• HOME
  • About Us
  • EVENTS
    • Upcoming Events
    • Past Events
      • The Cemetery at Jalan Kubor: Cultural Diversity of the Nineteenth-Century Port Town Community in Kampong Gelam, Singapore
      • MHC Public Lecture with Singapura Stories: Bugis and Makassarese Architecture and Urban Neighbourhoods in Singapore
      • Seminar 12: Pulau Brani Histories – Asal Pulau Brani
      • Seminar 11: Kg Kuchai Lorong 3 Geylang, from Tg Rhu and Singapore River: Kampong community, domestic architecture, and a long history
      • Seminar Ten: A People’s Theatre in the Park: Singapore’s National Theatre / Panggong Negara, 1963-1986
      • Seminar Nine: Busana: Malay Textile Traditions and the Art of Attire in Singapore and the Malay World
      • Seminar Eight: The Story of the Paya Lebar Airport Murals: A Talk by Dahlia Shamsuddin
      • Seminar Seven: A forgotten multi-ethnic settlement: Palmer Rd, Tg Malang & Kg Sambau
      • Seminar Five: Understanding Dakota Crescent: Architectural and historical perspectives
      • Transformasi Katong-Siglap – Talk & Public Seminar / Forum
      • Seminar Four: The stories behind two unique kampungs at Lorong Muallap and Lorong Teck Hock
      • Seminar Three: Standing at the Fringes: Balestier
      • Seminar Two: Kampong Histories of the Southern Islands and Clementi
      • Seminar One – Kilat Senja (6 April 2013)
      • Public Lecture: Masjid Maarof of Clyde Street/Jeddah Street, 1870-1996
  • KALLANG
  • GELAM, ROCHOR
    • Kampung Gelam & Kampung Rochor – morphological changes
    • Kampung Gelam & Kampung Rochor – photo from 1964
    • Old shops and historic businesses in Kg Gelam & Rochor
    • Jalan Kubor – Kg Glam’s cultural treasure
    • Kampung Gelam
      • Kampung Gelam 1970s Album
      • Kampung Gelam – from the Istana to Masjid Bahru (Masjid Maarof)
      • Morphological developments of Kampung Gelam 1819-1990s
      • Kampung Khaji (Bussorah Street) Ramadhan bazaar
      • Kampung Jemput (Muscat Street) Ramadhan bazaar
    • Kampung Rochor
      • KAMPUNG ROCHOR – Remembering Java Road, Palembang Road, Minto Road, Sumbawa Road
  • SUNGAI SINGAPURA – SINGAPORE RIVER
    • Kampung Melaka (Campong Malacca) and Singapore’s oldest traders’ mosque, Masjid Omar
  • KRETA AYER, TELOK AYER, TANJONG PAGAR
    • Kampung Sambau
      • Masjid Haji Muhammad Salleh & Makam Habib Noh
  • GEYLANG SERAI
    • Introduction to Geylang Serai
    • History of Geylang Serai
    • Geylang Serai’s Roles & Character
  • GEYLANG LORONGS
  • JALAN EUNOS, KAKI BUKIT
    • Old Mosque on the Hill – Masjid Alkaff Kampung Melayu 1932-1994
    • Kaki Bukit
  • KEMBANGAN, TELOK KURAU, OPERA ESTATE (SIGLAP)
  • EAST COAST SETTLEMENTS
    • Air Gemuroh
    • Kampung Bedok
  • URBAN FORM
    • From ‘Kampong’ to ‘Compound’: Retracing the forgotten connections
  • INVENTORY: ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM
    • Morphological Developments
    • Place names / Street names
    • Architectural Typology
    • Bugis and Makassarese Architecture and Urban Neighbourhoods in Singapore
  • COLLECTION FROM OUR READERS
    • Daily life
    • Old businesses of Kg Gelam
    • Old shops and historic businesses in Kg Gelam & Rochor
    • Nona Asiah of Lorong Melayu
    • The Bugis Merchant Haji Osman Daeng Passendrik Ambo’ Dalle’ bin Haji Ali
    • The Bugis Merchant Haji Mohamad Said La Chongkeng bin Daeng Patompo’
  • OLD SINGAPURA
    • Horses in Singapore, Part I — 14th century Singapura’s winged horse-and-rider statuette
  • REFERENCES
    • Books
    • Newspaper Articles
  • SHARE YOUR STORIES!
  • CULTURE & ARTS
    • FOM Hari Raya 2014
      • FOM FEATURE: Celebrating Hari Raya Aidilfitri in Singapore
      • FOM Feature: More than just culture: Ramadan Bazaars in Bussorah Street and Geylang Serai in urban historical perspective
      • FOM FEATURE: Hari Raya Songs First Recorded in the 1940s
      • FOM FEATURE: Hari Raya Puasa on the Eve of World War II in Malaya
      • FOM FEATURE: Hari Raya Quatrain
      • FOM FEATURE: Popular Malay Jewellery in the 1950s and 1960s
      • FOM FEATURE: Dressing Up for Hari Raya
    • “Fashion for the Merdeka era?” – a short BH feature on Malay traditional dress from 1957
    • ‘Slow food before it became Slow Food – THE STORY OF RENDANG’ by Khir Johari
    • Cock-fighting: Culture and Colonialism in Singapura and Southeast Asia, 14th to 19th centuries.
  • SINGAPORE ICONS AND SYMBOLS
    • Dr Goh Keng Swee and the secret negotiations for Singapore’s secession from Malaysia in 1965 – and his economic plan
    • Singapore’s tourism documentaries, 1930s and 1950s
    • Merdeka Bridge – Singapore’s Independence Bridge and its Lions of 1956
    • MERDEKA!!! Singapore’s Merdeka Talks of 1956,1957, and 1958, and Merdeka proclamations before 1965
    • A Google Doodle of Zubir Said, The “Majulah Singapura” Composer
  • MAPPING SINGAPORE
    • Studying and mapping place histories through streets in Singapore – ST graphic article 2019
  • Pulau Ubin Lives – Documentation & Report
    • Pulau Ubin Lives – Venice Architectural Biennale 2020
    • Pulau Ubin Lives Symposium Apr 18 2018
    • Studio DO
  • CAMPONG WARDS: Forgotten Urban Neighbourhoods in Singapore
    • Campong Bencoolen, Campong Malacca, and other forgotten neighbourhoods
    • Compound houses and compound shophouses
    • Lorongs in Kampung Bengkulu: The forgotten alleys of history
    • Kampong Serani: Some Notes on the Eurasian Community in Town
    • Kampong Melaka and the other story of Singapore River
    • Chinese beyond Chinatown: Kampong Melaka
    • The multiple sites of the Chulia community
    • Malays beyond Kg Gelam: Kg Penghulu Kesang
    • Kampong Bengkulu’s Jewish Mahalla and Japan Town
    • Kampong Dhoby, Queen Street: A lost North Indian quarter
  • Early Malay Associations and Clubs
    • The three oldest Malay clubs in nineteenth-century Singapore
    • Malay clubs bearing the term ‘Peranakan’
    • Clubs with the term Malay/’Melayu’ and ‘Jawa’/Java/Javanese

Tinder are a great casual intercourse app if you’re at least an 8/10, under 25, and also great images

Jan 07, 2022 ~ Leave a Comment ~ Written by Rossman Ithnain

Tinder are a great casual intercourse app if you’re at least an 8/10, under 25, and also great images

    Top-notch the consumers a€“ big variability during the top-notch consumers because there are plenty volume of the people a€“ 50,000,000+ consumers easier connecting a€“ unless you’re quite attractive chap it’ll be difficult, the majority of women would okay place a€“ Pretty international at this point but most common in English speaking region standing a€“ just the thing for attractive gents and ladies who desire an ego improve free trial offer a€“ certainly, give it a try by clicking on the switch below

We all know about Tinder as well as justification. They will have a huge number of consumers and just have become the first name anyone think of in terms of fantastic places for finding everyday hookups in their place. If you are between 18 and 30 you have got probably currently tried they therefore the the greater part of you performedna€™t posses an excellent experiences.

Among the less popular reasons for having Tinder is the fact that the the greater part of attention regarding software goes toward a really little portion of those deploying it. This might be great if you’re already an 8/10 or better for the styles division (you is going to do well on Tinder) however for people who are not part-time brands Tinder may be an extremely irritating enjoy.

We’d to add it throughout the checklist because it can become so excellent for a small subset men and women it takes some perform and capacity to attract the exact opposite intercourse to reach your goals.

BBW’s while the people that are looking a one nights stay with these people have to have a look at BBW fit

From the big sexual online dating programs available to you it may be truly hard as a huge and beautiful girl or one which likes all of them. With such a giant emphasis put on appearances a female would youn’t have similar find given that other babes may face lots of rejection or complaints when using the same relationship apps. This often brings about BBW entirely preventing the very popular online dating applications and seeking for any other options. After that, the inventors that happen to be seeking all of them regarding the normal software strikeout and disappear nicely. It really is a vicious pattern!

This issue try fixed attractively by BBW fit spouse . They usually have finished an excellent tasks assembling a community this is certainly besthookupwebsites.org/christiancupid-review entirely single BBW and guys that find them breathtaking. Without the worries that can come together with a normal dating website it becomes very simple for both women and men to actually meet!

It isn’t overstating they while I declare that this is the web site that each and every BBW, or chap who wants to meet them, has to take to initially. End throwing away all of your time and money in the basic hookup software if you know what you want.

Exactly how the hookup website and app critiques efforts

We take the entire process of assessing different hookup programs and internet most severely. To provide you with the most useful records out there, we fork out a lot of time and money to give every option a chance. Our typical review process happens the following:

  1. We total an entire web site examination in search of such a thing questionable or unusual
  2. We signup for both the free (if offered) and compensated forms of this internet and programs
  3. We assess what can be done with every type of this site
  4. We submit at the least 50 messages to several people of various amounts of appeal
  5. We evaluate the feedback we have and recognize something a computer-generated impulse and what originates from genuine folk
  6. We try to put up real schedules making use of the genuine women that answer

Comments

comments

Posted in Uncategorized
Twitter • Facebook • Delicious • StumbleUpon • E-mail
←
→

No Comments Yet

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Free Hit Counter
Free Hit Counter

About Us

A collection of stories and shared memories as a chronicle of Singapura.

A compilation of images, maps, drawings, accounts, and descriptions which, when interwoven, shed light on the rich tapestry of events in the lives of Singaporeans.

Our stories, Singapura stories.

Share with us your stories, email to singapurastories@gmail.com (click here).

Contributors and Collaborators
Alfian Sa’at
Azlan Mohamed Said
Dahlia Shamsuddin
Daeng Paliweng
Faizah Jamal
Hadijah Rahmat
Helmie Sufie Jailani
Imran bin Tajudeen
Julina Khusaini
Khir Johari
Mohamed Effendy
Rossman Ithnain
Zuul Aziiz

Administrator:
Khairul Ariffin bin Sharifuddeen

Past administrators:

Shaziran Shahabdeen
Yazid Ninsalam
Khadijah Rajali

Flickr Photos

Archives

  • June 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • July 2018
  • April 2018
  • January 2018
  • October 2017
  • August 2017
  • January 2017
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • March 2016
  • December 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • March 2014
  • January 2014
  • April 2013

Categories

  • Collection from our readers
    • Old businesses of Kg Gelam
  • Compound houses
  • CULTURE & ARTS
    • FOM Hari Raya 2014
  • Events
    • Past Events
    • Upcoming Events
  • Gelam-Rochor-Kallang
    • Kampung Gelam
      • Jalan Kubor
      • Kampung Intan
      • Kg Jemput – bazaar in front of Sultan Mosque
    • Kampung Kallang
    • Kampung Rochor
  • Inventory: Architecture and Urbanism
    • Architectural Typology
    • Morphological Developments
    • Place names / Street names
  • Jalan Eunos Malay Settlement / Kaki Bukit
  • Jalan Kubor Cemetery
  • Kampung in rural areas
  • Northeastern Islands
  • Old Singapura: Bukit Larangan
  • Pioneers
  • Rumah Limas
  • SINGAPORE ICONS AND SYMBOLS
  • Southern Islands
    • Pulau Sudong
  • Tanjong Pagar-Bukit Pasoh-Telok Ayer-Singapore River
    • Kampung Sambau
  • Tanjong Singapura
  • Uncategorized

Pure Line Pro theme by Theme4Press  •  Powered by WordPress Singapura Stories  Cerita kita, Cerita Singapura

Top