Tegan and Sara — Nineteen
April 2012
ihavamoustachee replied to your post: It’s 6 a.m. and I have completed six pages. I also…
you are clearly an essaywriting beast
Fuck, if only. It is now almost 9 a.m. and I have 7 unedited, randomass, strewn together pages. But also, I had to take a break to do my linguistics homework, which was twice as long as it usually is, and I was not prepared for that. I have an hour left before I have to run off to class - I won’t be getting any sleep at all :/
It’s 6 a.m. and I have completed six pages. I also have 17 sources. It’s getting there…
thisonetimeatzoocamp replied to your post: thisonetimeatzoocamp replied to…
lol yeah. that’s cool. is this something i can use? i hate reading.
Haha I’m not sure how efficient you would find it. It reads pretty slowly and it’s computer generated, so the pronunciation is a bit whack sometimes. I just thought it was cool that there were three different accents, and how those accents sound. I mean, it’s a scholarly website - what are they doing fucking around with accents? Silly people :]
Here is a link to one of the sources with the reading ability <http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?sid=94bf5d04-1c4e-4671-b773-d93a1990af07%40sessionmgr114&vid=1&hid=111&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=a9h&AN=9609220667>.
Or you can just try <web.ebscohost.com>. Only the html articles can be read aloud, not the pdfs as far as I know.
Have I really accepted that I’m just not sleeping tonight? It’s already 1:27 a.m. Why am I not more freaked out about this ten-page paper and linguini homework? Plus, I really wanted to re-edit my poetry paper. Oh, and I’m sure we were supposed to read more of The Encyclopædia of Stupidity by tomorrow morning as well.
thisonetimeatzoocamp replied to your post: Academic Search Complete
read the sources or read the articles?
It will read the sources/articles. The articles are the sources. It won’t read my article. Does that answer that question?
The database I am using to find sources for my article will read the sources aloud to me in an American, a British, or an Australian accent.
I don’t want to do this anymore.