LucyG

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LucyG

LucyG

@LucyGoodchild

Writer of all things science, sustainability and startup, defender of apostrophes, lover of bees. Find me in the sky: https://t.co/bokShXUa13.

Amsterdam Katılım Nisan 2008
742 Takip Edilen847 Takipçiler
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LucyG
LucyG@LucyGoodchild·
I'm not one to announce my departure, but you can find me on the other app at LucyGoodchild. (Why did it take me so long? Authentication hoops and executive dysfunction.) See you in the sky!
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Merriam-Webster
Merriam-Webster@MerriamWebster·
We hope this etymology isn’t too scary. ‘Haunt' originally meant “to visit often” and “to continually seek the company of.” In the 1500s, ‘haunt’ began to mean “to have a disquieting or harmful effect on,” as in “that problem may come back to haunt you.”
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Dr Adam Rutherford
Dr Adam Rutherford@AdamRutherford·
Ok, here we go: Much of my work concerns the history and return of scientific racism. I’ve written extensively about attempts to resurrect the shuffling corpse of race science and eugenics for many years. Bigotry dressed up as biology. 1/n
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Susie Dent
Susie Dent@susie_dent·
Word of the day is ‘struthious’ (18th century): prone to ignoring unwelcome facts and letting a situation worsen without any intervention. From the Latin for ‘ostrich-like’.
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MATT GRAY
MATT GRAY@matt_gray_·
This is what great writing looks like:
MATT GRAY tweet media
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Penguin Books UK
Penguin Books UK@PenguinUKBooks·
'A room without books is like a body without a soul.' Marcus Tullius Cicero
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Merriam-Webster
Merriam-Webster@MerriamWebster·
English: The People’s Language™️
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Nicole Filippone, Autistic Advocate & Author
It's Autism Awareness Month, so let's bust a pretty common myth about autism. "Everyone is a little autistic." This is not true... so, let's talk about it.
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Susie Dent
Susie Dent@susie_dent·
Word of the day is ‘fling-brand’ (17th century): one who takes pleasure in breeding dissent and argument, purely for the sake of it.
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LucyG
LucyG@LucyGoodchild·
“When autism meets ADHD, it’s a curious form of alchemy… The paradoxes of AuDHD can camouflage each other or – on the surface at least – cancel each other out, which is why some AuDHDers experience missed or incorrect diagnoses.” This is a great read: theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2…
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Susie Dent
Susie Dent@susie_dent·
Tsundoku, from Japanese, is the act of buying yet another book that you fully intend to read, but never quite get round to.
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Chris Packham
Chris Packham@ChrisGPackham·
Hello , I’ve written another letter to @antanddec about the ongoing appalling abuse of animals on @ITV programme @imacelebrity . I’ve tried to be polite but my patience has run thin . If you agree with what it says please RT . #ImACeleb
Chris Packham tweet mediaChris Packham tweet media
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LucyG
LucyG@LucyGoodchild·
Here’s a reminder that it ain’t over til it’s over. This morning I had 19,000 words of the 50,000 I need to win #NaNoWriMo. Thanks to great support and accountability (word crawls rule), I have passed the 30k mark. The next four days will be tough, but I’m not calling it yet!
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Susie Dent
Susie Dent@susie_dent·
Apricate (17th century): to turn your face to the winter sun and bask in it for a moment. (I know, I’ve said it before, but it’s too beautiful to forget.)
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Merriam-Webster
Merriam-Webster@MerriamWebster·
Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia is the fear of long words, which feels a bit passive-aggressive...
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Susie Dent
Susie Dent@susie_dent·
Etymology of the day is ‘poppycock’, meaning ‘nonsense’. It came from the Dutch ‘pappekak’, meaning either ‘doll’s excrement’ or ‘soft shit’.
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