Yaarel
🇮🇱 🇺🇦 He-Mage
Heh, you two do argue ... expansively.Huh, it seems Max blocked me. Never thought I'd see the day.
Heh, you two do argue ... expansively.Huh, it seems Max blocked me. Never thought I'd see the day.
Not................relevant. They can use the "ra" sound to mean goonygoogoo for all that it matters(it doesn't), when they use it in spellcasting it is ALSO a mystical power sound that when combined with the others results in sleep.I am saying, they are not speaking the same language. They dont all use the "sound" "ra" in the same way with the same meaning. Some dont have the phonemes "r" or "a" at all. For example, in Norwegian jo means one thing, and in English the similar sound yo means something else.
They can change it, yes. They won't, though, because I doubt that even 1% of players are having the same issues you are having here.D&D can change the rules for 2024. Then, the "Verbal component" is the Wizard describing the spell effect in any language of the Wizards choice, with the proper inner intention.
Not relevant. The mystic elements there are Bu, which is also in BU, BUtt, hubBUb, etc. The entire word has no need to be mystical per RAW. Only sounds within the word. In virtually any language you can come up with a BU sound, and if you can't, well then that wizard will need to make up a nonsense word with BU in it.So for example, in the spell from Shakespeare, "Bubble, bubble, toil and trouble," the witches are performing a ritual that literally brews turmoil. This spell is in the English language.
Threads will be better off for it. I hated to do it since I have a personal belief in not blocking folks.Heh, you two do argue ... expansively.
I dont mean to combine all three books into one book.But Combining all three books into one is too much. And I think there is value in having the monster section separated from the player book.
What you are describing is called an "agglutinative language". It squishes together many word elements (morphemes) to form a complex word for various semantic and grammatical meanings. The meaning of the complex word can be a lengthy phrase in other languages.The mystic elements there are Bu, which is also in BU, BUtt, hubBUb, etc.
The Raw only says: "Verbal" is "specific" "sounds".You still need to take verbal RAW into account instead of continuing to ignore it.
No I'm not. I'm describing the language using a normal word for that language, but which includes the mystic syllable, which along with the other syllables and perhaps the other two components, trigger magic. The sentence could be, "The button is loose." with the mystic syllables being "he," "bu," and "oo." The sounds don't have to be put together to form a complex word or any word. Or they can be a single word that isn't in the caster's language, "Hebuoo." as a "magical word."What you are describing is called an "agglutinative language". It squishes together many word elements (morphemes) to form a complex word for various semantic and grammatical meanings. The meaning of the complex word can be a lengthy phrase in other languages.
Which, AGAIN, isn't relevant at all to what I'm saying. I don't understand why you keep trying to shove me into something that I'm not saying and am nowhere near. There can be a shared language, unshared language or even no language and just have sounds.But there is no shared language in the first place.
Again, NOT RELEVANT.There is no word element "BU" that all caster use and understand in common for the same purpose for the same spell.
By RAW they can. They may not know what spell is being cast, but they will in fact recognize the mystical sounds when they hear them and know a spell is being cast. If you option in the Xanathar's rule, they can even make an arcana check to know what spell is being cast as it is being cast, which applies even if the caster and arcana user share no languages.The casters cant understand each other.
But not ones specific to a given spell.The Raw only says: "Verbal" is "specific" "sounds".
(All sounds have pitch and resonance.)
Any sound =/= specific sound and you are arguing that the caster can literally use any sound of any pitch he wants to cast his "personal" spell. That's not RAW.The only RAW is that the caster makes a "sound", whether quiet or loud. Any "sound".
What you are calling a "mystical syllable" (bu) is a "morpheme". It is a language. This morpheme would be meaningful information about a specific spell and its effect.No I'm not. I'm describing the language using a normal word for that language, but which includes the mystic syllable, which along with the other syllables and perhaps the other two components, trigger magic. The sentence could be, "The button is loose." with the mystic syllables being "he," "bu," and "oo." The sounds don't have to be put together to form a complex word or any word. Or they can be a single word that isn't in the caster's language, "Hebuoo." as a "magical word."
Each caster develops ones own specific sounds. These sounds arent meaningful to anyone else. But they are meaningful to oneself.But not ones specific to a given spell.
Any sound =/= specific sound and you are arguing that the caster can literally use any sound of any pitch he wants to cast his "personal" spell. That's not RAW.