'morgen!
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) March 5, 2020
Georg Friedrich #Händel, einer der bedeutendsten #Komponisten der Geschichte, war ein Mann vieler #Tonarten, aber nicht immer der sanften Zwischentöne. Wie seine #Musik war auch sein Ruf durchaus „#gewaltig“. Erfahren Sie mehr im Artikel des Tages https://t.co/hWnNgHUu4H pic.twitter.com/VfZXIxKr8q
— Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache (@dwds_de) March 5, 2020
"Viele Menschen sind zu gut erzogen, um mit vollem Mund zu sprechen, aber sie haben keine Scheu, es mit leerem Kopf zu tun." (Orson Welles, 1915-1985, US-amerikan. Regisseur, Schaupieler, Autor) [via https://t.co/L4VYhlcapr]
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) March 5, 2020
Khutulun, a Mongol noblewoman, was a very good wrestler.
So good that she made wagers with male suitors.
If he won? Marriage.
If she won? She'd get some of his horses.
Khutulun went on to amass a herd of over ten thousand horses. #WomensHistoryMonthhttps://t.co/bTKzDjRZRl
— Wikipedia (@Wikipedia) March 4, 2020
Lettering (quite certainly) and type (presumably) on the sign of a – well, what is ‘Heißmangel’ in English? It’s a shop specialised in ironing bedsheets and other larger laundry items. The sans-serif type is rather commonplace, but the script lettering is nice (while imperfect). pic.twitter.com/6uG1U1O5Jq
— isoletters (@isoletters) March 5, 2020
Aus unseren Neuerwerbungen – Sprachen und Kulturen Asiens, Afrikas und Ozeaniens 2020.3 https://t.co/nshe8lODSW
— ULB_MS_FachInfo (@ULB_MS_FachInfo) March 5, 2020
Aus unseren Neuerwerbungen – Nordische Philologie 2020.3 https://t.co/CMvogOj5ro
— ULB_MS_FachInfo (@ULB_MS_FachInfo) March 5, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1235480440825409537
I’m totally hooked by @richove’s stories of how knowledge has been attacked & safeguarded through the ages. This is a wide-angle lens book. And also a very humane and personal one, w/ an urgent call to action. Coming Fall 2020. @Harvard_Press @bodleianlibs #CoverReveal #ReadUP pic.twitter.com/zMI6IUb587
— Sharmila Sen (@_sen_sharmila) March 5, 2020
Thanks Sharmila, it is great working with you and your colleagues @Harvard_Press: very excited to see the cover! For UK folks, the book is being published by @johnmurrays https://t.co/rRX8yCt61o
— Richard Ovenden (@richove) March 5, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1235482457471938560
Scientists: you should wash your hands because of Coronavirus.
People: I'm gonna stop flying, hoard masks, work from home & totally rearrange my life.
Also Scientists: the #ClimateCrisis will kill millions – we must use clean power & change how we get to work.
People: No way.
— Nathaniel Stinnett (@NCStinn) March 4, 2020
idk who needs to hear this but if you ever need to move a lamb over a wall, here u go pic.twitter.com/r0wotk5qgH
— anica (@AnicaSeelie) March 3, 2020
APCs
BPCs
EPCs
Submission feesNext up:
CPCs = Considering Processing Charges“Dear Dr. X,
We heard you are considering submitting an article to our journal. Please pay us a fee, just the thought of another paper is.. well just pay us will you?Sincerely,
Journal"— Katrine Sundsbø (@katrinesundsbo) March 3, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1235482943121833984
The ceiling of Grand Central Station in New York contains a patch that was intentionally left uncleaned to show how dirty it was after 100 years of cigarette smoking. (Image: cisc1970) pic.twitter.com/eNe8yqvAnb
— Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) March 4, 2020
Passed a woman on my hike today on the trail in the woods far away from most anything. She was wearing a surgical mask. No squirrels were harmed. #coronavirus #Really
— Dave Blazek (@LoosePartsGuy) March 4, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1235489792684691456
The Library Law in Denmark is 100 years old today! ❤️✊ #librarylife pic.twitter.com/IBRFHTSb8X
— Christian Lauersen (@clauersen) March 5, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1235509206607900673
als nächstes kommt dann aus der literaturliste dieses artikels auf den zu-lesen-stapel: "Librarians, Life and Ladders: Carl Spitzweg and Others" https://t.co/RWpMsnsuKy #bibliothek #leitern #kunst 🙂 [leider #closedaccess]
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) March 5, 2020
Since we live with somewhere between 3 and 13 Cats I wouldn’t say we live alone. Please adjust your definition accordingly. https://t.co/UXdJXoM51m
— Fake Library Statistics (@FakeLibStats) March 5, 2020
the scariest thing about COVID-19 is that it looks like a JIRA ticket
— Molly Waggett (@mollywaggett) March 4, 2020
OED Word of the Day: booky, adj. Characterized by, consisting of, or derived from books; devoted to books; bookish.https://t.co/FM08jf1Ayh
— The OED (@OED) March 5, 2020
"Ich musste doch nur niesen weil ich allergisch bin!"
Dann schlugen die Flammen des Scheiterhaufens über ihm zusammen.— Heinrich IX (@drhuch) March 5, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1235563215205040128
cc @IlonaRiek: wo sitzt Du? 🙂 https://t.co/3ODiqpnudF
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) March 5, 2020
The word with the most meanings in English is the word ‘set’. The Oxford English Dictionary lists 430 possible definitions, and the entry is over 60,000 words long.
— Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) March 5, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1235564666149056513
"Wer das Klebeband vorher von den Kartonagen entfernt, senkt den Aufwand im Recyclingprozess und bekommt Karmapunkte." — gut zu wissen. dann hab ich schon diverse punkte gesammelt! 🙂 https://t.co/Z4R6PrDVVp
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) March 5, 2020
Tja nun pic.twitter.com/AtpEMXZUjL
— Johanna Sprondel (@jsprondel) March 5, 2020
We have new buttons and pencils for our upcoming counts. #squirrelcensus #nycopendataweek #opendata https://t.co/iBPYJqBadc pic.twitter.com/ckmwN1AMdi
— Squirrel Census (@SquirrelCensus) February 29, 2020