LifeEIGO@fuitsu.tumblr.com

ただなんとなく英文を読んでみる日々
May 11
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Phone sex is the dumbest thing in the world. It’s not sex. It’s like calling a restaurant and asking them to describe their food. That’s not the same thing as eating.
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It’s going to be absolute disaster, like a burrito before sex.

- jack Donaghy, 30 rock

so true

(via kray)
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May 10
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Sometimes I can’t believe how Californian California is. Women walk around half-naked, waiters call patrons “dude,” and medical marijuana is legal. But I wondered just how legal. Could anyone buy it? Even me, who doesn’t have cancer, AIDS, arthritis, glaucoma or even any previous pot-smoking experience?
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WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration stepped up its heparin alerts to hundreds of hospitals, medical societies and pharmaceutical organizations on Friday after learning that some medical facilities still had the contaminated blood thinner among their supplies.
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Facebook says that the “Pages” feature is meant for people and brands that want to have a lot more “friends” than are allowed via normal accounts. An example is Barack Obama’s Facebook page, which currently shows 820,000 supporters.
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One belongs to New York instantly, one belongs to it as much in five minutes as in five years

Thomas Wolfe

This is so true…’tis a love affair, nyc + I have going on. and i suspect you might feel the same way?

(via 27)
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How 10 Well-Known Beverages Got Their Names

didyouevernotice:

Coca-Cola was named for two of the ingredients that made up the drink at the time – coca leaves and kola nuts.

Mountain Dew is an old slang word for moonshine. It was marketed as “zero-proof moonshine” for a while and even used pictures of hillbillies in its marketing efforts until 1973.

Fanta - Two versions here, both based on the German word “fantasie” (fantasy/imagination). Story #1 – a contest was held for employees to name the drink. The inventors told employees to let their “fantasie” run wild. One salesman came up with Fanta. Story #2- same thing, except early versions of the drink were made from by products of cheese and jam production. Thus, the consumer would have to use their “fantasie” to imagine that the beverage actually tasted like oranges.

TAB – A computer randomly generated 250,000 three- or four-letter name possibilities. Why TAB was selected out of that list isn’t for certain, but Coca-Cola says it’s because it helps people keep “tabs” on their weight.

Pepsi – Used to be called the highly imaginative “Brad’s Drink”. Inventor Caleb D. Bradham bought the name “Pep Kola” from a local competitor, which eventually evolved into “Pepsi-Cola” and then “Pepsi”.

Canada Dry – Pretty simple explanation here. It was invented in Canada, and dry was supposed to mean “not sweet” (as opposed to “not wet”). There you have it.
Started in Canada. Dry = not sweet

A&W Rootbeer – This one’s pretty easy, too. A&W = the company’s founders, Roy Allen and Frank Wright.

Gatorade – This beverage was invented to help a football team with dehydration issues. The team? The University of Florida Gators. Gator-aid.

Dr Pepper – The rumor is that the man who bought the formula, Wade Morrison, used to live near a Dr. Charles T. Pepper and had a thing for his daughter. Also, as someone who considers the AP Stylebook akin to the Bible, I have to share - with this particular brand name there is never a period after the “r” in Dr.

Squirt – So-named because it “Squirts” in your mouth like a ripe grapefruit.

(via mental_floss Blog)

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Last night I danced with a stranger, but she just reminded me you were the one.
— Bob Dylan - Standing in the Doorway (via tumbl-me)
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How many times do you have to cycle through your very limited collection of steampunk-approved DVDs—basically, Van Helsing, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Young Sherlock Holmes, and Howl’s Moving Castle—before you realize you might have jumped on the wrong band-dirigible?
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Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes. Art is knowing which ones to keep.
— Scott Adams (via affremblequotes)