Psion
Adventurer
arnwyn said:Oh, please let it be "crunch" and "fluff"!
So, what did you all think of "crunch" and "fluff" being sported in a Dragon ad recently?

arnwyn said:Oh, please let it be "crunch" and "fluff"!
Yeah, but at that point, it could almost be argued that Norse was only a competing dialect of the same Germanic language anyway. And Latin directly had very little impact on English, surprisingly enough.Ian the Mad said:Bah! The Vikings and their silly Old Norse, and those bloody priests and their Latin screwed up perfectly good Germanic! This Old English nonsense is just a silly corruption.
Ian the Mad said:Bah! The Vikings and their silly Old Norse, and those bloody priests and their Latin screwed up perfectly good Germanic! This Old English nonsense is just a silly corruption.
Well, yes, the various scandanavian borrowings were more of a "You got your Old Norse in my Anglo-Frisian!" "You got your Anglo-Frisian in my Old Norse!" "Two great tastes that taste great together!" case than anything else. And yes, there wasn't a lot of direct borrowing from Latin outside of religious terms, at least in the Old English period, but it's fun to blame it for everything, anyways.Joshua Dyal said:Yeah, but at that point, it could almost be argued that Norse was only a competing dialect of the same Germanic language anyway. And Latin directly had very little impact on English, surprisingly enough.![]()
Gaaaahhhh! I was even going to make mention of that in my post: that those words were creeping into Dragon magazine advertisements. My first thought: "This advertisement is meaningless. Write in proper English, bozo."Psion said:So, what did you all think of "crunch" and "fluff" being sported in a Dragon ad recently?![]()
Followed by the inevitable "boot 'em" advice.Ferox4 said:problematic players
how many of these must we endure?
Mystic_23 said:Hey, hey! Watch it with badmouthing the Vikings. Unless you WANT us to raid and pillage!