Ben W Bell
SOC-14 1K
Does anoyone around here know if there has been published the Vilani word for Eye?
Ben Bell
Ben Bell
Then I'd go for "Dakimashmagi"; seeing is the defining attribute of the eye in question. I might conflate the word a bit to give it more punch.Originally posted by Straybow:
"Seeing Eye" is actually a trade mark.
HAHAHAOriginally posted by Tanuki:
>Also is there a word for Seeing, as in Seeing Eye.
Assembling a Vilani phrasebook?
"This is my seeing eye Varger."
So what is the proper Bilanidin for:
"The All Seeing Eye" (in a temporal and literal sense)?
And the Starship Name: "Imperial Star Ship Blue Smoke"?
And last but not least, if you would, "To Protect the Commonweal."
I found the following and perusing it right now.....o: and I keep thinking I am smart, this place is turning out to be a nice reality check sometimes.
Bilanidin Resources.
Those are my webpages -- enjoy. Yes, we owe a debt to Kenji for creating the Vilani grammar.
Why, yes -- now that you mention it. I am pretty popular with the Bilanidingi guga ... do you happen to know any?I may have to defer to G. Kashkanun Anderson for the one-liners for bars... ah that didn't sound quite the way I meant it... GKA is good with turning phrases I meant.
Since I suspect Duraamgar to be some kind of archaic warrior god (I have the name derived etymologically from "blazingly bright" + "assistant/shield-bearer"), swearing an oath against it might be regarded as particularly potent -- if not as poetic as the one against Kuragan.There are also mythical names that can be expletified by attaching /kug-/ or /dam-/ onto them:
Alaaru the Swift. Damalaaru is colorful and can be satisfying.
Kuragan is a mythological Vilani god. Kugguragan is an expletive heard among traditionalists.
Duraamgar is a mythological Vilani sun god. Daamgar is a nice strong conflation.
In textbook Vilani: probably gurukarpu when the Noob is referring to himself; and gurukarshe when the Noob is being addressed by his superiors -- unless his superiors think he's a twerp, in which case it's gurukarpu from them, too.And what is Bilanidin for "Noob"?![]()
I'd love to help, but there's too much there for me to zero in on with an answer. I get the gist that you're confused about the nature of Vilani verb construction; but can you phrase your request in the form of a specific question?Thanks again and ummm, I got a question, brb......*cut, copy, paste*
aragraph:The subject pronouns are quite strange to English speakers, in that they represent only the general ... [blah, blah, blah] ... -gim: agent marker
Am confused....help?!