─ hii! i'm quite dreadful at talking about myself but here's some basics about me:
- australian
- born in 2004
- lesbian
- non-binary + other labels, but that's the easiest and most straightforward :]
- autistic
- i draw! mostly animals, particularly cats
studying compsci & IT:)DROPPED OUT OF MY COURSE!!! doing an art course for the time being
uhh and as for names! gemma (gem) or lorelei (lore) are fine, but feel free to just refer to me as nimravidae. subject to change </3
also i talk kinda weird with big words! i am not trying to be pretentious, i'm just autistic
this cool guy here is my fursona!!! her name's jade & i love her lots :] the art is by me |
─ favourites!
- colour: GREEN but i wear mostly black
- hex codes: #8b9455 #8e9a4b #746e44
- drink: ginger beer... chai, milk tea & mogu mogu
- fruit: dragonfruit
- book: warrior cats
- movie: what we do in the shadows (2014)
- tv show: total drama, clone high, amphibia
- anime: lucky star, dungeon meshi, death note
- video game: sky: cotl, cookie run (ovenbreak & kingdom), my other silly phone games
- console: nintendo switch, xbox (2001)
- pokemon: torracat!!!! and vaporeon and sprigatito. shinx was my fav as a kid
- season: spring
- flower: violets! my cats name is violet & also they represent lesbianism..
- animal: cats! and bugs and isopods
- music: the cure, blur, mitski, paramore, glass animals
─ miscellaneous site related things i wish to mention!
the image on my 88x31 button is a drawing i did awhile back, i'm still really fond of it. there's a little bit of photo-collage going on with it as well!! ─>
what does my site name, nimravidae, mean? nimravidae, or nimravids, are a long-extinct family of feline relatives that lived during the mid eocene through to the early miocene. they're also referred to as false sabre-tooth cats:] i'm quite fond of them, alongside cats & their relatives. they belong to the order carnivora, and the sub-family feliformia, which includes cats, hyenas, civets, linsangs, mongooses, & the like. the guy at the top of my page is a paleoillustration of a nimravid in the genus hoplophoneus (by robert bruce horsfall)