Difference between revisions of "Talk:Adventurer Roleplaying"

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(Adventurer origin - nobility stripped and questioned?)
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Hmm... does that mean, it might be possible in the future for nobility questioning... not only chop someone down from their lordships/etc.. but dump them all the way down to peasantry? (thus everyone killable?)
 
Hmm... does that mean, it might be possible in the future for nobility questioning... not only chop someone down from their lordships/etc.. but dump them all the way down to peasantry? (thus everyone killable?)
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== RP Treatment of conversion from Adventurer to Nobility ==
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Question - when an adventurer gets the recommendations, and becomes a noble.. how should he or she treat her time as a commoner?  And-or should they ever mention their recommendation process which made them a noble anyway?  ie: hide it, be embarrassed about it, or it's as if the "A Knight's Tale" movie, and be proud that they rose up to become a true noble, and due to their "low station at the start" they're proud to be more than what they once were? -- --[[User:Faith|Faith]] 20:59, 20 January 2012 (CET)

Revision as of 21:59, 20 January 2012

Elated?

elate |əˌleɪt| |iˌleɪt| 
verb [ trans. ] [usu. as adj. ] ( elated)  
make (someone) ecstatically happy : I felt elated at beating Dennis. 
adjective, archaic: in high spirits; exultant or proud : the ladies returned with elate and animated faces.

Is this really what is meant in the phrase, "they can't even talk in a properly elated language"? --Anaris 03:49, 22 February 2007 (CET)

Mayhap the writer was referring to "elevated" language? Elenar 04:11, 22 February 2007 (CET)

Adventurer origin - nobility stripped and questioned?

Hmm... does that mean, it might be possible in the future for nobility questioning... not only chop someone down from their lordships/etc.. but dump them all the way down to peasantry? (thus everyone killable?)

RP Treatment of conversion from Adventurer to Nobility

Question - when an adventurer gets the recommendations, and becomes a noble.. how should he or she treat her time as a commoner? And-or should they ever mention their recommendation process which made them a noble anyway? ie: hide it, be embarrassed about it, or it's as if the "A Knight's Tale" movie, and be proud that they rose up to become a true noble, and due to their "low station at the start" they're proud to be more than what they once were? -- --Faith 20:59, 20 January 2012 (CET)