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September 29th, 2004, 05:18 AM
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Brigadier General
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Re: What is the etymology of your moniker?
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narf poit chez BOOM said:
Quote:
Arakiel said:
I was actually *looking* for an avatar name...found Arakiel under a list of Fallen Angels so Arakiel I became...that was like 7 years ago... I usually have an Arakiel character in every game I play now. Heck he even has a Last name (Gazorkull)
<pauses for a schizophrenic episode>
right, im better now...
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Schizophrenia is not Multiple Personality Disorder. A person with Schizoprenia has disordered and illogical thoughts. A person with MPD effectivily displays multiple personalities in the same body.
While a person with Schizophrenia can beleive there are other personalities in their body, in MPD the personalities appear to actually exist and not just be random figments.
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Thank you Narf, I read that and I was about to clear that one up myself...
Arakiel: Just be very careful what you say on issues like that, You never know who might accidently offend.
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September 29th, 2004, 05:50 AM
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General
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Re: What is the etymology of your moniker?
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I've been told that the root of my real life first name (Tyrel) is that of the Scandinavian god of battle (Tyr). You're into mythology, is that true??
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Yes, Tyr was a norse (viking) war God, who was the general of all the Aesir's (the Gods') armies. His most famous story is the one with Fenris the Wolf, a giant monster sired by Loki (the ambiguous trickster God) and a giantess. Fenris had a sibling called Jormungund, a giant snake that circled the world with his tail in his mouth. Anyway, Fenris was growing bigger and bigger and hungrier and hungrier, and the Gods were afraid of him, so they decided to tie him up.
They tied him up, but he broke the bonds, so they tied him up again with stronger chains, but he broke those too. In the end they had some magic chain made that wold be strong enough, but this time Fenris refused to be chained up. They said it was just a test of strength and that they would untie him if he couldn't break it, but he didn't trust them and still refused. In the end they only got him to agree to being chained up by saying that one of them would put their hand into his mouth as a symbol of faith. If he failed to break the chain and they refused to untie him he could bite off that hand. Tyr volunteered for the job and lost his hand, but Fenris stayed tied up until Ragnarok, the final battle, where all bonds are undone. Fenris was mutually killed by Odin in the final battle, IIRC. I'd have to check my sources about that, it could have been Thor.
Anyway, the story with Tyr and Fenris is probably where the Italians get the phrase "In bocca al lupo" (into the mouth of the wolf) meaning "Good luck".
Othaglot & Cane readers may feel a nagging recognition at the phrase "Bocca al lupo". Chapter 23. A stylised Jormungund appears as the symbol of my Viking shipset, and in the O&C story as a symbol of the Jormungund clan. Coincidence? I think not...
Read the O&C story here. It's just a few clicks away from the shipset, too.
EDIT: Now that I think about it, "In bocca al lupo" is probably more to do with the story of Romulus and Remus, the orphaned twins who were raised by wolves and subsequently went on to found the city of Rome. Oh well.
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September 29th, 2004, 06:35 AM
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Brigadier General
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Re: What is the etymology of your moniker?
If I recall correctly...
Thor kills Jormungand but dies of the snakes poison afterwards.
Odin is killed by Fenrir, but one of Odin's Sons kills Fenrir to avenge his fathers death.
I'm pretty sure thats it, But I haven't brushed up on my Norse as much as i should
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September 29th, 2004, 06:46 AM
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Brigadier General
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Re: What is the etymology of your moniker?
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Raging Deadstar said:
...But I haven't brushed up on my Norse as much as i should
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Bad archaeologist!
__________________
I can only please one person per day, and today is not your day. And tomorrow isn't looking too good either.
Gabriella in Blood 2
Men may control the free world, but women control the boobs.
Brent in Plaver vs. Player
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September 29th, 2004, 09:11 AM
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Lieutenant Colonel
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Re: What is the etymology of your moniker?
Well, as a parting shot...
General Woundwort is the half-mad tyrranical villain in Richard Adams' book Watership Down. Nothing at all do do with SEIV, I just like the book.
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September 29th, 2004, 10:33 AM
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General
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Re: What is the etymology of your moniker?
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General Woundwort is the half-mad tyrranical villain in Richard Adams' book Watership Down.
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You mean, of course, the half-mad tyrranical villain widdle bunny wabbit in Richard Adams' book Watership Down.
Heh, I would have thought that was funny until we invited a rabbit into our home...
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September 29th, 2004, 11:14 AM
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Corporal
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Re: What is the etymology of your moniker?
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Raging Deadstar said:
Quote:
narf poit chez BOOM said:
Quote:
Arakiel said:
I was actually *looking* for an avatar name...found Arakiel under a list of Fallen Angels so Arakiel I became...that was like 7 years ago... I usually have an Arakiel character in every game I play now. Heck he even has a Last name (Gazorkull)
<pauses for a schizophrenic episode>
right, im better now...
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Schizophrenia is not Multiple Personality Disorder. A person with Schizoprenia has disordered and illogical thoughts. A person with MPD effectivily displays multiple personalities in the same body.
While a person with Schizophrenia can beleive there are other personalities in their body, in MPD the personalities appear to actually exist and not just be random figments.
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Thank you Narf, I read that and I was about to clear that one up myself...
Arakiel: Just be very careful what you say on issues like that, You never know who might accidently offend.
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You guys are kidding right? Your not ACTUALLY reading that much into every little thing typed on this goofy thread are you? If the people here are THAT sensetive to every little thing put down and have to super analyse every word typed then this may be the Last post I bother making here. Which is kinda sad cause it seemed like a nice forum about the game. Life is serious enough, I don't need BS like this on some goofy forum thread for a game.
__________________
-Arakiel
"Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit upon his hands, hoist the black flag and begin slitting throats" - Henry Louis Mencken
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September 29th, 2004, 12:30 PM
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Sergeant
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Re: What is the etymology of your moniker?
A "chronon" is a unit of time with nice science fiction ring to its name. Since I'm an historian and a fan of science fiction, I am fascinated by times past, present, and future. So it seemed a perfect fit.
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September 29th, 2004, 12:43 PM
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Brigadier General
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Re: What is the etymology of your moniker?
Quote:
Arakiel said:
You guys are kidding right? Your not ACTUALLY reading that much into every little thing typed on this goofy thread are you? If the people here are THAT sensetive to every little thing put down and have to super analyse every word typed then this may be the Last post I bother making here. Which is kinda sad cause it seemed like a nice forum about the game. Life is serious enough, I don't need BS like this on some goofy forum thread for a game.
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Put Bluntly, there are people on this forum who are Schizophrenic. I won't name them as It's their life and it shouldn't be talked about without consent. It's not us super-analysing anything, it's the fact you could be offending somebody here who has Schizophrenia.
To name one of these people: Me. I'm not offended by remarks like that but it is annoying when people inadvertently say something not true about the condition. I'm just saying be careful what you say on those kind of topics, If arguments erupt it spoils the community, and we rarely have them here.
Timstone: I noticed you edited your original message I dread to think what my favourite Dutchman said that he had to edit...
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September 29th, 2004, 01:29 PM
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Lieutenant Colonel
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Re: What is the etymology of your moniker?
Quote:
dogscoff said:
Quote:
General Woundwort is the half-mad tyrranical villain in Richard Adams' book Watership Down.
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You mean, of course, the half-mad tyrranical villain widdle bunny wabbit in Richard Adams' book Watership Down.
Heh, I would have thought that was funny until we invited a rabbit into our home...
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One quote, pal...
"I warned you! I warned you, but did you listen to me? Ohhhhh nooooo! 'Oh, it's just a harmless little bunny', isn't it? Well, it's always the same, I always warn them but do they listen to me?..."
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