#futō
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#shida shahabi#piano#cello#Linnea Olsson#Palmer Lydebrant#futō#live session#music#fat records#Youtube
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Shida Shahabi - Futō (live session)
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Shida Shahabi - Futō (live session)
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Funimation Announces English Dub Adaptation Of "RE-MAIN"
Marco!
Funimation has announced a September 25th start date for the English dub adaptation of RE-MAIN coming from Studio MAPPA. It is directed by Kiyoshi Matsuda, written by Masafumi Nishida, who also serves as the chief director and sound director, with Kaori Futō providing the original character designs, Shiho Tanaka adapting the designs for animation, and music composed by Kana Utatane. Cast and…
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[.neway] ⭕️ • Futōs #organicsushi_cz #maguro #avocado #lettuce #bigsushiroll #futomaki #tasty #fresh #organic #sushiroll #🔴 #🥑 #🥬 #thisistheway #japanesesoulfood #food #for #you (v místě ORGANIC SUSHI) https://www.instagram.com/p/CaJ6keFrBxM/?utm_medium=tumblr
#organicsushi_cz#maguro#avocado#lettuce#bigsushiroll#futomaki#tasty#fresh#organic#sushiroll#🔴#🥑#🥬#thisistheway#japanesesoulfood#food#for#you
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Adding on to this, now that I'm back to my better sources.
First, a correction: fūror would not generate the frequentive *fursō, since fūror is a 1st conjugation verb; it's frequentive would be *fūritō.
Second, I forgot to consider futō, and fūdō, both of which would also likely generate *fursō as a possible frequentive form.
Third, I didn't specify the prinicpal parts of these hypothetical verbs, or possible further derivation from them (because why not dig as far back as possible in our hypothetical etymology?) So:
fudō: Can't be 1st conjugation, so 3rd; thus *fudō, *fudere for sure. For the 3rd principal part, most 'short vowel' + 'd' stem 3rd conjugations seem to either reduplicate, giving *fefudī or *fufudī, or add 's', giving *fussī; shifting to act like 4th conjugation is also possible, giving *furīvī. And the fourth principal part show the 't' > 's' change I mentioned at the beginning of the first post, and then other changes, resulting in either *fussum or *fūsum; if shifted in the previous, that would be *furītum. My favorite is *fudō, *fudere, *fefudī, *fussum, but feel free to mix it up if you want! There don't seem to be any Latin words with an 'fud' root, so that's the end of this one.
fūdō: Same as above, starting *fūdō, *fūdere; 'long vowel' + 'd' seems to much more consistently show a simple 's' pattern, giving the final parts as *fūsī, *fūsum. So that's that: *fūdō, *fūdere, *fūsī, *fūsum. There is one possible source for this verb, a re-lexicalization of the 'fūd' stem in the verb 'fundō, fundere, fūdī, fūsum', meaning 'to pour out, shed'; this happens sometimes, where the perfect stem of a verb gets turned into the present stem of a new verb.
futō: This one does not exist but the extended 'futuō' does, meaning 'to fuck'; 'futuo, futuere, futuī, futūtum' would become the frequentive *fututō, *fututāre, so that direct root is unlikely, though you could do the reverse of what was mentioned above. One common re-lexicalizing strategy for perfect stems is the addition of a 'u' to the end of the stem, so 'futuō' could be seen as the re-lexicalized version of a verb with perfect stem *futī. Now, 'short vowel' + 't' is a VERY unusual shape for a perfect stem, so this is likely a bare root perfect, meaning we have circled all the way back around to our original verb *futō. Adding the 't' to the root would result in the same possible sound changes as *fudō showed, so either *fussum or *fūsī again . That would make this verb (picking my favorite) *futō, *futere, *futī, *fussum.
fūtō: There's no real word I can find to link this one back to, and 'long vowel' + 't' is rare; the only example I'm really finding is 'abītō', which has no perfect or supine system, except in its alternate form 'abaetō' (which still counts as having 'long vowel' + 't', for the most part), which has perfect 'abaetī' and no supine system. So by that, we're limited to *fūtō, *fūtere, *fūtī at most; bare root perfect rules would, as above, let us add *fussum or *fūsum as a supine stem if we wanted. But for fun, let's also consider 'short vowel' + 't' patterns, as well as 'vowel' + 'consonant cluster ending with 't'' (which, while etymologically very distinct, is metrically identical, and 'long vowel' + 't' varies with 'vowel' + 'tt' all the time, so…). Leaving aside compounds of 'sistō' as comparisons (because it's one of those relexicalized perfect stems and the 's' is important to that, we've got three paterns: root + 'u', like a lot of 2nd conjugations; root + 's', common in the 3rd; and root + 'īv', mimicking 4th (also reducing to just root + 'i', also like 4th). These would give us *fūtuī, *fūsī, and *futīvī (or *futiī). For some variety here, I'm goin to pick my favorite version of this verb to be: *fūtō, *fūtere, *fūtīvī, *fūtītum, but again, pick your favorites!
And that's that; I've spent nearly 90 researching and writing up verb paradigms on this shitpost and have had the time of my life. This is probably more than anyone would ever want to know about Latin verbs, but boy did I find it interesting to put together.
I just want you to know that thanks to that last linguistics post, I just had a split second where my brain thought the correct plural was “fursonae”
(With reference to this post here.)
I mean, that one’s not even spurious. The word “fursona” is a play on the word “persona”, for which the Latin plural legitimately is “personae” (and “personae” is a rare but accepted plural in English as well), so by derivation “fursonae” is perfectly cromulent.
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LEGOLAND JAPAN April 1 2017 OPEN Nagoya City Minato-ku Kinjō Futō
レゴランド・ジャパン 2017年4月1日 名古屋市港区金城ふ頭にオープン
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買い忘れ無いように。俺❗️ #芝浦 #ガス #キャンプ #iwatani #iwataniprimus (Shibaura-futō Station)
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