xAtNight · 1 points ·
Yeah, i watched it and liked it very much. But afaik it's shoujo. But I could be wrong.

xAtNight · 1 points ·
Death Note is shounen, so it is intended for male adolescents (age ~10-18, often also ~6-18). So is Blue Exorcist. And Puella Magi Madoka Magica is shoujo, it is intended for female adolescents.

xAtNight · 9 points · *
Oh, look what I've found http://hugelol.com/lol/57339
[btw, Repost]

xAtNight · 1 points ·
If you enter the orange portal with X mph, you would come out of the blue portal with exactly X mph. Because the blue portal is on the ground, you would fly upwards and lose momentum. Because gravity pulls you down. So, your momentum decreases from X to 0. Then it would increase again as you fall towards the ground.

xAtNight · 4 points ·
No. You don't gain momentum. The momentum entering one portal equals the momentum coming out of the other. But you gain momentum as you fall towards the portal. It's called gravity and affects you every time you come out of the orange portal.

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xAtNight · 5 points ·
Doesn't multilingual people do this all day? I allways talk ein bischen deutsch, then un poco español. Only weil puedo. :D ( means: I allways talk a bit of german, then a bit of spanish. Only because i can.)

xAtNight · 1 points · *
Just to blow your minds. The DS is the most purchased console...154million times..

xAtNight · 1 points ·
"A pen is an ink-based writing instrument. It can be a dip pen, which you dip in ink in order to write, such as a quill, a cane, or a stylus, or it can be a reservoir pen, where the ink is contained in a reservoir inside the pen: such are the fountain pens and the more modern ballpoint pens, roller point pens and all the other variety of newer pens, of which there is a large selection. By contrast, a pencil is a graphite writing instrument, not ink-based, and again, whether it is real graphite or any of the newer synthetic materials is indifferent for this purpose.

Pluma literally means feather, and the name was adopted when the pen used to be a goose feather, that is, a quill. Nowadays, pluma by itself is the metal nib of the pen. By extension, the whole pen is often called a pluma. In many countries it is called a lapicera, instead of pluma.

The proper name for the pen, meaning by pen the instrument that holds the metal nib, is portaplumans, very little used, but nevertheless the correct name.

In Argentina we call lapicera both the fountain pen and the dip pen. We call pluma the nib itself. However, if you call pluma the whole pen, as it is done in other countries, nobody looks at you as if you were a Martian: everybody understands you.

In Spanish, a pencil is called lápiz, and a pen is called lapicera. The different kinds of pen have different names.

Thus, a fountain pen is called a lapicera fuente, lapicera estilográfica o estilógrafo, or simply a fuente. The most common name is a lapicera fuente.

A ballpoint pen is called lapicera a bolilla, bolígrafo or birome. The most common name in Argentina is birome, as Imariano said, in honor of László Biró, its inventor.

In some countries, the pen is called lapicero instead of lapicera, but lapicero is technically a pencil holder, not a pen.

All of these meanings and usages have been checked with different diccionaries and the Dictionary of the Real Academia Española."
Found this on the internet. I hope, it helped ;D

xAtNight · 17 points ·
Mutations. Or she's an alien...we don't know..


:(