Trope-a-Day: Which Me?
Which Me?: Averted. Since forking is common, Eldraeic has long since adopted proper naming and pronoun conventions to distinguish I-prime from me-secundus and me-tertius, and even me-tertius-beta.
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Which Me?: Averted. Since forking is common, Eldraeic has long since adopted proper naming and pronoun conventions to distinguish I-prime from me-secundus and me-tertius, and even me-tertius-beta.
Fort Petrae
“Look here. You know there are a more than a few species out there whose names we can’t hope to pronounce, even if you only count the ones that use vocal language. Such as all the amorphoids, whose vocal organs are as arbitrary as the rest of them.” “Like
Aurí Péng
If language is not correct, then what is said is not what is meant; if what is said is not what is meant, then what must be thought remains unthought; if what must be thought is not thought, then what must be done remains undone; if this remains undone, apprehension
Blackjacket's Dictionary
pennant number: The Imperial Navy’s best attempt at a general purpose identification code for ships, other means having proven inadequate. It is generally held that the true identifier of a ship is its name: that is, after all, what is written upon the hull, and with it travels the
trope-a-day
Nom de Guerre: Played straight with attributive names (see: Overly Long Name), with particular reference to the use of a field-name and/or a foe-name, which are literal noms de guerre.