Help! I need a name for a Legendary Sword of Righteous Justice!!!


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Why not make it a name that for once do not mean anything but sounds good. I was thinking:

Thall'Mahrill
Ildmazare
Tenathla'Dier

-or some thing like this...
 

Kjorf, Sword of "Just Ice" -- When wielded by any save a Paladin of true heart, the sword appears to be normal cold iron. When a Paladin of true heart takes up Kjorf, however, the sword reveals its true nature: the iron becomes cold and transparent, "bright as a diamond, cold as righteous fury, light as mercy, and clear as justice".

-- N
 

The Grackle said:
(what's goin' on ---G? yr margins are all wonky.*nevermind. it's gone now)

The Justicator. (heh :D )
Glacialedge
Bleak-biter
North-warden
Paladin-X's Gate-key (as in, he kept that country locked down w/it! Pretty tough.)
The straight path. (also tough.)

Cold words:
Chill, ice, frost, snow, rime, freeze, gelid, winter, polar, sleet, bitter, northern, Boreal.
Protector words:
Gaurd, ward, warden, defender, wall, champion, sentry, watch.



what e resistance? all?
The way it works is that the first energy type to damage you in a round sets the resistance. It lasts for one hour. If two energy types do simultaneous damage, you get to pick which one.

--G
 

Great names everybody. Thank you all so much.

I've decided to combine a couple because I think a truly legendary blade should have lots of names, especially if it's been used by different peoples through history.

So here's what I'm going with.

Vodire, the "Just Ice"; the Frost Nail; Ice Breaker.

Nifft's awesome visuals have also become a part of the story too! Especially since the arrogant Paladin NPC is going to get to the sword first. It will do a good job of foreshadowing his fall.

Gez-- I'm going to make sure that someone calls the Paladin using the blade one cold, hard bastard. In honor of your suggestion.

--G
 


Caldrhit ('cold justice' in old english), Hridcald ('snow-cold' in old english), Jafnadr ('justice' in old norse), and Véurr ('protector' in old norse) were the best I could come up with.
 

In all fairness, I should mention that the name Vodire has a meaning too.

Vodire is kind of a play on words. It's a corruption of "Voir Dire," a legal term which means "To speak the truth." It's probably old French or something . . .

--G
 


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