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We suggest 30 text messages you can use to break up with someone instead of ghosting them. Keep it short, sweet, and direct, instead of leaving them wondering.
1) You’ve survived a breakup, taken a bit of time to honor the no-contact rule and now want to text your ex, or 2) it’s your friend’s breakup, and they could use some support from you since ...
Last year, I mutually ghosted (or "co-ghosted") two people, broke up with nine other people, and received one certifiably unhinged breakup message. Looking at those stats, you'd think I'd have the ...
SMS language displayed on a mobile phone screen. Short Message Service language, textism, or textese [a] is the abbreviated language and slang commonly used in the late 1990s and early 2000s with mobile phone text messaging, and occasionally through Internet-based communication such as email and instant messaging.
The last line of a paragraph continuing on to a new page (highlighted yellow) is a widow (sometimes called an orphan). In typesetting, widows and orphans are single lines of text from a paragraph that dangle at either the beginning or end of a block of text, or form a very short final line at the end of a paragraph. [1]
This line includes a masculine caesura after θεὰ, a natural break that separates the line into two logical parts. Homeric lines more commonly employ feminine caesurae; this preference is observed to an even higher degree among the Alexandrian poets. [3] An example of a feminine caesura is the opening line of the Odyssey:
An Enthusiastic Endorsement for breaking up via text message.
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