United-Statian movement

Joovey del Dwenam   Tue May 22, 2007 11:50 am GMT
AH! THE HISPERICA FAMINA! I could go to town on that. Irish monks
producing long, agonistic poems in which they call upon the most obscure
Latin vocabulary they can find to best their opponents. It uses Latin,
but it's in the time-honored tradition of bardic competition, marked in
Welsh by long magical poems that are intended to blind one's competitors
with their obscurity. Taliesin (see _Ystorya Taliesin_ by Patrick
Ford--see me, too, in my other life, bibliography on request) is a huge
contributor to the tradition in Welsh. There are two glorious poems in
the Hesperica collection that detail the parts of the body. They are the
Leiden Lorica and the Lorica of Laidchen. The one is a charm, meant to
"empty out" the heart of one's beloved so that she will love you and no
other man (or he will love you and no other woman. Or she will love you
and no other woman. Or he will love you and no other man. I want to
cover all bases here). They are also fabulous collections of wordlists.
I've been basing my collection of T. parts of the body on these. The
Lorica is the breastplate: you arm yourself and all the parts of you by
reciting it, calling upon the Godhead and the angels and saints to protect
you on your journey from injury and disease. The other blesses all the
parts of your beloved. No stone is left unturned (or uncovered, as the
case may be ;-)). Hurray! And that will have to be my last compulsive post of the day. Back to work!
Miguel de Cerveza   Tue May 22, 2007 10:23 pm GMT
Yes, yes, we can all rely on elbarto to lead the way in his anti-American crusade. Too bad his statian movement will fail.
Guest   Tue May 22, 2007 10:31 pm GMT
Miguel, do you speak another language besides English ?
Guest   Sun May 27, 2007 9:29 pm GMT
"That simply untrue. Again, more of your stupidity! Only TWO languages don't use "American" to refer to United States citizens. Those languages are Spanish and Portugese. As we've shown over and over, in most other languages it is customary to refer to us as Americans!"

Scratch one of those languages off, in Portuguese a citizen of the U.S is a "Americano".