But for Nady, once the troon phase is gone the body hair, deepened voice and gigantic clit will remain. She may feel a great loss of femininity that ruins her romantic and sexual relationships and causes her to further lose her sense of self and deal with a lot of regret. This is why hormones shouldn't be passed out like candy and informed consent clinics are a mistake.
Nady will just be one of the many ruined bodies cast aside by the troon social epidemic. And so many of them are documenting all of this online where they will never ever be able to get rid of the evidence.
At least ending up with megaclit, a deep voice and extra body hair is a bit better than transitioning back after you've already had your dick chopped off and turned into a neo-vagina.
I get the feeling that she will mistake/explain the actual dysphoria she feels from that as evidence that she is as "non-binary"/"genderqueer" as she always claimed to be.
Just letting it sit for two days isn't going to dry it out. Get a bunch of silica gel packs and put it in a sealable bag. Leave for several days. I've heard rice works too.
She probably fucked it up permanently by turning it on while it was still wet inside.
after a quick Google search, I've found out that verbs in Arabic are gendered based on their nouns. I wonder if Milo is going to try to mangle the language in an attempt to be nonbinary, and then scream "oppression" when her professor takes points off her assignments for using incorrect grammar?
EDIT: honestly, if she takes learning Arabic seriously, I have to give her props. Arabic seems like it'd be a hell of a language to learn (correct me if I'm wrong), and I hope she isn't taking it just for SJW brownie points lol- it's actually a language that is in high demand for prospective FBI and CIA employees (and among other government branches and the military as well, I'd assume)... not that Milo would have a chance at that sort of employment lol.
after a quick Google search, I've found out that verbs in Arabic are gendered based on their nouns. I wonder if Milo is going to try to mangle the language in an attempt to be nonbinary, and then scream "oppression" when her professor takes points off her assignments for using incorrect grammar?
EDIT: honestly, if she takes learning Arabic seriously, I have to give her props. Arabic seems like it'd be a hell of a language to learn (correct me if I'm wrong), and I hope she isn't taking it just for SJW brownie points lol- it's actually a language that is in high demand for prospective FBI and CIA employees (and among other government branches and the military as well, I'd assume)... not that Milo would have a chance at that sort of employment lol.
I once asked a Muslim co-worker if I should bother learning Arabic or punjabi. He said that I'd be wasting my time. It's a very primitive language and all but dead in all but name, words have multiple meanings based on context, pronouns can entirely change a sentences context, entire letters don't exist.
I have no doubt milo will give it up for being too difficult and it'd be hard to blame her. Even people fluent in the language have no fucking idea what some passages mean sometimes.
Waiting for Nady's Muslim conversion saga. The Quran isn't really the Quran unless you're reading it in the original classical Arabic, according to devout Muslims, so you can't really be serious about conversion unless you know the language or are working on learning it.
Waiting for Nady's Muslim conversion saga. The Quran isn't really the Quran unless you're reading it in the original classical Arabic, according to devout Muslims, so you can't really be serious about conversion unless you know the language or are working on learning it.
It was Canadajin, and she did it because she wanted a specific guy to like her. He's gone on to make several videos about how fetal alcohol syndrome doesn't make his dick hard, but she keeps pushing. It's like if I found out a smoking hot model liked the color blue, so I decide to dress in all blue to impress her. It's pretty fucking sad.
The language class might be due to undergrad requirements, as most universities require a certain number of elective classes. Her choosing Arabic as opposed to one of the romance languages is her own damn fault.
Bragging about how long she does the sex for, right on the heels of bragging about doing the sex. Dildos on the walls.
I give it 6-ish months before we hear her talk about how super amazingly cool she must be for smoking pot. Or tripping on mushrooms. So different from the normies!
He said that I'd be wasting my time. It's a very primitive language and all but dead in all but name, words have multiple meanings based on context, pronouns can entirely change a sentences context, entire letters don't exist.
There is no such thing as a "primitive" language. Language evolves horizontally, not vertically.
Arabic is a non-Indo-European language, meaning it is very, very different from what Europeans would be used to, but it's more like trying to learn Japanese grammar-wise in difficulty. It's different and weird, but not impossible by any stretch of the imagination. Personally, I struggle with the pronunciation--uvulars and pharyngeals are hard when you don't come from a language that uses them, and they're not particularly common in other languages compared to a lot of sounds.
The problem with learning Arabic is that you, as an outsider, have to learn TWO languages, not one--the literary language, which is used in news and books, and pick a variety of spoken language, and if you pick wrong, it's like using Italian to speak to a Spanish person--it's pretty doable, but it's not great. The literary language is like if speakers of Romance languages (French, Italian, Spanish, etc) all had to read and write in Latin, albeit not QUITE as far from my understanding. While more and more Arabic writing is being written in dialect, rather than MSA (the standard written version), Arabic as it actually exists in speech isn't going anywhere anytime soon. What he said was stupid.
Words in Arabic have "bones" to them, rather than definite meanings. The archetypial example is K-T-B. Sub sperg:
kataba كَتَبَ or كتب "he wrote" (masculine) katabat كَتَبَت or كتبت "she wrote" (feminine) katabtu كَتَبْتُ or كتبت "I wrote" (f and m) kutiba كُتِبَ or كتب "it was written" (masculine) kutibat كُتِبَت or كتبت "it was written" (feminine) katabū كَتَبُوا or كتبوا "they wrote" (masculine) katabna كَتَبْنَ or كتبن "they wrote" (feminine) katabnā كَتَبْنَا or كتبنا "we wrote" (f and m) yaktub(u) يَكْتُب or يكتب "he writes" (masculine) taktub(u) تَكْتُب or تكتب "she writes" (feminine) naktub(u) نَكْتُب or نكتب "we write" (f and m) aktub(u) أَكْتُب or أكتب "I write" (f and m) yuktab(u) يُكْتَب or يكتب "being written" (masculine) tuktab(u) تُكتَب or تكتب "being written" (feminine) yaktubūn(a) يَكْتُبُونَ or يكتبون "they write" (masculine) yaktubna يَكْتُبْنَ or يكتبن "they write" (feminine) taktubna تَكْتُبْنَ or تكتبن "you write" (feminine) yaktubān(i) يَكْتُبَانِ or يكتبان "they both write" (masculine) (for 2 males) taktubān(i) تَكْتُبَانِ or تكتبان "they both write" (feminine) (for 2 females) kātaba ##### or ##### "he exchanged letters (with sb.)" yukātib(u) ##### "he exchanges (with sb.)" yatakātabūn(a) يَتَكَاتَبُونَ or يتكاتبون "they write to each other" (masculine) iktataba اِكْتَتَبَ or اكتتب "he is registered" (intransitive) or "he contributed (a money quantity to sth.)" (ditransitive) (the first t is part of a particular verbal transfix, not part of the root) istaktaba اِسْتَكْتَبَ or استكتب "to cause to write (sth.)" kitāb كِتَاب or كتاب "book" (the hyphen shows end of stem before various case endings) kutub كُتُب or كتب "books" (plural) kutayyib كُتَيِّب or كتيب "booklet" (diminutive) kitābat كِتَابَة or كتابة "writing" kātib كاتِب or كاتب "writer" (masculine) kātibat كاتِبة or كاتبة "writer" (feminine) kātibūn(a) كاتِبونَ or كاتبون "writers" (masculine) kātibāt كاتِبات or كاتبات "writers" (feminine) kuttāb كُتاب or كتاب "writers" (broken plural) katabat كَتَبَة or كتبة "clerks" (broken plural)
maktab مَكتَب or مكتب "desk" or "office"
makātib مَكاتِب or مكاتب "desks" or "offices"
maktabat مَكتَبة or مكتبة "library" or "bookshop"
maktūb مَكتوب or مكتوب "written" (participle) or "postal letter" (noun) katībat كَتيبة or كتيبة "squadron" or "document" katā’ib كَتائِب or كتائب "squadrons" or "documents"
iktitāb اِكتِتاب or اكتتاب "registration" or "contribution of funds"
muktatib مُكتَتِب or مكتتب "subscription"
istiktāb اِستِكتاب or استكتاب "causing to write"
Basically, the vowels and pronunciation are determined by where the word is in the sentence. In terms of writing, the difficulty of the "lacking vowels" thing is greatly exaggerated--only short vowels are skipped, and the difficulty is no more different than old-school text speak. Hll, evn nglsh cn b rd prtty wll wtht vwls. Nd whn y gt usd to it, ts smpl.
All words, in all languages, can change based on context. Seriously, in English the word "set" has like 400+ definitions. Yet we have very little issue.
Badlinguistics is a peeve of mine, don't buy into that shit fam.
I sincerely hope that her learning to speak Arabic results in a Muslim-phase for her as well. Please please please.