![]() ![]() We will have to clean up vomit today.” You don’t wish for vomit. It would be like, “The dog has knocked the leftovers off the counter and ate them. ![]() I can see how it can be read that way, but it’s an acknowledgment of an inevitable turn of events rather than a threat. Wait and you will see.ĭina swore not to let any guest come to harm. We are getting closer to solving the mystery. Will 300 guests boost the Inn a lot? And will it help that so many of them will be seeing the parents portrait? No worries, we should be back on schedule with our CE, so hopefully, we will mess up less in the future. Normally something like this would be caught during the editing process, but because you are reading the first draft – and that particular scene was literally written Friday morning – this slipped through. We never want to name any alien species after an actual nation. ![]() That was unfortunate word choice coincidence on our part. It would be unrealistic if all the nicknames were of English origin.ĭid you know that there is a Yurok Tribe? Some species have nicknames in more than one language. Whoever first encounters the species, gets to name it. In cases where the names are too difficult for a human mouth to replicate, the innkeepers resort to nicknames. ![]() Some species, like the koo-ko, have easily pronounceable names and some, like the Quillonians, do not. We do it quite a bit, because the inns are international. Curious, how often do you guys use foreign language words to name an alien species? Juliana Dushegubs? Love the name, literally means soul killers/strangelers in Russian. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |