have you heard of drake-oh-mortis?
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- Dragon's Egg
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have you heard of drake-oh-mortis?
yarr he created dragons and lives in the sun acording to legend.[/i][/b]
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- Silver sorceress
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yarr, is that because it is talk like a pirate day?
If you were to juggle a lion, and a house cat, the end result would look something like a tattered chunk of red fabric. The cat would scratch anything within reach, and the lion would just eat you. The lesson to learn? Make sure you eat your spinach.
- Matrix Operator
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- Silver sorceress
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- Location: on the back of a black dragon laughing as the world dies below me
okay? i really dont get the point, but that's my problem and not yours.
If you were to juggle a lion, and a house cat, the end result would look something like a tattered chunk of red fabric. The cat would scratch anything within reach, and the lion would just eat you. The lesson to learn? Make sure you eat your spinach.
- Matrix Operator
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- Wanderer
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i havent heard of it but 'drake' could be derived from "draco" which is latin for "dragon" and being in a dragon dicussion it seems more likely.
also mortis... *thinks back to school wishing she listened more in latin class* either means life or death but will now be irrated by that so i am noting it down and will post if i work it out x
also mortis... *thinks back to school wishing she listened more in latin class* either means life or death but will now be irrated by that so i am noting it down and will post if i work it out x
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- Wanderer
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i think i cracked it!!!!!
ok... so it DID annoy me so i rooted out my old books and...
mortis means dead/death in latin e.g "libris mortis" means "the book of the undead" (d&d) and "in articulo mortis" means "at the point of death"
ok now draco... erm i already said i think it means dragon in latin and also the greeks thought draco as the repesentation of the dragon 'Ladon' that Hera set to guard the golden apples of Hesperides!!!
AM I RIGHT?!?!?! please let me know!!!
also here is another latin thing... "ab insomni non custodita Dracone"
enjoy lol
mortis means dead/death in latin e.g "libris mortis" means "the book of the undead" (d&d) and "in articulo mortis" means "at the point of death"
ok now draco... erm i already said i think it means dragon in latin and also the greeks thought draco as the repesentation of the dragon 'Ladon' that Hera set to guard the golden apples of Hesperides!!!
AM I RIGHT?!?!?! please let me know!!!
also here is another latin thing... "ab insomni non custodita Dracone"
enjoy lol
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- Wanderer
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