Jung jin young b1a4 biography template
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The Workshop discussion
W H E R E ' ST H ET R U T H ?
H E L L O ! — I'm Aubree, and these are my templates. In general, my templates tend to take to extremes: either meticulous photo editing in order to minimize HTML, or so much HTML that I've sworn to never replicate it. Some might refer to my approach to template making as slightly masochistic. (It would not be wrong.) That being said, if you are not interested in making your own graphics, I can go on a gif hunt for you, or, alternatively, you can request custom graphics at my other thread, IN MY FAITH. Do note that all of my codes are made using Google Chrome on a 13-inch MacBook, and are consequently optimized for such conditions, and so may not look right on all computer displays.
My templates are each categorized into one of three difficulty levels, chosen at my own discretion:
E A S Y — Can be used by people who have little HTML knowledge, essentially consists of just plugging in information and insertin
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Benedict had a successful podcasting career as "Papatak," dishing out witty and sassy advice to broken-hearted people who called in. Despite his perky online persona though, in reality he was strict and critical with people around him. On the very day he planned to föreslå marriage to his lady love Victoria, she also decided to break up with him because she felt suffocated by his controlling nature.
As he walked the street despondent after the abrupt rejection, a bar called "Turning Point" suddenly appeared (complete with a disembodied Joey Marquez voice-over announcing its name) and he was compelled to enter. The bartender Saro offered him to drink Wishkey -- a potion which could take him back in time to learn lessons and make better decisions to correct his present situation.
The Wishkey brought Benedict into various historical places and events, like the Garden of Eden, the Stone Age, the Battle of Mactan, the Cry of Balintawak with Andres Bonifacio (Jhong Hilario),
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After Trafalgar: The Royal Navy & the Napoleonic Wars, 1806 – 1816
This article examines the operational history of the Royal Navy during the military and geopolitical progress of the Napoleonic Wars, from the Battle of Trafalgar on 21 October 1805 to 27 August 1816 when Lord Exmouth suppressed the Algiers slave trade. This decade begins after Nelson and Collingwood smashed the invasion threat at Trafalgar, subsequent Franco-Spanish sea power thus reduced to mere squadrons, desperately rebuilding at bases scattered around the globe. The British Cabinet and Admiralty could at last concentrate on capturing France’s overseas naval bases and colonial factories. During these tumultuous years the United Kingdom persistently made war on Napoleonic France and captured the fleets and colonies of those nations which were allied to Bonaparte, such as Spain, Denmark, Russia and Italy. In 1812 the Royal Navy overcame the intervention of the United States, a growing power that had wo