seems far from prospering at the moment.
Written by Romina Navarro, Giovana Fleck, Violeta Camarasa, Tori Egherman, Laila Le Guen, Belen Febres-Cordero, Marisa Petricca, Andrea Paola Hernandez, Manuela Burghelea
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Le Giornate dello Sport indette dalla Regione Veneto hanno l’obiettivo di valorizzare la pratica sportiva attraverso la collaborazione con le numerose associazioni attive e presenti nel territorio tra cui l’Atletica Leggera Montecchio Maggiore che con l’aiuto degli atleti, allenatori e dirigenti ha organizzato diverse attività per gli istituti comprensivi 1 (San Francesco, Manzoni e Anna Frank),per gli istituti comprensivi 2 (Zanella e Don Milani) e per l’istituto Giuseppini.
Le attività si sono diversificate in base al luogo dello svolgimento degli esercizi proposti e in particolare all’età degli studenti che vi hanno preso parte.
Per l’istituto Anna Frank essendo ragazzi dagli 11 ai 14 anni, con la collaborazione dell’organizzazione PWT Park World Tour Italy Orienteering, si è potuta svolgere un’attività più complessa al fine di spronare i ragazzi a dare il meglio di loro, imparando ad orientarsi con una mappa e una bussola e di scovare le lanterne sparse nel Polisportivo Comunale.
Per l’istituto Giuseppini, anch’essa una scuola media, sono state svolte delle gare di velocità su una distanza di 30m dividendo le batterie in base all’età e al sesso dei ragazzi. I più veloci si sono fronteggiati in una semifinale e finale per decretare il vincitore maschio e femmina del primo, secondo e terzo anno.
Ai ragazzi più piccoli delle elementari essendo all’interno delle palestre con altre società sportive, si è optato per un percorso da svolgere divisi in due squadre, adottando esercizi praticati spesso durante gli allenamenti di Atletica Leggera, cercando così di attivare la reattività del bambino, dandogli la responsabilità di dover agire nel modo corretto per portare a termine il percorso il prima possibile e ovviamente fare il tifo per i propri compagni.
Al termine di queste giornate sono arrivati dei feedback molto positivi sull’organizzazione e sulle attività proposte.
Un grande ringraziamento agli istituti comprensivi che hanno partecipato, all’Ufficio Sport di Montecchio Maggiore per la collaborazione nell’organizzare le giornate e in particolar modo, un grazie a tutti i volontari dell’AMM, Atletica Ovest Vicentino e al gruppo di Orienteering. Un grazie quindi a Gabriele Viale (presidente dell’AMM), Diego Zocca (allenatore dell’Atletica Arzignano), Marabel Vittoria Crestani (allenatrice dell’AMM), Damiano Bolla (atleta del gruppo Orienteering), Tidjiane Minougou (atleta dell’Arzignano), Alice Prearo (ex atleta dell’AMM), Lisa Dal Grande (allentarice dell’AMM), Abdou Guene(Campione Italiano dell’Atletica Ovest Vicentino), Moillet Kouakou (Campionessa Italiana dell’Atletica Ovest Vicentino), Desiree Muraro (Campionessa Italiana dell’Atletica Ovest Vicentino), Angelica Preto Martini e Giulia Fongaro (atlete dell’Arzignano). Grazie anche all’assessore dello sport di Montecchio Maggiore Gianluca Peripoli per la partecipazione ad alcune attività.
Le giornate dello Spot Le Giornate dello Sport indette dalla Regione Veneto hanno l'obiettivo di valorizzare la pratica sportiva attraverso la collaborazione con le numerose associazioni attive e presenti nel territorio tra cui l'Atletica Leggera Montecchio Maggiore che con l'aiuto degli atleti, allenatori e dirigenti ha organizzato diverse attività per gli istituti comprensivi 1 (San Francesco, Manzoni e Anna Frank),per gli istituti comprensivi 2 (Zanella e Don Milani) e per l'istituto Giuseppini. 352 more words
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May It Be: Prologue
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/2xLoRiF
by Erin_Knightly_Tetch
"May It Be" picks up 5 months after the events of "Twisted Souls" and Gotham is in a very eerie dead calm. With a missing Basil Karlo and Ethan Bennett, the GCPD are at loss as to find the two Clayfaces and Detective Ellen Yin will not give up until she finds her former partner and bring him back to the light; Elsewhere, Erin Knightly is trying to keep her life together as she continues her romantic relationship with Jervis Tetch/The Mad Hatter and her wounded friendship with Guen Pendragon/Wraith. Erin must face several obstacles as she tries to keep reality in check....or face falling into Wonderland forever....
Words: 1248, Chapters: 1/?, Language: English
Series: Part 1 of TB: May It Be
Fandoms: The Batman (Cartoon)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: F/M
Characters: Jervis Tetch, Oswald Cobblepot, Kirk Langstrom, Ellen Yin, Bruce Wayne, Achilles Milo, Original Female Character(s), Ethan Bennett, Basil Karlo, Cosmo Krank
Relationships: Jervis Tetch/Original Female Character(s), Jervis Tetch/Original Character(s)
Additional Tags: Developing Relationship, Romance, Angst, Mild Language, Friendship, Fighting, Flirting, Alice in Wonderland References, Sarcasm, Sassy
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/2xLoRiF
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the most autumn vlog ever !! 🎃🍂
#pizza4alice#alice guen#fashion#cosmetics#vlog#halloween#the pumpkin spice candle is such a vibe#i got them not last year but the year before#and this year as well!#the first time i was able to buy it in person from Giant Tiger#and then this year the brand i got was only available from Walmart online in a set of two#i finished the second one last night! now i just need to clean and recycle the jar#also i like to get the pumpkin spice liquid soap from bath and bodyworks#and this year was (i think) the third year i did that as well!#fall#pumpkin spice candle#fall 2024#autumn 2024#halloween 2024#autumn traditions#fall traditions#sanrio#pom pom purin#cats#rilakkuma
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