‘ You could drop Tony Stark naked in the middle of the desert and he’d fly out in a jet made of sand and cactus needles.
So many theories about Pepper or Valkyrie or Nebula saving Tony have come out of this trailer. Keeping bees in properly managed hives where they don’t starve or die from preventable disease is much better for them than being left to fend for themselves, and they’re far too important to be left alone.Īll the fruits and vegetables that vegans *do* eat couldn’t exist without bees, and the hives which pollinate those crops also produce excess honey which the beekeepers can sell to help keep themselves and their hives going. We also make sure that pests are controlled, bees are treated for disease, and the hive is weatherproof and in good repair, all things that wild bees struggle with. And if the winter is harsher than expected and the remaining honey store runs low, we feed the bees plenty to make sure they survive. We take *excess* honey that they don’t need, and it stops the hive from becoming honey-bound, meaning that there’s so much honey the Queen has nowhere to lay eggs. If we destroyed the colony to harvest honey there would be no bees for next year, and beekeepers are incredibly careful to keep their bees healthy and thriving. The invention of modern moveable-frame hives means we can remove a selected frame, extract the honey and return it without killing a single bee. Bye.īeekeeper here! Just wanted to say that the fact that vegans won’t eat honey is very silly. Agave is 90% fructose, which can cause a host of issues. Your liver and thyroid will thank you, as well. You want to help the environment? Go back to honey. They feed off the nectar and pollinate the plants. Harvesting agave in the quantities required so you dont have to eat honey is killing mexican long-nosed bats. (This list deliberately omits annoyed and its synonyms, which are numerous enough to merit their own list.Vegans of tumblr, listen up. ”ĥ0: Perturbed: upset (also means “confused”)Ħ0: Seeing red: so angry that one’s vision is blurred, or one is stimulated as a bull in a bullfightĦ8: Storming: having a temper or an anger suggestive of stormy weather Mad: angry this term has so many other senses and is so easily replaced by any of its many synonyms that it is all but useless except in a statement starting with “I’m so mad I could. Livid: intensely angry to the point of being unable to control oneself ( livid, however, can also mean “bruised,” “pale,” or “colorful,” with the second sense associated with pain, shock, or fear)Ĥ8. Indignant: angry because of a real or perceived slight or unjust attackĤ7. Hot: angry, with the sense of physical discomfort caused by emotionĤ2. Hostile: actively intimidating, unfriendly, or resistantģ8. Hopping: so angry as to suggest that the person might jump up and down to express or assuage angerģ7. Fuming: extremely angry, from the association of the person with a volcano or other heated natural phenomenonģ4. Frustrated: angry or upset because of obstacles or challengesģ1. Foaming: so angry as to suggest insanity caused by hydrophobia (rabies), from the idea that foaming at the mouth is symptomatic of the diseaseģ0. Fit to be tied: extremely angry, suggesting that the person angered should be restrainedĢ9. Cool: angry but with emotions are held in checkĢ8. Cold: angry in an emotionally remote mannerĢ3. Cheesed off: see frustrated (can also mean “bored” or “disgusted”)Ģ1. Burning: extremely angry, from the notion of the body overheating because of the intensity of feelingġ8. Bristling: defensively angry, suggestive of an animal’s hair bristling as it responds to a threatġ6. Boiling: extremely angry, with the figurative sense of being agitated like heated waterġ5. Blue in the face: see frustrated, from the idea of facial discoloration caused by extreme emotionġ4. Bitter: harshly upset due to resentmentġ3. Bellicose: aggressively angry, from the synonym for warlikeġ2. Ballistic: explosively angry, from the adjective describing projectile flightġ0. Apoplectic: violently angry, from the adjectival form of apoplexy, the former word for strokeĩ. Antipathetic: expressing antipathy, or aggression or aversionĨ.
Annoyed: angry about being disturbed or harassedħ. Acrid: extremely harsh (also refers to an unpleasant taste or smell)ĥ. Are you angry? At the risk of infuriating you, or making you apoplectic or exasperated, here are dozens of words to use to describe your choleric condition more precisely:ġ.