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Alternative (s): 女仙尊忙逃婚
Langue: Français
Synopsis
Je suis soudain transportée dans le passé ? Devenue une immortelle, maître de l'école des grues ? Avec un (beau) disciple, un gamin manipulateur, 3 engagements de mariages et des dettes ? Me marier moi ? Hors de question ! Je suis une femme libre de trente ans qui est au sommet de sa carrière et je n'accepte pas ce destin !
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Ceddy90
Ceddy90
Feb 08, 2021
Out all the years I spent running away from my bully and lost a fight every time by each year

So as I got older I ask him to fight me again so I Dodge his hits and I keep doing it...

Then he back away

So I ask him a question why did you back away just now

So I walked to him and he just run away

With out me hitting him.
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🍓 AniPop !
🍓 AniPop !
Jun 05, 2021
Happy birthday!! ( 5 June ! )


Kawakami Princess is a character from the video game
 Uma Musume: Pretty Derby. 

They have been indexed as female teen with blue eyes and red hair that is past waist length. They have unique ears.

A beautiful horse girl who left her hometown to become a true princess. She’s quite prideful, but has the skills to back it up. She normally has a pragmatic personality, but is a romanticist at heart and has earnestly wished she could run away with a knight ever since she was young. In order to shine like a princess in the Twinkle Series, she hopes to fulfill her dreams by working hard at self-improvement.
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Alan Luiz
Alan Luiz
Aug 15, 2022
Ukraine War: The Donbas body collector who has lost count
Aleksey Yukov standing next to the white van, marked with a red cross
Image caption,
Aleksey Yukov and his men recover dead bodies of Ukrainian and Russian soldiers killed in combat in the Donbas
Aleksey Yukov has lost count of the bodies he's recovered in the Donbas over the past five months. He says he thinks it's more than 300, but he can't be sure.

Aleksey and his men drive a refrigerated white van, marked with a red cross, to carry out their work. They often drive towards danger to collect the bodies and remains of dead Ukrainian and Russian troops and civilians.

"We work with no days off. Constantly. We drive, we investigate, we transport, we search, all the time," he says.

It's grim work too - digging up the decomposing bodies of Russian soldiers buried in shallow trenches, or gathering their remains from burnt out armoured vehicles.

According to the United Nations, more than 5,000 Ukrainian civilians have been killed since Russia invaded in February.

There are no official figures for how many Ukrainian troops have died. But one adviser to President Zelensky told the BBC last month that between 100-200 Ukrainian soldiers were being killed every day. On average it's at the lower end of that scale.


Aleksey says that figure sounds realistic to him. But he believes the Russians are losing three times that number.

One Ukrainian soldier we spoke to, who had fought in Severodonetsk, described Russian tactics as similar to the First World War - with waves of their infantry running into a hail of bullets.

Smoke rising near homes in Donbas
Image caption,
Smoke rises near homes in the eastern Donbas region, where Russia has targeted its ground offensive
Who does Aleksey think is winning the war? "It's not about who is winning," he says. "It's about who's right. They [Russia] came here and that was unforgivable".

Every Ukrainian soldier we spoke to said they still believed they could win. Even in units that had suffered combat casualties of more than half of the troops.

But it's taking its toll on the living as well as the dead. Aleksey hasn't seen his one-year-old daughter for months.

"This war has ruined the life you had and the one you've been building," he says.


He adds that at the end of the day it all catches up: "That feeling when you are empty inside. The unfillable void".

Why Russia wants to seize Ukraine's eastern Donbas
Death comes quickly in the Donbas. Russian shells take mere seconds to land, and they're being used in industrial quantities. On average Russia is firing 20,000 artillery shells a day. Ukraine is able to respond with just 6,000.

There's no respite from the sound of heavy shelling at a military medical station we visit. The chief medical officer - who only wants to be known as Dr Anatoliy for his own safety - describes the situation on the frontline as "fragile".

He shows us photographs of a badly damaged military ambulance - riddled with bullet holes and torn to shreds by shrapnel. Dr Anatoliy says the red cross painted on their vehicles mean nothing to Russians. Two more ambulances are waiting outside the building under camouflage nets - ready to go to pick up the injured.

Tina packing a military bag inside an ambulance
Image caption,
Before volunteering to join the army Tina worked at a children's hospital
We meet Tina and Polina, two front line medics.

Tina used to work at a children's hospital before she volunteered to join the army. She wipes away tears as she talks about the family she's now missing.


"The pain goes away, because you have a task: to get a person to a hospital alive" she says. I ask if she's scared. "Of course it's scary. When a shell lands nearby, everything shrinks inside you".

For every soldier killed many more are injured. Tina says she's not allowed to give numbers but adds "there are casualties almost every day, and not just one. Sometimes many, sometimes a lot".

Polina standing near a vehicle
Image caption,
Twenty-one-year-old Polina says she exercises and listens to music to keep some sense of normality
Polina is just 21. The war's already cast a big shadow over her short life.

Her father and uncle are now prisoners in Russian-occupied Ukraine. She says she's trying her best not to let it get her down. She exercises and listens to music whenever she can - just to keep some sense of normality.

But Polina admits it's hard not to feel gloomy and depressed: "Apart from the bullets flying over your head, wounded people - and those wounded are often my friends and buddies - if you're taking it to heart it's going to be tough".

It's the troops she treats who give her hope.

"The guys who are injured and exhausted don't even want to go to hospital sometimes. They say I'm not going to leave my mates, we're holding the line together".

line
War in Ukraine: More coverage
RUSSIA: Stop the fighting: Russian soldier's mum speaks out
WATCH: War nears Ukraine maternity ward
ANALYSIS: Is the tank doomed?
READ MORE: Full coverage of the crisis
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Vivily
Vivily
Jul 16, 2019
Nagi's Long Vacation - ForJoyTV Japan Drama - Nagi no Oitoma

Drama Name: Nagi no Oitoma (2019)
English Title: Nagi's Long Vacation

Japanese Title: 凪のお暇
Watch Online: https://forjoytv.com

Channel: TBS
Date: Start from July 19th of 2019
Runtime: 22:00(Friday)

Brief Plot:

Nagi Oshima (Haru Kuroki) is a single, 28-year-old woman and she works for an electrical product manufacturer. She has extremely curly hair. She spends about an hour a day to make her straight. Nagi Oshima always tries to smile and considers other people's feelings.

drama, tv, and dorama
But, one day, her boyfriend Shinji Gamon says something to her. This makes Nagi Oshima look back at her life. She decides to reset her life. Nagi Oshima quits her job, cuts off everybody she knows (including her boyfriend), quits social media and cancels her cellphone.

To restart her life, she moves to an old apartment in the suburbs of Tokyo. She wants to have a pleasant and free life, not caring about other people. She also decides to leave her hair curly. Her new life begins, with her ex-boyfriend Shinji Gamon following her and new people in her life.
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Alondra Antonio Rios
Alondra Antonio Rios
Aug 14, 2018
#Best-Wedding😱😱😱😱
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