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JeaoneKef

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 Um, epic nom nom time  Totes! Awks, but did you peep her hooking up  FML. Today suuu-uucks. Total fail! Just wanna get wasteyface tonight. Thi stanley puodelis s will probably be incoherent in the near future, becau stanley canada se most slang dies young. But why      Slate explores the complex linguistic evolutionary tree behind words like groovy  embarrassing to use! , cool  timeless and perfect!  and many others that have fallen out of use. According to UNC linguist Connie Eble, a few factors help certain term catch on and stay entrenched. First, and maybe most importantly, is brevity. We ;ll use cool as the paragon of slang, because it   extremely old, and still ubiquitous. We say it daily. There is, perhaps, an argument that cool isn ;t really slang anymore, by virtue of its own linguistic success. But Eble says it   thrived in part because it   short and easy. Easiness is another factor. Cool is e stanley mugs asy to say. It sounds normal. People will not be saying epic nom nom in 100 years. Cool is a real word, without the connotations of, you know, coolness. Bling is cringe-inducing, because it   so arbitrary in construction. Blech. This process, of constant birth and quick death, has only been accelerated by technology. Killer app  Dead and buried. At least I hope so. Cyber is a prefix I ;m always loathe to use, because it feels like something from an early-90s PSA video. L33t鈥攊s that even a thing anymore  Sexting鈥攑robably too confus Lbev ONA Union Street Lightning Review: A Camera Bag More Fashionable Than Functional
 Is there such thing as a Caucasian, Asian, or African voice  And could you actually identify someone   race just by listening to him or her  Admittedly, the whole notion of race is nebulous to say the least 鈥?it   a concept that blends physiological and social differences indiscriminately. But there are still scientists trying to study the actual physiological differences between different racial groups. And one of those differences is how we sound to each other.     The moment you try to study the actual physical differences between races, you run into trouble. The data gets tangled pretty qui stanley cup ckly because genetic makeup doesn ;t  stanley cup website always match up with how you look. Sometimes the data are statistically tangled, since any physiological characteristic of a race, from height to skin color, will overlap with characteristics of other races. And when you start to look into the question of vocal differences, you run into sociological tangles as well. Humans are talented, and often unintentional, vocal mimics. We ;ve always been unconscious mimics, which is how language spread around in the first place. So it   pretty much impossible to find such a thing as a completely uninfluenced voice. In spite of the complications stanley cup , there have been a few studies looking at race and voice, both from a physiological and a social standpoint. Physiology of Voice The studies on physiology of race, as it applies to voice, are few and far between. For one thing, there are the t