'morgen!
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) April 19, 2020
„Coronavirus Rhapsody“ https://t.co/8psdegiN9Z 🙂
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) April 19, 2020
"woher hat der leberkäs seinen namen?" tl;dl: es ist kompliziert. 🙂 https://t.co/MdOvlTCs3A #leberkäscontent
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) April 19, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1251775459563634691
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1251819015288369152
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1251839129723310081
This week: #languagelearning trauma is, apparently, relative. #learngerman #zwanzichgh pic.twitter.com/X4jGJ8sXxq
— Itchy Feet Comic (@ItchyFeetComic) April 19, 2020
Someone fund this project please. @tomgauld pic.twitter.com/5LTv0SjG53
— New Scientist (@newscientist) April 19, 2020
League of Legends Esports: No more fossil fuel money in League of Legends esport! – Sign the Petition! https://t.co/tBi7n6Rfb4 via @Change
— Leporellos Katalog (@leporelloatkthb) April 19, 2020
Given a selection of colors, is there a way to sort them from lightest to most saturated to darkest? I feel this should be simple but it's escaping me.
— Nicholas Rougeux (@rougeux) April 19, 2020
Woolly jumper of the day. pic.twitter.com/X1hJJjCaJY
— Dick King-Smith HQ (@DickKingSmith) April 19, 2020
my cartoon for yesterday’s @guardianreview #literature #cops
p.s. my new book: https://t.co/aZ6YOwvsen pic.twitter.com/UWrFyfagJE
— Tom Gauld (@tomgauld) April 19, 2020
Just witnessed my first online PhD defense, by now dr. Chris Hartgerink @chartgerink, including online party and drinks. The dissertation, "Contributions towards understanding and building sustainable science" is CC0 and available here: https://t.co/nkCQzQ2PIF pic.twitter.com/wKEsMlBeXy
— Jeroen Bosman aka @jeroenbosman@akademienl.social (@jeroenbosman) April 17, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1251905718598467586
#workingfromhome, the True Story pic.twitter.com/SPkbrRuhdl
— Ohad Zemet (@OhadZemet) April 17, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1251907898986369024
Bonus tweet: This has to be the best sentence I’ve read in scholarship recently. pic.twitter.com/jjvOzW2efJ
— Ruth Ahnert (@RuthAhnert) April 17, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1251909248340103170
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1251909662972219395
Das sieht man nicht oft, daß eine neue Universitätsbibliothek gegründet wird, hier in Zürich (@UZH_ch): https://t.co/PQER3ueRHs
— Bernhard Tempel (@nemissimo) April 18, 2020
Für die digitale Version der Messe #lebenundtod habe ich einen Beitrag zur Bedeutung von Sprache in der #Coronakrise erstellt. Für Linguist*innen keine neuen Erkenntnisse, für die Zielgruppe bietet er aber hoffentlich den ein oder anderen Denkanstoß. https://t.co/ME5jpmHiEN
— Isabella Buck (@isabellabuck_) April 18, 2020
Ich hab mir vorgestern beim Fernsehen mit Eis in den Ausschnitt gekleckert und gestern saß ich in der Sonne und heute habe ich da eine helle Stelle. Was lernen wir daraus? 1. Ich dusche zu selten, 2. Salty Caramel Eis von Lidl hat ca. Lichtschutzfaktor 30.
— Helene Bockhorst (@helenebockhorst) April 18, 2020
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1251910377539080192
MOSS vs LICHEN. A cartoon from my new book ‘Department of Mind-Blowing Theories' which is out now: https://t.co/8aNdWyOwH9#moss #lichen pic.twitter.com/xqAGjXRdzv
— Tom Gauld (@tomgauld) April 18, 2020
In der Serie: "#CoronaPandemie – Expertise aus der Wissenschaft" skizziert die katholische Moraltheologin Monika Bobbert in 11 Thesen wichtige ethische Eckpunkte der Corona-Krise – bspw. das #Diskriminierungsverbot und das Grundrecht auf Gleichbehandlung. https://t.co/EHP8GptQD5
— Universität Münster (@uni_muenster) April 18, 2020
#Coronavokabular in der niederländischen Sprache #Coronavocabulaire #Neologismus #neologisme https://t.co/JjBAm5RQVL
— FID Benelux – @FID_Benelux@openbiblio.social (@FIDBenelux) April 18, 2020
Happy #Caturdaypic.twitter.com/x3G5vYzCP1
— Larry the Cat (@Number10cat) April 18, 2020
Very British Problems with Lockdown
(https://t.co/1yVjA7rbpd / @Telegraph) pic.twitter.com/PWChO8VDg1— Rob Temple (@RobTemple101) April 18, 2020
— Moose Allain Ꙭ (@MooseAllain) April 17, 2020
The word ‘hundred’ comes from the Norse word ‘hundrath’ which actually means 120.
— Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) April 17, 2020
viele tipps in den replies zu kollaborativen #postits. https://t.co/swzBIAV6sY
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) April 19, 2020