#grandmas Halloween
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bobal4tte · 3 months ago
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me if you even care
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c0ntr0lledchaos · 1 month ago
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Happy spooky month!
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daisylambs · 1 month ago
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October 🎃
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turnipoddity · 14 days ago
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When i was a child i was SOO into halloween and trick or treating. I went once, but let’s remember i live in indonesia where…. nobody celebrates halloween. And it was like, in 2006. My neighborhood is full of grandmas and grampas in their retirement homes. So i just ended up going door to door in a dracula costume and sit to talk with them. Got my cheeks pinched here and there, and they gave butter biscuits and warm tea🥰
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literaryvein-reblogs · 20 days ago
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Writing Notes: Halloween
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REFERENCES (Banshee; Ghost; Ghoul; Goblin; Haunt; Specter; Vampire; Wraith; Origins of Halloween)
Banshee
A female spirit in Gaelic folklore whose appearance or wailing warns a family that one of them will soon die.
Banshee came from combining the Gaelic words meaning “woman of fairyland,” but any positive associations with fairies ends there.
Are female spirits that, if seen or heard wailing under the windows of a house, foretell of a death in the family that lives there.
Today, the word is most frequently heard in the idiom “scream like a banshee” or “wail like a banshee,” which shows the power of myth and the imaginative power of language, since probably no one has actually heard one.
Ghost
Most common meaning today is “a disembodied soul” or “the soul or specter of a deceased person”, which came next, a meaning based on the ancient folkloric notion that the spirit is separable from the body and can continue its existence after death. It originally meant “vital spark” or “the seat of life or intelligence,” which is still used in the phrase “give up the ghost.”
An older spelling of ghost, gast, is the root of aghast (“struck with terror, shocked”) and ghastly (“frightening”).
The German word for ghost, geist, is part of the word zeitgeist, which literally means “spirit of the time.”
Ghoul
A legendary evil being that robs graves and feeds on corpses.
Ghoul is a relatively recent English word, borrowed from Arabic in the 1700s.
Because it’s spelled with gh-, it looks vaguely like the Old English words ghost and ghastly (which share a common root in the Old English word gāst, meaning “spirit” or “ghost”).
In fact, it comes from the Arabic word ghūl, derived from the verb that means “to seize,” and originally meant “a legendary evil being held to rob graves and feed on corpses.” The word was introduced to western literature by the French translation of Arabian Nights.
Goblin
An ugly or grotesque sprite.
Usually mischievous and sometimes evil and malicious.
Haunt
To visit or inhabit as a ghost.
However, this is not the original sense of the word.
For centuries, it had a perfectly unfrightening set of meanings: “to visit often” and “to continually seek the company of.”
In the 1500s, it began to mean “to have a disquieting or harmful effect on,” as in “that problem may come back to haunt you.” The meaning here is simply the lingering presence of the problem, not the possibly scary nature of the problem itself; it is applied to thoughts, memories, and emotions.
The noun haunt retains this fright-neutral definition, “a place that you go to often,” as in “one of my favorite old haunts.”
A lingering idea, memory, or feeling may have led to the ghostly meaning of haunt, or one by a disembodied or imaginary spirit.
Specter
A visible disembodied spirit.
Specter originally meant “a visible disembodied spirit” in English—a good synonym for ghost. But, unlike ghost, the notion of being visible is paramount in specter, which came to English from the French word spectre, which developed directly from the Latin word spectrum, meaning “appearance” or “specter,” itself based on the verb specere, meaning “to look.”
Specere is also the root of many English words that have to do with appearance: aspect, conspicuous, inspect, perspective, and spectacle.
Vampire
The reanimated body of a dead person believed to come from the grave at night and suck the blood of persons asleep.
Legends of bloodsucking creatures go back to Ancient Greece, with harrowing tales of them rising from burial places at night to drink peoples’ blood before hiding from dawn’s daylight. These stories were popular in eastern Europe.
Originally comes from the Serbian word vampir, which then passed from German to French, coming to English in the 1700s.
The extended senses of vampire, “one who lives by preying on others” and a synonym of vampire bat, were both in use within a few decades.
Wraith
The exact likeness of a living person seen usually just before death as an apparition. The distinguishing quality of a wraith, compared with other ghosts, is its specificity.
Originally, it referred to either the exact likeness of a living person seen as an apparition just before that person’s death as a kind of spectral premonition of bad news, or a visible apparition of a dead person.
When referring to a living person, it’s a synonym of doppelgänger, or the “spirit double” of a living person (as opposed to a ghost, which refers to the spirit of a dead person). Doppelgänger is now frequently used in a broader sense to mean simply “someone who looks like someone else.”
When referring to a dead person, wraith is a synonym of revenant, which originally referred to a ghost of a particular person and subsequently has been used for a person who returns after a long absence.
ORIGINS OF HALLOWEEN
The traditions of Halloween have their origins in Samhain, a festival celebrated by the Celts of ancient Britain and Ireland.
Samhain marked the end of summer and the onset of winter, and occurred on a date that corresponds to our November 1st.
It was believed that during the Samhain festival, the world of the gods was visible to humans, and the gods took advantage of this fact by playing tricks on their mortal worshippers. Those worshippers in turn responded with bonfires on hilltops and sometimes masks and other varied disguises to keep ghosts from being able to recognize them. Things tended to get spooky and dangerous around Samhain, with bloody sacrifices and supernatural phenomena abounding.
Samhain chugged along for centuries, until Christianity poked its nose in: in the 8th century CE, All Saints' Day, a somewhat new Christian holiday, got moved from May 13th to November 1st.
The evening before All Saints' Day became a holy—that is, a hallowed—eve. Within a few centuries, Samhain and the eve of All Saints' Day had been merged into a single holiday. Protestants of the Reformation and all that came after largely rejected the whole thing, but the holiday persisted among some communities.
19th-century immigrants to the U.S., including many from Ireland, brought their Halloween customs with them and deserve no small amount of credit for the holiday as it's celebrated in the U.S. today.
More: Writing Notes & References ⚜ Word List: October
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redthemarten · 29 days ago
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Sure, let's start with a classic! Although it seems that Mister Wolf was bullied into carrying both the basket and Little Red herself all the way to grandma's cottage...
You deserve some Credit Coupons for your input. Sigewinne takes them out of the Duke's pocket and hands them to you (he doesn't dare to oppose).
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elderscrollsconceptart · 14 days ago
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Todd Howard poses with the "Skyrim Grandma"
Source: Shirley Curry during her 2019 visit to Bethesda studios where her appearance was scanned into their engine in order to become an NPC in TES VI
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In 2024 Shirley announced her retirement from YouTube and that she's worried she'll die before TES VI comes out (Same Shirley. Same)
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nekochan08 · 3 months ago
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An old comic about how America celebrates Halloween & Christmas.
(Featuring England and France having a parental dispute…)
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Yea……….pretty much. And there are so many dick drawings EVERYWHERE on signs, windows, the sidewalks from the night before and toilet paper on trees and houses.
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lntheconservatory · 1 year ago
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Happy Halloween!!! 🎃🦇
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meandtheveggies · 1 month ago
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Halloween sweaters + crafts 👻🧡
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thepastisalreadywritten · 20 days ago
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Halloween costumes for dogs. 🐶🎃🔊
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webdiggerxxx · 14 days ago
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꧁★꧂
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emdotcom · 2 months ago
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🎃 You get brownie points if you give me details ...
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halloweenbitchbaby · 1 year ago
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flowery-laser-blasts · 2 months ago
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Me: I do have one fond memory of my grandma. She used to tell me my favourite story before bed: The Legend of Bluebeard.
@theatticdemon : Blue...
@miss-doodle-jester : Oh god, it all started there.
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rosalie-starfall · 1 year ago
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Addams Family Values
1993
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