Family picture - Aug 2008
[Bahasa Indonesia]Pre-Ramadhan family picture. Aug 31st 2008.
Is it a wonder that I love them so much?
This is what I do. I write - about anything that cross my mind, about what concerns me, and about what excites me - and I speak up. I try to help a bit here and there. My way of chipping in to the society. while at the same time walking on my personal journey. Sometimes it works, other times it does not. But you know that's not important. What matters is we start doing something. Anything.
[Bahasa Indonesia]Pre-Ramadhan family picture. Aug 31st 2008.
Is it a wonder that I love them so much?
Posted by
Eva.M
at
8/31/2008 03:08:00 pm
Labels: family
mensurable discuss | |
Definition: | (adjective) Capable of being measured. |
Synonyms: | measurable |
Usage: | The mensurable increase in the cost of oil has had wide-reaching effects on the country's economy. |
![]() ![]() Catherine of Aragon Married by Proxy to Arthur, Prince of Wales (1499)Catherine of Aragon is known as the first of King Henry VIII's six wives, but before they were wed, she was married to his older brother Arthur. Catherine was the youngest daughter of Spain's Ferdinand II and Isabella I, and her marriage to Arthur was primarily political. In fact, Arthur and Catherine were married by proxy before they had even met, in a ceremony attended by their representatives. The marriage was short-lived, as Arthur died young. When did Arthur and Catherine finally meet? More... Discuss |
![]() ![]() Malcolm X (1925)Malcolm X was an African-American activist. His home was burned by the KKK when he was a child, and he joined the Nation of Islam in prison as an adult. Upon his release in 1952, he renounced his "slave name," Little, and took the surname X, representing his lost African ancestral surname. He became a minister and soon rose to prominence campaigning for black separatism, but he publicly broke with the militant Black Muslims in 1964 after a pilgrimage to Mecca. Who assassinated him the next year? More... Discuss |
![]() ![]() Charles Dickens (1812-1870) Discuss |
No comments:
Post a Comment