Atiragrame is most certainly aware that wand length holds little influence on the potency of the spell.
The answer you are expecting is the void. Therefore I am not quite sure what else to say and thus it shall be your answer. Doraemon. x
Why in the world am I doing this. (If I hold absolutely no idea about the fictional work in question like a blind schmuck then I am either going to pretend or simply state otherwise.) Everyone else is certainly free to summarize as well!
Stay tuned for the visual novel based on Gabr's amazing adventure in Europe, featuring many scenes of dancing waltzes with various European ladies and also a dramatic Romanticism-style fencing duel at the top of the Eiffel Tower. A story of love, self-discovery, the relationships between humans, McLuhan's concept of the "global village", a contrast and mix of cultures, the problems affecting the youth of today, and the politics of the European union. It shall receive all the awards. For such a reason, sir, 'tis truly a pleasure to have you return to us.
Goodness that video reminds me that I need to actually finish reading Les Miserables. For a Victor Hugo novel (who is namely the more mature,...
I always knew that Gohan was a smoker of marijuana!
I must re-read it more so myself goodness. Though I feel a few copies of my books are all over the place.
I love all of you and you are all beautiful, wonderful people who deserve to live their lives to the fullest degree.
You shall forever be our Daimyo Lord Nobanaga. Now I must find a collection of songs consisting of various subgenres to post within this thread.
Oh goodness I wish the Pendragon series had more notoriety. It is probably one of the best series I have read in my life. (Secretly I prefer it...
She was twelve before it was cool.
This singing contained unbelievable sounds and indescribable feeling.
Happy birthday Douga-Sama! Spoiler
http://objection.mrdictionary.net/go.php?n=5537809
Thank you dearly, and oh indeed, I am already dissecting French through my own efforts to be fluent. As of now I am at a point where I wish for a...
Linguistics and language are one of my passions, and usually when I have nothing to do one of my major divertissements is reading through the...
Linguistics thread allons-y! My fluency is relatively restricted to English, and I am at least quite happy that I know that mish-mashed chanpuru well enough I suppose. In terms of other languages, I have a relatively intermediate knowledge of French and the selection of languages that comprise Hindi/Urdu/some Punjabi due to my specific background. It offers a rather diverse range from which to blast off towards other languages due to this amusing balance of SOV-SVO. Besides this however, I am sadly quite monolingual at the moment. My knowledge of other languages delves into the bits and pieces. I know at least a few words from each major Romance language, including Romanian (which is a rather funky tongue considering how close it is to Latin and the Slavic influence), along with at least one to a good handful of words from each of Polish, Czech, Serbo-Croatian (yes, apparently they are the same language, the distinction is simply the alphabet utilised), Russian, Irish, Greek, German, Dutch (Afrikaans would be more appropriate actually), Hungarian, Finnish, a few of the Nordic languages, Arabic, Japanese, Korean, Cantonese, Mandarin, Indonesian, Swahili, and some other sorts of languages I cannot recall at the moment. Though one must keep in mind that in this extremely large list of languages I would probably not be able to hold the simplest conversation and these would be more linguistic knowledge of certain vocabulary. Out of all of these, I am, at the least, relatively familiar with one or more of the following things, depending on which language they are: a. The basic grammar, or bits and pieces of it, especially word construction b. Alphabetic/written script construction (for example, Arabic is an abjad) c. Their linguistic origins and relations I am able to write and read Russian Cyrillic, Korean Hangeul, and to a lesser extent Greek in a relatively alright manner. I hold some basic knowledge of Hiragana and Katakana, and an even more basic knowledge of kanji/hanzi/et cetera. I find this completely amusing for two reasons: one, I am fluent in none of these languages and at best could use them only to pick out words for now (which may hopefully change), and two, I know these writing systems and yet am barely aware of my own Hindu Brahmic-based one! Goodness I am a testament to silliness. At times, I am actually quite prone to inserting random foreign language words into my speech or typing. For example, the Indonesian word "bahasa", meaning language, has combined with the English onomatopoeic expression of discontent "bah" to gain the English usage/meaning whilst expressing the Indonesian word, which adds a layer of punnery since "language" is a euphemism in English itself for explicit cursing, and bahasa acts as a euphemism on that level. Metalinguistics. Out of all of this, however, I am still sadly monolingual. Though I seem to know how to say "I love you" in more than five languages or so. My interest in linguistics, however, is extremely vast and extensive, and I am more prone to knowing the mechanics and details of language structure and language relation than how to speak them per se. For example, If my recollection is correct, these two languages can quite honestly be two of the hardest due to their grammar if I recall correctly. Namely, Finnish, as was probably said before, is not in fact Nordic but is part of the Finno-Ugric family, related closely to Hungarian, Estonian, and a random collection of languages by the Urals. Its construction is nothing exactly like the Nordic Germanic languages that it neighbours, and would be a bit more of a challenge for an English speaker to pick up easily. Russian grammar is also known to be rather complicated. To give an example, if I recall correctly, Russian has six noun cases and Finnish has even more than that. But despite this I love the Finnish word for "love" and its associate inflections, especially in "I love you", because it reminds me of the name of a Star Wars planet. "Rakastan sinua."
If you play Braid backwards- Oh wait.
Thank you Llave, you have been of assistance so dearly in this time of business! I was actually planning to change both of those things for a...