User:Angela21124

Welcome to my user page!

User:Adi21124
User:Adi21124
   
User talk:Adi21124
User talk:Adi21124
   
User:Adi21124/About me
User:Adi21124/About me
   
User:Adi21124/Awards
User:Adi21124/Awards
   
User:Adi21124/Bookmarks
User:Adi21124/Bookmarks
   
User:Adi21124/Places I've been
User:Adi21124/Places I've been
   
User talk:Adi21124/Archive
User talk:Adi21124/Archive
   
User:Adi21124/Gallery
User:Adi21124/Gallery
   
                               

ABOUT ME...

[edit]

Hello Friends!!Nice to meet you all <3.. I am Adi its my wikipedia username. I am a girl. Apr 29th is my birthdate.I really like editing on wikipedia.wikipedia is such a nice cite edited by its contributers.I was always waited 4 the such site bt wikipedia is fabulous and I Love Wikipedia.I also suggest my friends to go 2 the site wikipedia.I am proud of being an wikipedian.I don't like to see the red link on wikipedia

MUSIC...

[edit]

My Favourite singers/Bands are

  • text
    Shakira
  • text
    Britney Spears
  • text
    Rihana
  • text
    Madonna
  • text
    Lady Gaga
  • text
    Akon
  • text
    Eminem
  • text
    Usher
  • text
    GreenDay
  • text
    Linkin Park
  • text
    Black Eyed Peas
  • text
    Beyonce Knowles
  • text
    Hillary Duff
  • text
    Enrique Iglesias

POEM BY ME...

[edit]

One Bright day, in the middle of the night,

Two dead boys got up to fight
Back to back they faced each other
Drew there swords, and shot on another
The deaf police men heard the noise, and came and killed the 2 dead boys
If you don't believe this LIE is true, ask the blind man, he saw it too!


Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still upon Gibeon
Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still upon Gibeon is an 1816 biblical landscape painting by the British artist John Martin. It depicts an episode from the Book of Joshua, in which the Israelite leader Joshua comes to the assistance of the besieged city of Gibeon, appealing to God to halt the Sun in order to give his army more time to fight by daylight. Romantic in style, it was Martin's breakthrough picture, receiving praise both when it was shown at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition of 1816 at London's Somerset House, and when it appeared at the British Institution the following year. Since 2004, it has been in the collection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.Photograph credit: John Martin