for your next poem/story (pt. 2)
Gemology—the scientific study of gemstones
Clarity - The grading of a gemstone is based on the presence or absence of inclusions. The fewer inclusions, the better a gemstone’s clarity grade.
Crown - Located above the girdle or at the top of a cut stone, the crown faces up and is in plain view when the gem is arranged in a setting.
Culet - The bottom quadrant or point on a stone with a pavilion that ends in a single point; a bottom facet cut parallel to the girdle on a stone with an otherwise pointed bottom, initially intended to prevent chipping.
Diaphaneity - The general term to describe the transmittance of light through an object. The 3 typical classifications are transparency, translucency, and opacity.
Diffusion treatment - A treatment used to alter the color of a gemstone (mostly sapphires).
Dispersion - The separation of white light into the component colors of the visible spectrum.
Facet - A flat surface on a stone or other media.
Girdle - The line created where the crown and pavilion facets meet, or the series of facets that separate the crown and pavilion facets.
Pavilion - The part of the stone below the girdle, otherwise the bottom portion of the stone.
Sectile - Capable of being cut as into slices or shavings.
Table - A facet on the crown, usually parallel to the girdle. In cases when the girdle isn't a straight line, the table is typically at 90° to the stone's center axis.
Tavernier rule - A method of gemvalue calculation. Price increases by the square of weight of stones. Now obsolete.
Veinstone - Any mineral other than metal which occurs in a vein (i.e., a crack, crevice, or fissure, filled, or practically filled, with mineral matter).
Wisps - Whitish wisp-like fractures resembling thin wind-blown clouds. Occur in some synthetic emerald but never in the genuine.
Youstone - An old English term for jade.
Sources: 1 2 3
More: On Gemology ⚜ Word Lists
Tom actually laughs, “You didn’t like the singing butterflies?”
Harry snorts, and smiles fondly at Tom. “I loved the singing butterflies.”
- Full Circle (Ch. 9) by @tetsurashian
I had a lot of fun drawing this adorable scene. I highly recommend this fic if you need some lighthearted and funny Tomarry!
Original Post
other words to describe your characters instead of _____
HIGH bewildered, baffled, perplexed, disoriented, stunned, amazed, astonished, flabbergasted MODERATE doubtful, puzzled, surprised, perplexed, befuddled, distracted, disorganized LOW misled, undecided, uncertain, lost, dazed, unsure, indecisive
HIGH ashamed, exhausted, powerless, anemic, decrepit, frail, useless, depleted MODERATE vulnerable, inept, inadequate, worn out, helpless, spent, run down, sluggish, fragile LOW tired, weary, limp, soft, feeble, ineffective
HIGH powerful, potent, fearless, forceful, mighty, emphatically, active, vigorous, unyielding MODERATE confident, tough, robust, brave, sound, daring, hardy, hefty LOW capable, adequate, firm, assured, steady, stable, solid
If these writing notes helped with your poem/story, please tag me. Or leave a link in the replies. I'd love to read them!
Sirius: Why must you assume the worst of me?
Sirius: Aside from my history and general personality?
James: Sometimes your evil leaks out
Sirius: No argument.
Sirius: Can't fight the beast within forever.
James: Did that sound creepier now than in your head?
Sirius: No.
James: Ah.
James: Just checking.
Scrolling through nct's account and I decided to become angsty
it drives me bonkers the way people don’t know how to read classic books in context anymore. i just read a review of the picture of dorian gray that said “it pains me that the homosexual subtext is just that, a subtext, rather than a fully explored part of the narrative.” and now i fully want to put my head through a table. first of all, we are so lucky in the 21st century to have an entire category of books that are able to loudly and lovingly declare their queerness that we’ve become blind to the idea that queerness can exist in a different language than our contemporary mode of communication. second it IS a fully explored part of the narrative! dorian gray IS a textually queer story, even removed from the context of its writing. it’s the story of toxic queer relationships and attraction and dangerous scandals and the intertwining of late 19th century “uranianism” and misogyny. second of all, i’m sorry that oscar wilde didn’t include 15k words of graphic gay sex with ao3-style tags in his 1890 novel that was literally used to convict him of indecent behaviour. get well soon, i guess…
qjj volume 4 cover reveal ♡
I have likely not added many that I've reblogged to this list. Please feel free to roam my blog and/or ask/message me to add something you'd like to see on this list!
Look by @writers-potion
Voices by @saraswritingtipps
Show, Don't Tell by @lyralit
5 Tips for Creating Intimidating Antagonists by @writingwithfolklore
How To (Realistically) Make a Habit of Writing by @byoldervine
Let's Talk About Misdirection by @deception-united
Tips to Improve Character Voice by @tanaor
Stephen King's Top 20 Rules for Writers posted by @toocoolformedschool
Fun Things to Add to a Fight Scene (Hand to Hand Edition) by @illarian-rambling
Questions I Ask My Beta Readers by @burntoutdaydreamer
Skip Google for Research by @s-n-arly
Breaking Writing Rules Right: Don't Write Direct Dialogue by @septemberercfawkes
International Clothing
Too Ashamed of Writing To Write by @writingquestionsanswered
"Said" is Beautiful by @blue-eyed-author
“Are you scared?” Hero whispered “because I am,”
Villain turned to look at Hero, and froze at the expression on their face. Their normally bright eyes were dull, and their hands were shaking.
“It’s okay, it’s okay,” Villain reassured them, pushing aside their own nerves.
“I’ll be the brave one this time,”
for your next poem/story (pt. 1)
Abyssal plain - A flat region of the deep ocean floor.
Aeolian - Describes materials formed, eroded, or deposited by or related to the action of wind.
Braided stream - A sediment-clogged stream that forms multiple channels that divide and rejoin.
Colluvium - A general term applied to loose and incoherent deposits, usually at the foot of a slope or cliff and brought there chiefly by gravity.
Conchoidal - Resembling the curve of a conch shell and used to describe a smoothly curved surface on a rock or mineral; characteristic of quartz and obsidian.
Devitrification - Conversion of glass to crystalline material.
Dune - A low mound or ridge of sediment, usually sand, deposited by the wind.
Ephemeral lake - A short-lived lake.
Estuary - The seaward end or tidal mouth of a river where freshwater and seawater mix.
Euhedral - A grain bounded by perfect crystal faces; well-formed.
Fenestral - Having openings or transparent areas in a rock.
Fluvial - Of or pertaining to a river or rivers.
Friable - Describes a rock or mineral that is easily crumbled.
Granoblastic - Describes the texture of a metamorphic rock in which recrystallization formed crystals of nearly the same size in all directions.
Hermatypic - Describes a type of reef-building coral that is incapable of adjusting to conditions lacking sunlight.
Hot spring - A thermal spring whose temperature is above that of the human body.
Isthmus - A narrow strip or neck of land, bordered on both sides by water, connecting two larger land areas.
Lacustrine - Describes a process, feature, or organism pertaining to, produced by, or inhabiting a lake.
Lithify - To change to stone, or to petrify; especially to consolidate from a loose sediment to solid rock.
Lunar tide - The part of the tide caused solely by the tide-producing force of the Moon.
Source ⚜ More: Word Lists