Guys what are some of the best Bakudeku fics that are a must read or some of your favorites?
✔ subjectively sorted by Hits || alphabetically listed || as of 2021.10 (5868 works) ✔ 2020 in review : (daily) complete fics + (monthly) longest fics + list of all the fests ✔ most popular fics of other years
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(Un)wanted by @aibidil [E, 36k]
Accidental Magic by @penguinanimagus [E, 34k]
Adventures in Truth and Texting by @fluxweeed [E, 11k]
Adventures of a Suicidal Gentleman by GallaPlacidia [?, 47k]
Aletheia by @lazywonderlvnd [E, 8k]
The Alpha’s precious treasure by @polly-weasley [E, 3k]
‘And The Forest Met The Sky’ by Silverhood [M, 87k]
Another Heart Whispers Back by @slytherco [E, 53k]
the best treasure is up Harry’s arse by @bafflinghaze [E, 2k]
A Big Black Sky by @alxmeg [M, 90k]
Bitter Transmutation : Cruel Transformation by @dorthyanndrarry [M, 103k]
The Blind & The Silent by darkpyroangel06 [E, 59k]
Bond Bright by @caedes12 [E, 36k]
A Brother to Basilisks by Lomonaaeren [M, 613k]
The Bucket List by GallaPlacidia [?, 32k]
Can’t Afford to Fall by @p1013 [E, 100k]
Can’t Fight The Moonlight by @magicalrocketships [M, 16k]
Can’t Fight This Feeling by @writcraft [E, 10k]
Cassiopeia Lily Malfoy by GallaPlacidia [?, 37k]
Caught by the Ferret Tail by Alien_Slushie [T, 4k]
The Changing Lights by @lazywonderlvnd [E, 142k]
Clouds That Veil the Midnight Moon by @drarrytrash [E, 36k]
The Courting by the Pureblood Who Only Has Five Milligrams of Romantic Intelligence and Thinks He’s Real Smooth by @cibeewastaken [T, 19k]
Criminal by @the-sinking-ship [E, 83k]
Crown Witness by @slytherco [E, 70k]
The Curse of the Sea by @samyistrying [E, 62k]
Diffraction Patterns (I Don’t Know How to Forget You) by @yourdifferentoctober [E, 93k]
Doing love the right way by Linola [E, 2k]
Draco might not be a Weasley by blood, but he’s family by @mfingenius [M, 50k]
Evitative by @k-vichan [T, 222k]
Ex Nihilo (And Other Feats of An Untrained Veela) by Kandakicksass [M, 127k]
A Family of Our Own by @dwell-on-dreams [E, 2k]
The Ferret’s Nest by @l0vegl0wsinthedark [E, 9k]
Found Family by Doctor_Who_Cares [E, 148k]
The Four Doors by @fluxweeed [E, 48k]
freely, as men strive for right by @bixgirl1 [E, 17k]
Friends? Is That What We Are? by @l0vegl0wsinthedark [E, 33k]
Get Your Kinks Out by @cassiopeiasshadow [E, 38k]
The Gryffindor And His Slytherin by ridleyrey [E, 59k]
Heart Like Neon by @lqtraintracks [E, 41k]
Hogwarts a school for all kinds of creatures by UnicornPower1 [E, 254k]
I Was Held In Chains But Now I’m Free by gayshiit [E, 24k]
I’ll Tell You Mine (If You Tell Me Yours) by @drarryruinedme7 [E, 4k]
I’m So Tired by andrewminyardenthusiast & @brekkerenthusiast [T, 84k]
If an Injury Is to Be Inflicted by @shealwaysreads [E, 44k]
If It Takes All Night by @tackytigerfic [M, 10k]
In Another Life (I Would Make You Stay) by aboutmalfoy [T, 112k]
in heat by @bonesliketambourines [E, 4k]
Inside Your Mind by @lazywonderlvnd [E, 36k]
knickers in a twist by technicolourbeat [E, 86k]
Let Out the Beast by @acupforslytherin [E, 9k]
Licking a Path to You by @drarryruinedme7 [E, 18k]
Light up the Night by Saras_Girl [M, 98k]
Love and Other Unsafe Medical Practices by @tedahfromtayla [E, 116k]
Lucid by @dracoladon [E, 4k]
Luckiest Baby in the World by @mfingenius [M, 18k]
The Mirror of Ecidyrue by starbrigid [ series ]
Modern Love by @tackytigerfic [E, 61k]
Nero su bianco by @zuzallove [E, 40k]
Never Grow A Wishbone by @shanastoryteller [T, 123k]
The New Flight Instructor by @mxmaneater [E, 143k]
The Nobility of Ascent by Lomonaaeren [E, 27k]
Nothing Stays the Same by isabelbarret [E, 103k]
Nyctophilia by prolonged_autumn [E, 108k]
Of Custody and Guardianship by Ghostnic [T, 50k]
Omega’s Binding by @madriddler [E, 49k]
The One Where Draco Loses his Mind and Gains a Boyfriend by @dianacopland & @sassy-cissa [E, 18k]
Owl Was Well by @fencer-x [T, 66k]
A Perfectly Valid Dare by @ano-ka-ba & @kittymiaomeow [E, 5k]
Ruined Omega by @madriddler [E, 97k]
See It My Way by @queenofthyme [E, 26k]
Sententia by @anchanee [M, 313k]
The Sinner’s Redemption by @dianacopland [E, 55k]
Snowball Kisses by @eatamilkbone [E, 21k]
A Social Arrangement by @bitkahuna [E, 143k]
Something Good (The Second Time Around) by Ravenclaw626 [E, 99k]
Split by @pocketwatchangora [E, 41k]
Strawberries and Pajamas by @drarrysht [E, 3k]
Sucker by @ruinsplume-lefthandedbasilisk [E, 117k]
Synonyms For Pretend by Scarlett_Lucian [T, 33k]
There Will Be Time. by dracoseratonin [T, 62k]
There’s Too Many People (That Walk Alone) by huffinglepuff [T, 39k]
Time and Again by @manixzen [E, 68k]
To Be Out of Your Own (and consumed by another) by @cassiaratheslytherpuff [E, 18k]
True Children Still by @gracerene09 [E, 34k]
Two Trees by @eelwinks [E, 36k]
Under My Skin by @polly-weasley [E, 8k]
Vanished by @devilrising [E, 134k]
Vortex by @xanthippe74 [T, 20k]
The Wand That Chose Two Wizards by @talkingtravesties [T, 116k]
What Dreams May Come by @firethesound [E, 36k]
What’s Left Behind by ElvaDeath [T, 74k]
when evil blooms by thedoomofvalyria [E, 83k]
When The Smoke Clears by GoldFrostbite13 [M, 158k]
Where The Falcons Fly by MyNameIsThunder [M, 283k]
With Friends Like These by @bixgirl1 [E, 6k]
The Wrong Sort by @caffeinatedflumadiddle [T, 289k]
You Look the Way I Feel by @yourdifferentoctober [E, 108k]
You were made for me by @polly-weasley [E, 4k]
Your Daddy Knows (You’re A Flame) by @ladderofyears [E, 27k]
General Plan:
Weeks 1 and 2: Purpose:
Learn the fundamentals sentence construction
Learn how to spell and count
Start building a phrase stockpile with basic greetings
The Alphabet
Numbers 1 - 100
Subject Pronouns
Common Greetings
Conjugate the Two Most Important Verbs: to be and to have
Basic Definite and Indefinite Articles
Weeks 3 and 4: Purpose:
Learn essential vocabulary for the day-to-day
Start conjugating regular verbs
Days of the Week and Months of the Year
How to tell the time
How to talk about the weather
Family Vocabulary
Present Tense Conjugations Verbs
Weeks 5 and 6: Purpose:
Warm up with the last of the day-to-day vocabulary
Add more complex types of sentences to your grammar
Colours
House vocabulary
How to ask questions
Present Tense Conjugations Verbs
Forming negatives
Weeks 7 and 8: Purpose:
Learn how to navigate basic situations in a region of your target language country
Finish memorising regular conjugation rules
Food Vocabulary and Ordering at Restaurants
Money and Shopping Phrases
Present Tense Conjugations Verbs
Weeks 9 and 10: Purpose:
Start constructing descriptive and more complex sentences
Adjectives
Reflective verbs
Places vocabulary
Weeks 11 and 12: Purpose:
Add more complex descriptions to your sentences with adverbs
Wrap up vocabulary essentials
Adverbs
Parts of the body and medical vocabulary
Tips for Learning a Foreign Language:
Learning Vocabulary:
What vocabulary should I be learning?
There are hundreds of thousands of words in every language, and the large majority of them won’t be immediately relevant to you when you’re starting out.Typically, the most frequent 3000 words make up 90% of the language that a native speaker uses on any given day. Instead try to learn the most useful words in a language, and then expand outwards from there according to your needs and interests.
Choose the words you want/need to learn.
Relate them to what you already know.
Review them until they’ve reached your long-term memory.
Record them so learning is never lost.
Use them in meaningful human conversation and communication.
How should I record the vocabulary?
Learners need to see and/or hear a new word of phrase 6 to 17 times before they really know a piece of vocabulary.
Keep a careful record of new vocabulary.
Record the vocabulary in a way that is helpful to you and will ensure that you will practice the vocabulary, e.g. flashcards.
Vocabulary should be organised so that words are easier to find, e.g. alphabetically or according to topic.
Ideally when noting vocabulary you should write down not only the meaning, but the grammatical class, and example in a sentence, and where needed information about structure.
How should I practice using the vocabulary?
Look, Say, Cover, Write and Check - Use this method for learning and remembering vocabulary. This method is really good for learning spellings.
Make flashcards. Write the vocabulary on the front with the definition and examples on the back.
Draw mind maps or make visual representations of the new vocabulary groups.
Stick labels or post it notes on corresponding objects, e.g when learning kitchen vocabulary you could label items in your house.
How often should I be practising vocabulary?
A valuable technique is ‘the principle of expanding rehearsal’. This means reviewing vocabulary shortly after first learning them then at increasingly longer intervals.
Ideally, words should be reviewed:
5-10 minutes later
24 hours later
One week later
1-2 months later
6 months later
Knowing a vocabulary item well enough to use it productively means knowing:
Its written and spoken forms (spelling and pronunciation).
Its grammatical category and other grammatical information
Related words and word families, e.g. adjective, adverb, verb, noun.
Common collocations (Words that often come before or after it).
Receptive Skills: Listening and Reading
Reading is probably one of the most effective ways of building vocabulary knowledge.
Listening is also important because it occupies a big chunk of the time we spend communicating.
Tips for reading in a foreign language:
Start basic and small. Children’s books are great practice for beginners. Don’t try to dive into a novel or newspaper too early, since it can be discouraging and time consuming if you have to look up every other word.
Read things you’ve already read in your native language. The fact that you at least know the gist of the story will help you to pick up context clues, learn new vocabulary and grammatical constructions.
Read books with their accompanying audio books. Reading a book while listening to the accompanying audio will improve your “ear training”. It will also help you to learn the pronunciation of words.
Tips for listening in a foreign language:
Watch films in your target language.
Read a book while also listening along to the audio book version.
Listen to the radio in your target language.
Watch videos online in your target language.
Activities to do to show that you’ve understood what you’ve been listening to:
Try drawing a picture of what was said.
Ask yourself some questions about it and try to answer them.
Provide a summary of what was said.
Suggest what might come next in the “story.”
Translate what was said into another language.
“Talk back” to the speaker to engage in imaginary conversation.
Productive Skills: Speaking and Writing
Tips for speaking in a foreign language:
If you can, try to speak the language every day either out loud to yourself or chat to another native speaker whether it is a colleague, a friend, a tutor or a language exchange partner.
Write a list of topics and think about what you could say about each one. First you could write out your thoughts and then read them out loud. Look up the words you don’t know. You could also come up with questions at the end to ask someone else.
A really good way to improve your own speaking is to listen to how native speakers talk and imitate their accent, their rhythm of speech and tone of voice. Watch how their lips move and pay attention to the stressed sounds. You could watch interviews on YouTube or online news websites and pause every so often to copy what you have just heard. You could even sing along to songs sung in the target language.
Walk around the house and describe what you say. Say what you like or dislike about the room or the furniture or the decor. Talk about what you want to change.This gets you to practise every day vocabulary.
Tips for writing in a foreign language:
Practice writing in your target language. Keep it simple to start with. Beginner vocabulary and grammar concepts are generally very descriptive and concrete.
Practice writing by hand. Here are some things you can write out by hand:
Diary entries
Shopping lists
Reminders
What could I write about?
Write about your day, an interesting event, how you’re feeling, or what you’re thinking.
Make up a conversation between two people.
Write a letter to a friend, yourself, or a celebrity. You don’t need to send it; just writing it will be helpful.
Translate a text you’ve written in your native language into your foreign language.
Write a review or a book you’ve recently read or a film you’ve recently watched.
Write Facebook statuses, Tweets or Tumblr posts (whether you post them or not will be up to you).
Write a short story or poem.
Writing is one of the hardest things to do well as a non-native speaker of a language, because there’s no room to hide.
There are lots of ways to improve your writing ability, but they can be essentially boiled down to three key components:
Read a lot
Write a lot
Get your writing corrected
awesome all types of workout in one image
Clip Studio Paint | Dec 3, 2024
What they do at those lectures ig
A little comfort for my baby Kacchan cause he needs it rn (I'm the one who needs it)
oh, to fly with you again
succession (2018–) cr. jesse armstrong / arcane (2021–) cr. christian linke & alex yee / euphoria (2019–) cr. sam levinson / the fall of the house of usher, steven berkoff / antigone, jean anouilh (trans. lewis galantiere) / a brother named gethsemane, natalie diaz / a flicker in the dark, stacy willingham / gone girl (2014) dir. david fincher / avatar: the last airbender (2005–2008) cr. michael dante dimartino & bryan konietzko / filmnoirsbian / to all the boys i’ve loved before, jenny han / clara ortega / the umbrella academy (2019–) cr. steve blackman / where things come back, john corey whaley / the pull of you, the national / little women (2019) dir. greta gerwig / jazmine hughes / antigonick, trans. anne carson / statue of vincet and theo van gogh, ossip zadkine / ‘blues for vincent’ otherwise known as the human condition, geoff dyer
Part 83 of my bakery “enemies” au!
First / Prev / Next / All
Kofi
The years from late middle age onward are also marked by a steady erosion of ambition. The cause isn’t so much a loss of drive as a growing realisation that you aren’t going to change the world after all. You’re just going to die and be forgotten, like almost everyone else. The knowledge that your existence doesn’t really matter is sobering, but also sort of a relief. It’s certainly changed my approach to paperwork.
— Tim Dowling, from “I’m nearly 60. Here’s what I’ve learned about growing old so far.” (The Guardian, June 8, 2022)
1 - They’re inexpensive
You can get a small whiteboard on Amazon from as little as £2.00, bigger ones are slightly more expensive starting at about £5.00 but that’s up to your personal preference.
2 - They’re erasable
The best thing about whiteboards is that they’re erasable! This means that you don’t use as much paper - so you’re saving money and helping the environment.
3 - They’re versatile
There are so many different uses for whiteboards that you’ll never think ‘i dont use that it was a waste of money’
1 - Essay Planning
Being a History undergrad, essay planning is what 90% of my life. Using a whiteboard means that I can change the order of my arguments, erase and add details whenever I want.
2 - Mind Maps
Mind Mapping can be super useful when essay planning, planning revision or connecting topics using a whiteboard means that you can easily mind map and erase/change any information easily.
3- To-do lists
Writing a to-do list on a whiteboard is so useful when you complete something just erase it!
4 - Teaching
My favourite method of studying/revising is to pretend to be teaching the subject to someone else, not only does this help you memorise the topic but it also shows gaps in your knowledge. If you can teach a topic then you definitely understand it.
5 - Practicing
If you study maths, for example, you can use a whiteboard to answer practice questions.
I have used whiteboards to study since I was in high school, meaning I’ve used them throughout my A-Levels and currently University (about 6 years). When I was revising for my psychology exams my friend and I would bring to college a set of whiteboard pens.
We would go into an empty classroom and use the big whiteboard to write the names of each study, we would then take it in turns to fill in details about the study from memory. THIS HELPED ME SO MUCH! and it was a fun way to study so I 10/10 recommend.
If you have any questions please ask me, also I don’t have stocks in whiteboards I just think they’re super useful!
Books that are also movies:
Anne of Green Gables 1-4 by LM Montgomery (BBC’s Anne of Green Gables and Anne of Green Gables: the Sequel)
Orphan Anne Shirley is adopted by bachelor Matthew Cuthbert and his spinster sister Marilla Cuthbert in edwardian Canada and must learn to reconcile her romantic and imaginative nature in this coming of age story
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott (Little Women (1994) or Little Women (2019))
A coming of age story following 4 sisters and their mother while their father is off at war. The main protagonist, Jo, is an especially romantic figure
Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman (Practical Magic)
Two sister witches must cover up the murder of one of their abusive ex boyfriend while an agent is investigating his disappearance
The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick (Hugo)
Orphan Hugo befriends Isabelle who helps him unravel the mystery of his father’s automaton
Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfield (Ballet Shoes)
Three orphan girls are taken in by an eccentric explorer and his niece, but once he’s gone they must take up performing arts careers to fend for themselves
Miss Pettigrew Lives For a Day by Winifred Watson (Miss Pettigrew Lives For a Day)
Miss Pettigrew, a governess, is accidentally sent to the wrong address by her agency and befriends a night club singer
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen (Pride and Prejudice (2005) or BBC’s Pride and Prejudice Mini Series)
Elizabeth Bennet and her sisters attempt to find love in Regency England, but Elizabeth and her love interest Mr Darcy make things more difficult than they need to be
Emma by Jane Austen (Emma (1995) or Emma (2020))
Emma Woodhouse fancies herself a matchmaker in Regency England, but quickly finds she knows little about love.
Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen (Sense and Sensibility (1995)
A coming of age story for the Dashwood sisters, who have lost their home but find love in Regency England
Other novels by Jane Austen
All of her novels have been adapted to screen. While all of her novels are good, I highlight these three because of their emphasis on female friendship and romanticism
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
Jane Eyre has a troubling childhood but grows up to become a governess and fall in love with her benefactor in Regency England
The Help by Kathryn Stockett (The Help)
A white female journalist records the stories of two black women who work in white households during 1960′s America
Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke (BBC’s Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell mini series)
A historical fantasy following the last two magicians on earth in Napoleon-era England
Legally Blonde by Amanda Brown (Legally Blonde)
Attempting to impress her ex boyfriend, Elle Woods applies to and gets accepted to Harvard Law School where she tries to prove herself as more than just an airhead blonde.
A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett (A Little Princess)
Orphaned Sara finds herself adjusting from a life of wealth to a life of poverty and abuse working at a boarding school and comforts herself by imagining she is a princess.
Matilda by Roald Dahl (Matilda)
Young Matilda is a prodigy in an abusive household, sent to a school with an abusive headmistress. But when she discovers that she has magical abilities, she uses it to seek justice for herself and her friends.
A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket (Netflix’s A Series of Unfortunate Events)
In an indeterminate time period, three orphans get moved from guardian to guardian as they are pursued by the villainous Count Olaf who wants their family fortune. Along the way they find themselves wrapped up in a secret society that has split into factions and gone to war with each other.
Movies:
The Mona Lisa Smile
When Katherine Watson takes a job as an art professor in a conservative town in the 1950′s she tries to teach her female students to become more assertive
Whisper of the Heart
Shizuku is a Japanese student at the end of her summer break who befriends an antique shop owner and his grandson after following a cat through the city. Inspired by the events she attempts to write a novel
Shakespeare in Love
A fictional account of a noblewoman who poses as a man in order to perform in a Shakespeare play, only to fall in love with the playwright and inspire future plays
Miss Potter
A hyperbolic account of Beatrix’s Potters life
Becoming Jane
A hyperbolic account of Jane Austen’s life
Ever After
A retelling of Cinderella set in renaissance era France and without magical elements, replacing the fairy godmother with Leonardo Da Vinci instead.
The Bookshop
Widowed Florence Green follows her dreams and opens a bookshop in the 1950s but unexpectedly finds herself at odds with the queen bee of the town who wanted the property for her own project.
Kiki’s Delivery Service
Coming of age story that follows 13 year old Kiki who, according to witch tradition, goes off to live on her own for a year to practice her magic. She sets up a delivery service but learns things will be harder than she anticipated.
Books:
*Some of which have movies that I either haven’t seen or didn’t personally like
The Girl with the Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier
A fictional account of the servant girl who inspired the real life painting by Vermeer
The Awakening by Kate Chopin
A truly bleak tale set in New Orleans at the end of the 19th century following Edna as she begins to have an awakening about feminism which affects her daily life. This is regarding as one of the first novels to primarily focus on the concept of feminism.
Agatha Christie Mysteries
Agatha Christie was so good at what she did that her books are still used today in toxicology classes and she largely helped define the mystery genre
Nancy Drew Mysteries by Carolyn Keene
Though written for children, the Nancy Drew books follow the amateur detective and her female friends as they solve mysteries in mid-20th-century America and the character has become a cultural icon.
Gathering Blue and Son from “The Giver Quartet” by Lois Lowry
Books 2 and 4 in the Giver Quartet. While books 1 and 3 are also good, books 2 and 4 are featured here because they have female protagonists. The books are part of a series, but only loosely connected and can be read as standalone books if desired. Gathering Blue follows Kira in a dystopian future as she makes a place for herself in her village through her ability to dye cloth, a skill which helps prevent her from being cast out for being disabled. Son, meanwhile, follows Claire who is looking for her son after he was taken from her.
The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare
Follows Kit who moves from the Caribbean to Puritan Connecticut where she befriends an elderly spinster woman who is accused of witchcraft
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
A staple of dark academia, it tells the story of Victor Frankenstein who creates artificial life and is immediately horrified by his creation, who swiftly grows angry and vengeful towards his creator.
The Secret History by Donna Tartt
Another staple of dark academia, follows six students who study the classics. The narrator is an adult version of one of the students reflecting on the events that led to a murder.
Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquival
Taking place in Mexico, Tita is being kept from her lover by her traditionalist mother. Tita expresses herself through her cooking which takes on magical properties.
The Inkheart Series by Cornelia Funke (Inkheart, Inkspell, and Inkdeath)
Follows Maggie and her book-worm father after she discovers her father has the ability to bring to life any book that he reads aloud. They are quickly swept off into the narrative of a fantasy novel.
The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman
Though part of a trilogy, the first novel is the most appropriate for dark academia, following a female protagonist (Lyra) in a historical fantasy setting as she unravels a mystery.
Music:
Florence Welch
Lana Del Rey
Lorde
Hozier
Enya
Alice Merton
Regina Spektor
Lenka