Hey everybody! I'm working on a text RPG and I'd like a synonym for plume, as in plume of smoke, for when the player casts a fire spell. I want to use a word other than 'spell' because I'm not fond of it and I want something more original.
Player scorched the Wolf with a plume of fire! Player scorched the Wolf with a megapyre! Player scorched the Wolf with a jet of flame! Player scorched the Wolf with a bursting flame!
But if a megapyre is a massive heap of burning combustible material, it sounds a bit weird to say that Player scorched the Enemy with it. It sounds like the Player is throwing the Enemy into the pyre, which it isn't
I'm working on a website project and I have a paragraph containing a list of items (it would work great as a ul, but needs to stay a p) that needs to have the first letter of each item bold. I've created a function to do this:
function inserter(string, splitter, skip) {
var array = string.s...
@Cerberus I thought that the egyptian hieroglyphs were actually -newer- and derived from precursors to the phoenician script. I saw that in a diagram in Diamond's Guns Germs and Steel.
The ABC order already existed in some form about 1400 BC, in the Ugaritic script, from which our alphabet is descended. From Wikipedia:
It is unknown whether the earliest
alphabets had a defined sequence. Some
alphabets today, such as the Hanuno'o
script, are learned one letter at a
t...
@Mitch ^
@Jacob Metallification: the casters attempts to turn the victim into metal.
Summon Carnivorous Plant: the plant will eat anything within reach, including the caster. Victims may or may not survive their stay of x turns in its digestive tracts.
@Cerberus you might know how to answer a question I've had for a long time... I read a book, I think it is from the sixties, that was about a lot of things but one main part was the source of images in this proto-sinaitic alphabet, and i remember that the only real substantive (justifiable) claim was that the shape of the letter A (alpha, aleph) really did come from the image of a bull (taurus).
I'm wondering what mechanism puts a y sound into words like coupon, which presumably had none when it came into the language. French pronunciation would seem to indicate it would be pronounced kuːpɔ:n, not kjuːpɔ:n, but many people pronounce it the latter way.
Similarly, why do we have such a di...
Consider cute /kjut/. It's not like [kyu:t] is a different word. Vowel length was phonemic in Old English, but that was rather a long time ago in a foreign language.