English Literature M.A. I'm interested in books specially horror stories. Living with my family and my pet. 24 years old.
View all posts by Amir.H.Ghazi
30 thoughts on “Different levels of senses”
All very useful…great visual way to reference these senses. Saved to my writing Evernote.
Really great and I like very much that these are in color as are many of the other help and creative ways of making these writing aids easily accessible for us. Thank you.
Reblogged this on Mandibelle16 and commented:
Here are some more helpful descriptive words from Amir. I don’t know how I wrote without his charts before!
I love Turin too. I lived there for about two years and my husband and I still have friends there. It was a city of the cold industrialized Northern Italy, but the sons and daughters of the South Italian immigrants made it multicultural, more open and more lively 🙂
It means something like: “Thanks from the people who come from the beautiful country where the “sì” sounds”. It’s a verse from the Divina Commedia, the epic poem at the foundation of Italian, that was written by the most important father of the Italian language, Dante Alighieri 🙂
Ahahah 😀 Saint Google always answers my prayers and instills me knowledge. But I do know some verses by heart. One of my professors at the university knew the whole epic poem by heart. He was a Dante’s expert 🙂
All very useful…great visual way to reference these senses. Saved to my writing Evernote.
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Thanks for reading.
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Really great and I like very much that these are in color as are many of the other help and creative ways of making these writing aids easily accessible for us. Thank you.
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You are most welcome! Hope you like it❤
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My list of your word explorations keeps growing. Thank you!
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Thanks! It’ll grow more!
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Interesting
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Reblogged this on Mandibelle16 and commented:
Here are some more helpful descriptive words from Amir. I don’t know how I wrote without his charts before!
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Thank you❤
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Great! Thank you!!! 🙂 It’s so helpful for a person like me who doesn’t speak English as first language!
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You’re welcome! It’s not my first language, too😊
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Then, you are doing an even greater work than I thought 🙂
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Thank you so much😊
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May I ask where are you from?
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I am Italian 🙂 and you?
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Really?!! I LOVE Italy!
I’m Iranian.😊
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Wow! You come from another place with a millennial history 🙂
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Yeah. We’ve many things in common in our cultures.
I love Turin
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I love Turin too. I lived there for about two years and my husband and I still have friends there. It was a city of the cold industrialized Northern Italy, but the sons and daughters of the South Italian immigrants made it multicultural, more open and more lively 🙂
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I like there because of my favorite football team, Juventus. I love your language, too. It’s so beautiful❤
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Thanks from «Le genti del bel paese là dove ‘l sì suona», (Dante, Inferno. XXXIII cantica, versi 79-80)
🙂
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And what does it mean signora?😊
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It means something like: “Thanks from the people who come from the beautiful country where the “sì” sounds”. It’s a verse from the Divina Commedia, the epic poem at the foundation of Italian, that was written by the most important father of the Italian language, Dante Alighieri 🙂
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Wow, beautiful sentence. I know him from my college course: History of Literature. Italy has many great writers and poems.
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Or better said: Of the fair land there where the ‘Sì’ doth sound,
— Dante, Divine Comedy: Inferno, translated by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
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You learn the book by heart?
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Ahahah 😀 Saint Google always answers my prayers and instills me knowledge. But I do know some verses by heart. One of my professors at the university knew the whole epic poem by heart. He was a Dante’s expert 🙂
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Oh Google😁
It’s a hard book to be understood.
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I adore that list!
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Thanks, Tanya!😊
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