Timoni West is a web designer in San Francisco.
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March 2nd, 2010
This dog was a stray I found, he was in a lot of physical pain and bleeding. after quite some time and money spent on him, he has gained a healthy amount of weight and is in perfectly good shape. The only thing he still needs is his deworming shot, the worms arnt contagious {unless you eat the poop}. Please, this dog needs a permanent home and someone who can afford his checkups until he is well. I should add that this dog is no sick, he just needs the mandatory shots that any other pet gets.
He is a loving dog that is ready to move into his permanent home. If you or someone you know is interested, please contact me.
I can also give you information and discounts for anything he needs. he is almost 3 months old, does not chew on this, is a very fun dog and somewhat potty trained. Please help him find a good home.
My EMAIL is Shivafallah(at)hotmail(dot)com
or message me on tumblr http://sheeeevvas.tumblr.com/
I live in the Los Angeles, Valley area ( Reseda/ Winnetka).

run bunny run

This is a good example of the future of American English. Yeah, it’s a bit appalling, and we all shudder at comma splices, but there’s a rhythm to it that is the same rhythm throughout all of the Hemingway-esque ultrasimple prose that hyperaware programmers and designers have been embracing for a few years now. (You know who you are.)

My background is in Medieval & Renaissance Literature, with six solid years of German besides, which means I know very little about Romance languages and a lot about English’s Anglo-Saxon roots. This is a very quiet and simple piece of prose, so full of simple grammar that almost reads like an ancient bit of translated pre-1066 text. There are a lot of newer, Norman words, like “contagious,” “permanent,” “mandatory” and “physical”, but nonetheless, the syntax reads as a much older language. It also reads as non-native English, but phrases like ‘arnt contagious’ and ‘no sick’ are both the history of English and its future.

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