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[Desnind] Slang, Traditions, and Stories

Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2017 11:10 pm
by Nymph
Slang, Traditions, and Stories
Every city throughout time has developed traditions, stories, and terms to describe their culture. These terms and stories have been handing down from generation to generation through word of mouth and repeated storytelling. Over time, truth has been broken down to myth. No one can tell what is real and what is imaginary. All they know is that tradition keeps these beliefs alive.

All of the following phrases, stories, and traditions have been developed by the player base. You can find links to individual posts as seen in the quick-guide below.

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Traditions[/color]]
NameTypeDescriptionCredit
Yara meje Tradition An evening where wishes are offered up to the stars by burning "wish sand". Vega

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Stories[/color]]
NameTypeDescriptionCredit
The Foolish Sailor Folklore A relatively new story about a sea Captain that challenged the Immortals and lost. Vega

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Slang[/color]]
NameTypeDescriptionCredit
Äïwätär dabi Slang A term to describe a non-Sev'ryn's need to rush about and fail to appreciate the beauty that's right there in front of them. Vega
Biyu tawng Slang Term used to describe someone who is stubborn. Ti'niva

[Desnind] Slang, Traditions, and Stories

Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2017 11:11 pm
by Nymph
Slang Term / Phrase
Developed by Vega
Phrase: Äïwätär dabi (in Xanthea. "Rush life" in common)
Pronunciation: /Ai-wa-tar/ d-abi
Meaning: A phrase used in Desnind and by Sev'ryn throughout Idalos to refer to the need of many non-Sev'ryn to rush about and fail to appreciate the beauty that's right there in front of them. The inference is that they are so busy rushing through life that they do not stop to realise that they are living it. It is not so much a derogatory term as more like a parent watching a child charging from one toy to another and not really stopping to enjoy any of them.

[Desnind] Slang, Traditions, and Stories

Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2017 11:12 pm
by Nymph
Folklore: The Foolish Sailor
Developed by Vega
They say this tale was told by a Sev'ryn girl with red hair. Half Sev'ryn and half Biqaj, she sat around the fire pit with us on the Mwẹnz Tsäbtä and spoke this story. It tells us what we all know, that the Immortals are not to be taken for granted. Respect the land and the seas.

The tale is of a Biqaj. There are many tales that Biqaj tell betwixt the sea and the stars, many falsehoods and fables. It is of a child, maybe nine arcs old who was with his father who was working as a navigator aboard a vessel. The boy was aboard the ship with his father, helping and learning, as our children learn to hunt and survive, learn the ways of the land, so too do the Biqaj learn the ways of the sea.

One trial, just at the end of Ymiden and before the second sun hides the stars for a time the child, whose name was Joq'an, heard the captain boasting of this ship and how it could not be sunk. He was listening to the grown ups and he heard his father warn the Captain not to speak so, for it is not wise to mock the ocean any more than it is wise to underestimate the earth or woods. The Captain laughed and called him a fool, a superstitious Biqaj who did not know the wonders which could be built with science and technology. A second time, and then once more Joq'an's father warned the captain to have more reverence for nature and the Immortals who guided them but they had laughed him off.

The Captain told Joq'an's father that U'frek himself could not sink the ship, that they would freeze in Saun before they sunk at sea, for the ship was unsinkable. Child as he was, Joq'an still heard it as clearly as you hear my voice now. That night, they both prayed to U'frek for the foolish men and left them to their boasting.

Ten trials passed of work and travel and then Saun came upon them. The second sun appeared in the sky and on the first night of Saun Joq'an and his father went to sleep in their bunk. Joq'an woke up, confused and hungry. That was his overwhelming feeling, one of hunger. Yet he was not thirsty. He heard shouting and calling and he called to his father who woke in the bunk above him and he, too, was confused.

The shouting was sailors, Biqaj as it happened, who had found the boat adrift, just off the shores of Desnind.

They didn't understand what could have happened. It remains a mystery to this trial. It was fifteen trials into Saun, and they had slept all fifteen. Yet they had not died from lack of water as they should, nor from lack of food, although they were both hungry. The vessel itself was drifting and had been picked up.

There wasn't another living soul aboard with Joq'an and his father. The crew had all disappeared, except for the Captain. He was dead, sitting at the table where he spoke those words and he was covered in ice, frozen solid, even in the middle of Saun. Even in the suns of Saun, that ice around him never melted. When they gave him the death rites at sea, he went into her frozen. Maybe he still is, frozen out there under the water, regretting his words and waiting until he is forgiven.

[Desnind] Slang, Traditions, and Stories

Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2017 11:12 pm
by Nymph
Ritual/ Tradition: Yara meje
Developed by Vega
This tradition takes place the trial after the first snow of Cylus. During that trial, a number of hollowed out logs are left, standing upright around the Fire Pit. There are also buckets of what seems to be fine, coarse sand in a variety of different colours. People from all over Desnind come and put a handful of this "Ãdälcï sọ i’en" or "wish sand". As you put the sand into the hollowed out log, you should whisper a wish for the arc ahead.

That night, the logs are burnt on the Fire Pit ~ the Ãdälcï sọ i’en burns slowly and causes the flames to burn high and move through a variety of colours. It is a beautiful sight and is said to be Moseke's reminder that the light will return. No one knows what the Ãdälcï sọ i’en is made from, that is a closely guarded secret, only the higher ups in the Temple know anything.

[Desnind] Slang, Traditions, and Stories

Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2017 11:13 pm
by Nymph
Slang Term / Phrase
Slang Term: "Biyu tawng"
Meaning: It is translated directly to common as difficult oak. However, the expression is usually used when describing someone who is overly (and usually annoyingly) stubborn.
Origins: The expression was originally used by a tree singer of Desnind, he had worked with the growing of oaks and observed how they could be particularly stubborn and hard to persuade. This was then adopted by the masses of Desnind as an expression pertaining to particularly stubborn people.
Example: "Ti'niva it such a Biyu tawng. He never lets me be the first to shoot."
Created by: Ti'niva

Re: [Desnind] Slang, Traditions, and Stories

Posted: Sat Oct 20, 2018 2:51 pm
by Pegasus
All uploaded to the wiki. Archiving.