an oversized jacket. a golden moon. sunflowers in a paper bouquet. miso white chocolate cookies rising in the oven. autumn has arrived and i welcome the old friend with open arms.
(ig: studylustre)
studying land reform while contemplating selling my soul to Notion (yes I joined the cult)
but imagine being in your favorite foreign city, living in a cute, cozy apartment with a lovely view, working at a small bookstore, spending your time at beautiful cofffee shops and libraries, taking long walks, meeting new people that make you feel good, being yourself, finding true love and actually feeling good & fullfilled with your life
[february 25, 2020 • tuesday]
are you guys currently in HS or college? and what year? I'm currently a third year in college ヽ(・∀・)ノ
19.9.19 A cool date and a cool day! I've started a temping job at a property marketing agents! It was actually crazy how I landed this, I saw the advert on a local group on facebook *yesterday*, replied, and about two hours later I had sent in all my important documents and I started at 8.45am today! How mad is that? Anyway it's really exciting and I'm so lucky even if it is only temporarily. Xx Emily
old ap calc notes 🍊
q: what is your favorite subject?
This is my trick for remembering trigonometric values. Forget memorizing those little charts or triangles, this is so much easier.
I learnt this in 10th grade from my favorite teacher (who wasn’t actually my maths teacher at the time) and I still used it for the rest of High School and will probably continue to use it in University.
So what do you do? You draw the chart in the picture. That one.
OK, but how do you read it? Like a table. (If you’re unfamiliar with radians, do not worry. It also works in degrees, just write: 0, 30, 45, 60, 90 instead.)
For example, if you want to find the sin(pi/2), you simply start at sin(x) and then move over until you’re at pi/2 (or 90 degrees). It says sqrt(4). Now you put that over 2, and you have it. Sin(pi/2) = (sqrt(4))/2, also known as 2/2, or 1.
If you want to find the cos(pi/4), you do the same thing: start at cos(x), move until (pi/4). It says sqrt(2), now put that over 2, and you have cos(pi/4) = sqrt(2)/2.
For tan(x), just take the sin(x) value and divide it by the cos(x) value!
So tan(pi/6) = sqrt(1) / sqrt(3) = 1/sqrt(3).
I find this so easy to remember because the first line starts at zero and increases, and the second line starts at 4 and decreases. It works for any values (yes, even ones above pi/2!) and it’s so simple. I encourage you to start by writing it out on every paper, when you’re studying, and on your exams.
“What the superior man seeks is in himself; what the ordinary man seeks is in others.”
— Confucius, Analects
“Because in the end, you won’t remember the time you spent working in the office or mowing your lawn. Climb that goddamn mountain.”
— Jack Kerouac (b. 12 March 1922)
27.02.2020
I had a french lit quiz today, did pretty well except for the part where our teacher specifically asked a German word in our very french French lit quiz -_- Anyways, did anyone else watch the mv of BTS’s ON if so let’s talk!!!
🎧bts, ON
12.07.17 // 11.00 PM
(!! old photo) i’m currently in london for summer school and there’s more work than i expected so my plan for anime marathon evenings has gone out the window :^)
[ check out my instagram @studyingg ♡ ]
🔅28.04.17 🔅 Green + yellow for notes on Trotsky 🤗 (click for better quality!)