Difference between revisions of "Talk:Adventurer Roleplaying"
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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)