Hotwife Texts

A Royal Pain In The Texts
A Royal Pain In The Texts
What are the odds that you are dared to send a random text to a stranger? And, what are the odds that the stranger happens to be someone you would never have imagined in your wildest fantasies?Well, the odds are in Chloe's favor. A text conversation which starts as a dare takes a one eighty degree turn when the person behind the screen turns out to be the cockiest, most arrogant, annoying asshat. Despite all this; the flirting, the heart to heart conversations and the late night musings are something they become accustomed to and something which gradually opens locked doors...but, that's not all. To top it all off, the guy just might happen to be in the same school and have a reputation for a overly skeptical identity..."What are you hiding?""An awesome body, beneath these layers of clothing ;)"But, who knows what Noah is really hiding and what are the consequences of this secret?Cover by my girl @messylilac :)❤️
9.4
53 Chapters
Wrong number
Wrong number
Nikki is Chad's secretary and is half a step closer to losing her job. She is defined as clumsy and forgetful. Chad is so close to ridding her of her job. One fateful night, she texts her nude image to her boss, will this cost her job or...
9.6
53 Chapters
Speak To Me
Speak To Me
Chasity Dawson is the shy daughter of a housemaid and Joe Bandit is the school's "Golden boy" and the son of the family her mother works for. One-night Joe texts her, and asks her for a favor that involves a mysterious unmasked culprit, leaving photos of Joe and his family at their doorstep every week for years. This mystery leads to a growing attraction between Joe and Chasity. Along with deadly secrets that were best left alone. Secrets… that could get someone killed.
9.7
76 Chapters
The Last of 99 Goodbyes
The Last of 99 Goodbyes
When my appendix bursts, my parents, my brother, and even my fiancé are all too busy celebrating my sister's birthday. I'm outside the operating room, frantically calling every family member I can think of to sign the consent form, but every call is either ignored or hung up on. After hanging up on me, my fiancé, Joel Graham, texts back. "Sophie, stop being dramatic. It's Yvette's 18th birthday today. Whatever it is can wait until after the party." I quietly set my phone down and sign the consent form myself. It's the ninety-ninth time they've chosen Yvette Norton, my sister, over me. This time, I choose not to care. I'll stop letting their favoritism hurt me. Instead, I'll do everything they ask of me without complaint. They'll all think I've finally learned to be obedient, and they'll never realize that I'm preparing to leave them for good.
10 Chapters
FALLING IN LOVE WHEN YOU'RE TEXTING
FALLING IN LOVE WHEN YOU'RE TEXTING
She’s texting him her heart. But she’s got the wrong number… When Isabel “El” Watson applied for a sales job with her company, she had no idea a jelly donut would explode on her blouse, or that her grumpy boss would practically laugh her out of the interview. Accountants could be salespeople, she was sure of it, even if that jerkface didn’t think so. So when a lady at the local wine festival offers her a sales job on the spot at a new boutique winery, El jumps at the chance. She also jumps at the chance to text with the guy who danced with her at the festival. Life was finally looking up. Boston’s friend, Chad, never should have given Boston’s number to the girl at the wine festival as a joke, but the damage was done. When El sends Boston a text later that night, believing he is Chad, he’s too nice to hurt her feelings by telling her the truth. But there are a few other truths Boston might have thought about: Truth #1: He’s her boss Truth #2: She just accepted a job at his mother’s new winery Truth #3: He’s always had a crush on her Even though Boston is no longer El’s grumpy boss, they still work together at his mom’s winery. And while sparks are flying as they get to know each other for real, El’s kind of sweet on the guy who always seems to know just what to say via text too. Obviously, things will come to a head. Will Boston come clean about the flirty texts being from him? Or will El figure out on her own that she’s been Texting With the Enemy?
9.9
110 Chapters
Selene's Chosen Queen
Selene's Chosen Queen
*** Mature themes*** *Alaina* Growing up I was always told I was 'special', that the moon goddess had this big plan for me one that involved Selene cursing a guy 5,000 years ago... a plan I wanted no part of. A plan that my entire pack figured out the first time I shifted, a plan that put me in right in the line of danger. I found the love of my life when I was a child, a chosen mate, hoping that I could live a normal life. That was until I went to the all Alpha meeting in Spain and met... him... and my life changed forever. *Ashton* I grew up being told stories of a prophecy. The actual texts have been lost for generations, and at this point they are bed time stories. Stories about what happens if you reject your fated mate, about Selene being born on earth. I never thought it was real, let alone be apart of the prophecy, until I first shifted. Then I met my mate, my strong willed, stubborn, smart, loving, mate. It's been a wild ride ever since. Daily updates until June 19, Bi-weekly updates (hoping for Tuesdays and Fridays) until, at least, September.
10
118 Chapters

What Teachings Surround The Samsara Wheel In Ancient Texts?

3 Answers2025-09-16 01:46:04

This topic is truly fascinating, and the teachings around the samsara wheel really resonate with various philosophies! The samsara wheel, a symbol of the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth, is often depicted in Buddhist and Hindu practices. In Buddhism, there's a strong emphasis on understanding suffering; this is represented in the Four Noble Truths, which highlight the nature of suffering and the path to enlightenment. The wheel illustrates how attachment and desire bind us to the cycle of rebirth, suggesting that liberation is attainable through the understanding of our desires and ultimately achieving Nirvana.

On the other hand, Hindu texts elaborate on dharma, karma, and moksha. The Bhagavad Gita, for example, discusses performing one's duty (dharma) without attachment to the results, which is a concept tied to breaking away from this cycle. Living in accordance with dharma helps in accumulating good karma, which affects future incarnations and ultimately leads to moksha, or liberation from the samsara wheel. The intricate interplay of these teachings reflects a deep understanding of life’s impermanence and the idea that our actions truly dictate our fate across lifetimes.

I’ve been exploring how these concepts influence storytelling too! Many anime/manga incorporate elements of reincarnation, like in 'Re:Zero - Starting Life in Another World', where the protagonist’s choices echo the teachings of samsara by impacting not just his current life but those around him as well. So, whether through ancient texts or modern narratives, the essence of samsara is an invitation to reflect on our actions and the cycle of life, making it all the more poignant.

Is Moiled Used Differently In British And American Texts?

2 Answers2025-09-06 23:20:45

Stumbling on the word 'moiled' while rereading an old rural novel made me grin — it's one of those little linguistic fossils that gives a paragraph extra texture. In my head 'moiled' always reads like the past of a hardworking verb: someone who moils is in the dirt, sweating or busy with small, ugly, necessary tasks. Historically it carries a mix of senses — to toil, bustle, or be in a mess — and that shape is why British writers, especially from the 18th and 19th centuries, used it more often in fiction and dialect writing.

If I look at how it's used today, the difference between British and American texts is more about frequency and flavor than about a change in meaning. In British English you'll still bump into 'moiled' in regional writing, historical novels, or in the prose of older authors who liked earthy vocabulary. It feels natural there in descriptions of farmhands, mill workers, or a crowded, clamorous kitchen. In American English it tends to be rarer; you'll mostly meet it in older literature, in translations, or when an author deliberately wants an antique or rustic tone. Dictionaries often mark it as archaic or dialectal, and that matches my experience flipping between Dickens, Hardy, and some scattered 19th-century American narratives — British contexts kept it alive a bit longer.

Practically speaking, when you hit 'moiled' in a modern read, I usually treat it as a stylistic choice by the author to evoke labor, muddle, or bustle. If you're thinking about using it in your own writing, use it as a spice: it can signal regional speech, period detail, or a narrator who favors old-fashioned words. If you're trying to understand a passage quickly, substitute 'toiled', 'drudged', 'bustled', or 'mired' depending on context. Personally, I love spotting it on the page — it's a tiny door into the everyday lives of past characters — and it often makes me slow down and picture the boots and the mud. Next time you see it, try saying the sentence aloud; the sound usually reveals whether the author meant hard physical work or a messy bustle.

Which Night Quotes Work Well For Romantic Texts?

3 Answers2025-08-26 06:17:48

There’s something about the hush of late-night hours that makes words land softer — I love sending a short line that feels like a warm blanket. When I text someone at night, I try to match the mood: gentle, sincere, and a little cinematic. Some of my favorite go-to lines are simple and image-rich, like: “Sleep easy — I’ll be thinking of you under the same stars,” or “Goodnight, my favorite daydream.” If I want to be playful, I’ll use something like, “Don’t let the moon steal you from me,” and when I’m feeling more poetic I’ll say, “Meet me where the night forgets its shadows.” I’ve stolen tiny inspirations from films like 'Before Sunrise' — not the quotes verbatim, but the feeling of two people talking under a streetlamp until dawn.

Timing and tone matter: a soft, honest sentence is better than a grand line that feels out of place. For someone new, I keep it light — “Sweet dreams — hope you dream of me,” or “Rest well, see you in my morning thoughts.” For a steady partner I might text, “Goodnight, love — you make my world quieter and kinder,” or “Sleep tight; I’ll save a sunrise for you.” I also like leaving a tiny promise: “I’ll call you tomorrow, unless the moon keeps you woke.”

If you want a little variety, mix short images (stars, moon, quiet streets) with a personal detail — a shared joke, a pet’s name, or a memory from the day. Those small, specific touches turn a line from cute to unforgettable. Tonight I sent one that referenced a rainy café we loved; they answered back with a voice note, and that felt worth more than any perfect quote.

Which Romantic Love Quotes Suit Valentine'S Day Texts?

4 Answers2025-08-28 19:44:49

I still get a little giddy when I think about the perfect Valentine text—small, honest, and not trying too hard. If I were sending one tonight, I'd open with something simple and warm, then slip in a line that feels like it came from an inside joke only we share. Here are a few lines I like to use when I'm aiming for cozy and sincere:

'You're my favorite hello and the hardest goodbye.'
'I'd choose you on every timeline, in every life.'
'If kisses were snowflakes, I'd send you a blizzard.'

When I text these, I usually follow with something specific: a memory from our last coffee date, or a goofy emoji that only the two of us find funny. That little personal touch turns a pretty quote into something that actually lands. If you want more playful ones, I can toss in cheeky alternatives, but for Valentine’s I prefer lines that feel steady—like a hand you want to hold at the movies.

Which Books Contain Original Gnosticism Texts?

2 Answers2025-08-31 06:20:28

On slow weekend afternoons I like to pull down a few heavy volumes and get lost in the originals—there’s nothing like holding a translation that comes straight from those dusty Coptic codices. If you want the core corpus of original Gnostic texts, the essential starting point is 'The Nag Hammadi Library' (the James M. Robinson edition is the classic). That collection gathers the cache of Coptic manuscripts found near Nag Hammadi in 1945, and it contains big hitters like the 'Apocryphon of John', the 'Gospel of Thomas', the 'Hypostasis of the Archons', and many more. Those texts are presented as translations from the Coptic, often with useful introductions and notes that place each work in its historical and theological context.

For a more modern, user-friendly set of translations I often reach for 'The Nag Hammadi Scriptures' (edited by Marvin Meyer). It’s a bit more readable for newcomers and collects Nag Hammadi material alongside other early Christian and Gnostic writings. If you want a single-volume grab-bag of important primary texts from varied sources, 'The Gnostic Scriptures' (also by Marvin Meyer) is excellent: it mixes Nag Hammadi pieces with other early documents and provides background that helps them click together. For specific, famous standalone works, look for good translations of 'The Gospel of Thomas' and 'Pistis Sophia' (the latter often in translations by G.R.S. Mead or in more recent critical editions). The sensational 'Gospel of Judas' got a full scholarly translation in the mid-2000s (the edition with Rodolphe Kasser and Marvin Meyer) if you’re curious about how the usual Judas story flips in some Gnostic circles.

If you love seeing the texts themselves, some editions include the Coptic transcriptions and photographic plates of the codices—those are gold if you want to chase the original language. For historical framing and to avoid getting lost in terminology, pairing these primary-text collections with accessible studies like 'The Gnostic Gospels' by Elaine Pagels (which isn’t a primary-source volume but is brilliant for context) makes reading them far more rewarding. My tip: start with one comprehensive collection and one contextual book, and let the weird, rich theology of these texts do the rest—there’s always another odd little tract waiting on the shelf.

How Can Readers Find Meaningful Texts In The Library Of Babel?

2 Answers2025-08-29 13:35:43

Some nights I treat the Library of Babel like a reverse treasure hunt: instead of a map leading to gold, I bring a tiny lamp (metaphorically) and hope the lamp reveals something that looks like meaning. If you’re coming at it thinking every volume is a prize waiting to be opened, you’ll get dizzy fast. I find it helps to set a constraint first—a theme, a phrase seed, or even a rule like “only look at pages that contain a month’s name.” That turns the infinite noise into a manageable hunting ground. Practically, start with short, memorable anchors: a first name, a single evocative noun, or even a punctuation pattern like '—.' Run those anchors through a search tool (if you’re using the online reconstruction of the library) or scroll with those filters in mind. You’ll be surprised how often tiny, coherent islands appear amid gibberish.

Once you have fragments you like, my favorite trick is to treat them like found poetry. Don’t expect a full novel; expect fragments that spark. I’ve taken three lines from different books and stitched them into a tiny scene that felt oddly true. Another pathway is statistical: look for pages heavy with common words, or sequences that repeat. Those are more likely to include readable sentences just by chance. If you’re more technical, export hits and run simple frequency analysis: which letters and short words cluster together? Patterns often point to legible text. If the library you’re using supports regex-like searches, exploit that to find coherent word boundaries or punctuation clusters—those give human-shaped edges in an ocean of randomness.

There’s also a social route that’s underrated. Share your favorite snippets with friends or an online group and ask others to build around them. Collaboration turns isolated fragments into narrative scaffolding. I like the philosophical bit too: reading the library is partly an exercise in how we make meaning. Borges' 'The Library of Babel' isn’t just about finding texts; it’s about recognizing significance where chance arranges letters into patterns we can care about. So mix method and play—use constraints, use tools, and then be willing to invent context. Sometimes a sentence becomes meaningful only when you place it next to a coffee cup at midnight, or when it helps a character in a story you’re writing. That’s where the library stops being an infinite nuisance and starts feeling like a secret garden of prompts and odd little truths I keep returning to.

How Do I Report Errors On Gutenberg Ca Texts?

5 Answers2025-09-02 09:00:39

Okay, here's the practical route I take when I spot a typo or weird formatting on gutenberg.ca — it's simple and feels kind of like fixing a friend's bookmark.

First, open the specific ebook page (the one with the full text or the HTML file). Scroll up near the top of the page or the start of the text: many Project Gutenberg Canada entries include a header that says where to send corrections, something like 'Please report errors to:' followed by an email or a contact link. If that line exists, use it — include the ebook title, the URL, the file type (HTML or Plain Text), the exact sentence or paragraph with the error, and your suggested fix. Be specific: chapter number, paragraph, or the first few words of the line helps editors find it fast.

If there isn't a clearly listed contact, look for a 'Contact' or 'Feedback' link on the site footer, or use the site's general contact form. I always paste a tiny screenshot and the exact URL, which makes it painless for maintainers to verify. It’s polite to sign with a name; that little human touch often gets quicker follow-up.

How Has The Grey Anatomy Book Influenced Modern Medical Texts?

5 Answers2025-08-28 07:00:28

Flipping through my battered copy of 'Gray's Anatomy' as a student felt like meeting an old mentor — dry, relentless, and somehow comforting. The book's insistence on systematic description taught me how to think about the body in layers: bones first, then muscles, then vessels and nerves. That ordered approach is everywhere now in modern texts; you can trace how contemporary atlases and textbooks borrow that chapter-by-chapter, region-by-region scaffolding.
Beyond structure, the illustrations set a standard. Henry Vandyke Carter's plates married accuracy with clarity, and modern authors still chase that balance — you see it in 'Netter' style atlases, shaded 3D renderings, and interactive software. Even pedagogical norms, like pairing succinct anatomy with clinical correlations, echo 'Gray's' influence. When I study, I use an app for cross-sections and a printed atlas for tactile reference; that hybrid method is a direct descendant of what 'Gray's Anatomy' began: a reference that aspires to be both exhaustive and useful in practice.

Are There Quotes About Happiness And Love From Ancient Texts?

4 Answers2025-08-25 00:58:26

I still get a little thrill when I stumble on an old line that feels like it was written for right now. A few of my favorites about love and happiness come from places you might expect — and a couple from ones that surprised me. From the Buddhist 'Dhammapada' there's that blunt moral: "Hatred is never appeased by hatred in this world; by non-hatred alone is hatred appeased." It always strikes me as a practical recipe for peace, not just a lofty slogan.

Then there's the Bible's poetic heat in 'Song of Solomon': "Many waters cannot quench love; rivers cannot wash it away." I read that on a rainy day and felt the line punch through the grey. Lao Tzu in the 'Tao Te Ching' gives the softer mirror to happiness: "Be content with what you have; rejoice in the way things are," which has saved me from chasing trends more than once.

I keep a little notebook where I jot these down — they’re like bookmarks for my moods. If you’re hunting quotes, try different translations; the same line can feel fierce, gentle, or absurdly practical depending on the translator, and that variability is half the fun.

What Primary Texts Anchor Early Philosophy History Timelines?

3 Answers2025-08-26 19:03:44

When I sketch the skeleton of early philosophical history for friends, I start with the texts that feel like anchors — the ones people kept coming back to, copying, debating, and building whole lives around. In the ancient Near East, that means things like the 'Epic of Gilgamesh' and the 'Code of Hammurabi'. They’re not philosophy in the modern, system-building sense, but they shape questions about mortality, justice, and human limits that later thinkers pick over. I often pull out a battered paperback translation of the 'Epic of Gilgamesh' when someone asks where the worry about death comes from — Gilgamesh wrestling with loss is shockingly familiar.

Moving eastward, the Vedic corpus and the 'Upanishads' are huge anchors for South Asian philosophical timelines. The hymns of the 'Rigveda' introduce cosmological and ritual concerns, while the 'Upanishads' start asking about the self, ultimate reality, and liberation — topics that colored every strand of Indian thought after them. In China, the nickname classics like the 'Analects' and the 'Tao Te Ching' serve similar anchoring roles: terse, quotable, endlessly interpretable. Confucian and Daoist strands both emerge from those short books and keep reappearing in debates about ethics and governance.

Finally, for the Greek side, nothing anchors timelines like the transition from the 'Iliad' and 'Odyssey' culture to the Presocratics' fragments and then to the full dialogues of 'Plato' and treatises of 'Aristotle' such as the 'Nicomachean Ethics' and 'Metaphysics'. Each of these texts marks a shift — from myth to rational inquiry, from poetry to argument — and together they create the scaffolding historians use to map early philosophy. I like to end these little chats by suggesting one primary text from different regions so people get the flavor: an epic, a religious-philosophical collection, and a philosophical treatise; reading them back-to-back is like watching the conversation of humanity begin to take shape.

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