
26 year old plural system mostly going by Sizhen or Wires.
(I publish under the name Nora Hikari)
omg idk i have a lot of these. i picked up "I love that for you" from a friend from texas and it is just such a wonderfully useful phrase and I use it all the time. also "you're so real for that" is something that I say probably like 30 times a day. I also like to do a little jig as like a physical comedy bit for my gf a lot and she loves to respond with "oh she's schmovin" which I love. Lastly I like to greet people I am close to in the morning with "gwamammo" instead of "good morning."
bonus is that a few days ago i decided that i am going to start saying "habby bippy" for birthdays
Fun facts:
Water ice doesn't absorb a lot of light in the visible; pure water ice is almost entirely transparent, although with slightly stronger absorption in the red (hence why very large amounts of mostly pure ice, such as glacial ice, has blue shading). What makes water ice much more visible comes from light scattering off impurities, air bubbles, or cracks (e.g. why ice cubes are sometimes clear and sometimes white, despite both being water ice).
It gets more interesting in the near-ultraviolet; between 200 and 400 nm, water ice is so transparent that we literally cannot measure the amount of light it absorbs. Even using deep boreholes in ultra-pure Antarctic ice, any loss of transparency is apparently dominated by scattering off impurities at levels of parts-per-billion. At the wavelength where absorption is lowest (~390 nm), our best estimate is that the mean free path of a photon in pure ice is over a kilometer; this makes water ice in the near-UV the most transparent solid known.
how did you choose your username?
🦠 what's your favourite classic dance song?
🧜 what "useless" superpower would you like to have?
why do you use cohost?
🐀 if you could force everyone in the world to watch one movie or tv show what would it be?
🥒 what are your favourite expressions?
🍯 what's your online pet peeve?