Amy•Hawaii•17

  • druun:

    redironoxide:

    Loving the puddles!!!!

    toddler mutant ninja turtles

    (via thefaultinourchickennuggets)

  • crimsonsag:

    fukthisurl:

    His face. I’m dead

    Is this How To Catch a Predator or Jeopardy

    (via spongebobssquarepants)

  • thegeekyblonde:

    geneticist:

    Candy-eating French Bees - Bees in France eating sugar from a nearby M&M factory began producing blue honey

    me too

    (via owlmylove)

  • harleygrenade:

    Why are you keeping this curiosity door locked? 

    (via strfires)

  • embelish:

    nokiabae:

    it’s been 4 months and I can’t stop thinking about this tweet

    (via oprahwingdings)

  • kushonthecoast:

    n0rma1-people-sxare-me:

    I heard you like bad girls. Well I’m bad

    At everything

    *winks at you with both eyes*

    (via asian)

  • 18thcentury-turnt:

    morelikecreamhuff:

    nethilia:

    nopeabsolutelynot:

    fangirlingoverdemigods:

    tyleroakley:

    peacelovelesbian:

    libby-on-the-label:

    busterposeys:

    at what point in history do you think americans stopped having british accents

    image

    Actually, Americans still have the original British accent. We kept it over time and Britain didn’t. What we currently coin as a British accent developed in England during the 19th century among the upper class as a symbol of status. Historians often claim that Shakespeare sounds better in an American accent.

    image

    whAT THE FUCK

    I’m too tired for this

    Always add in the video that according to linguists, Native southern drawl is a slowed down British.

    T’ be or not t’be, y’all.

    Fun fact: Same thing happened with the French accent. French Canadians still have the original French accent from the 15th century.

    Êt’e ou n’pô zêt’e, vous z’auts.

    I’ve been trying to find this post for months. I’m freakishly obsessed with this and want the truth of what early colonists sounded like.

    (via spongebobssquarepants)