New hair, who dis?!?! (Plus fake sunglasses because it’s my day off and no makeup is on my face.) #newhairwhodis #newhair #hairdresseronfire #supernaturallychangeme #bleachedhair #bottleblonde #shorthair #over45style #punkrockgirl #croppedhair #ihavethebestfriends #girlswithshorthair #boycut #androgynous #samehairihadat16 https://www.instagram.com/p/B5TYCwdjlAe/?igshid=b1mxostxih4b
Update: The castle as of April 2015 is actually only around $1,300,000 USD now due to the currency exchange rates! :D
this goes even further, some European countries will give you a castle for free if you submit a plan stating how you intend to restore or preserve it. Italy alone for example has somewhere between 100 and 300 castles they intend to give away to anyone with intent to be a caretaker, they literally cant keep track of how many discount castles are up for grabs
it doesn’t even have to be an ambitious plan, even if it says you just intend to keep it from becoming more shitty and will occasionally add a few bricks when you can afford it. given that most of them come with land you could convert the grounds to actually produce enough income to pay for the repairs- like setting up apple trees and brewing cider you sell with your castle name on the bottle, or raising some goats for cheese, a hobby farm could turn this into an actual income opportunity. hell, throwing parties at the castle could make it an income opportunity
they will literally -GIVE- you a castle to make sure someone is taking care of it rather then let them all sit empty
Carved from Calcite (Egyptian Alabaster) and was found in the the Sobek temple at Dahamsha during 1967 by workers digging of the Armant Canal in a shaft closed by the sandstone slab - the slab slid into place on two bronze wheels.
Sobek is seated in a human form with the crocodile head and his right hand holds the Ankh giving life to the youthful Amenhotep III. The King is wearing the Nemes headdress, with the uraeus and royal beard.
New Kingdom, 18th Dynasty, reign of Amenhotep III, ca. 1391-1353 BC. Now in the Luxor Museum.
“Ancient Egyptian is commonly divided into five historical stages, known as Old, Middle, and Late Egyptian, Demotic, and Coptic. Significant differences in grammar separate the first two of these from the last three, so that the stages can be grouped into two major historical phases, Egyptian I and Egyptian II.
Old Egyptian can be said to begin with the first known instance of a complete sentence, from a cylinder seal of the pharaoh Peribsen, near the end of the 2nd Dynasty. Prior to this, the language is represented solely by proper names, titles, and labels.
Some of the latter, however, contain phrases, demonstrating the existence of several grammatical features that characterize the later language: in this case, nisbe formation, adjectival modification, nominal verb forms, and genitival relationships expressed by direct juxtaposition, including that between a verb and its subject and consequent vs word order.”