Home Actress Lisa Ray Instagram Photos and Posts – November 2020 Lisa Ray Instagram - In this time outside of time, we can dress up like it’s Diwali any day. Thanks @nainajainkolkata for these splashes of colour and delight. #Souffle love wearing your creations.

Lisa Ray Instagram – In this time outside of time, we can dress up like it’s Diwali any day. Thanks @nainajainkolkata for these splashes of colour and delight. #Souffle love wearing your creations.

Lisa Ray Instagram - In this time outside of time, we can dress up like it’s Diwali any day. Thanks @nainajainkolkata for these splashes of colour and delight. #Souffle love wearing your creations.

Lisa Ray Instagram – In this time outside of time, we can dress up like it’s Diwali any day. Thanks @nainajainkolkata for these splashes of colour and delight. #Souffle love wearing your creations. | Posted on 27/Nov/2020 23:52:37

Lisa Ray Instagram – Framed against the backdrop of the mountain known as the sleeping elephant. This was sacred healing ground, a part of the traditional territories of the Sinixt (or Lakes) and Ktunaxa (Kutenai) peoples. 

Head to mouth to toe in @wearesui a proudly Indian (south Asian) brand with a green heart. Headbands and masks are crafted from leftover fabrics making them waste free ✌️
Lisa Ray Instagram – Posted @withregram • @guardian For the first time, the Oxford English Dictionary has chosen not to name a word of the year, saying that there were too many words to sum up the events of 2020.

“Coronavirus” was one of the most frequently used nouns in the English language by March. “Pandemic” has seen usage increase by more than 57,000% this year, with “circuit breaker”, “lockdown”, “bubbles”, “face masks” and “key workers” not far behind. 

The revolution in working habits has also affected language, with both “remote” and “remotely” seeing more than 300% growth in use.

Other news events have also been reflected in language. Use of “Black Lives Matter” has surged, and the phrase “conspiracy theory”has almost doubled in usage between October 2019 and October 2020. Use of “Brexit”, however, has dropped by 80% this year.

Previous choices for word of the year from Oxford have included “climate emergency” and “post truth”. Rival dictionary Collins chose “lockdown” for its word of the year earlier this month.

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