^^ Well said sir.The_Graff said:as an englishman i think its not so much that you're an american, but rather that you have no idea what you are talking about.
I agree with this 100%
^^ Well said sir.The_Graff said:as an englishman i think its not so much that you're an american, but rather that you have no idea what you are talking about.
Mmmmmmm, Rachel Weisz...Michael K said:And here I though this was about cute things from England (or Great-Britain).
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Uhm, Muggle is not a racial slur in the books. They even have "Muggle Studies". You're thinking of Mudblood.jprf said:Remember Lord of the Rings, the granddaddy of modern fantasy? British, not particularly cute.
And 'muggle' is actually kind of a racial slur withing the Harry Potter universe. The word itself is a tad strange (originally the books were for a very young audience), but the connotations are anything but cute.
So yeah, I join with my countrymen in asking what the hell?
Vote Thornberry 2012!Sizzle Montyjing said:IT'S NIGEL THORNBERRY!Rylot said:Going off of your avatar it's a pretty honest mistake.Sizzle Montyjing said:Maybe you've confused us with the fucking care bears or something?
How can you not find him FUCKING AWSOME!
I shall educate you.
And i believe they were mostly American inventions (i think)
Ahahaha.... aaaa, Glasgow.Aphex Demon said:I have. Woke up naked on a doorstep with a power-drill taped to my hand.TimeLord said:Britain? Cute? You obviously haven't been to Glasgow on a dark Saturday night.
Best first post ever. It's so very British.Arbi Trax said:I don't have a comment to make on this subject. I just wanted to point out that the standards of spelling, grammar and punctuation from the British contingent have been excellent so far.
Well done chaps, carry on.
Holy shit! I'm going to copyright that and make a book about the adventures of A'tl'xp'qwe'ííhk-qd'ml'p, it's gonna be a best seller!Mathak said:A'tl'xp'qwe'ííhk-qd'ml'p, now that is a REAL fantasy name!
thankyou sir.Mozza444 said:^^ Well said sir.The_Graff said:as an englishman i think its not so much that you're an american, but rather that you have no idea what you are talking about.
I agree with this 100%
yes, yes it is.irrelevant83 said:Again, it might just be the fact that I'm American.
Thats ok, it has masses of context given. But to START thinking up a story while randomly naming everything that is available for plotrelevancy "Kal'sur" ISN'T.SirBryghtside said:I generally don't care about pretentiousness - it just looks cool.
I mean, Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh Wgah'nagl fhtan?
How is that not awesome?![]()
It wasn't cute, it was condescending.irrelevant83 said:As an American, I do like British culture, especially comedy, but I can't get over their obsession with making everything cute.
I'm not even sure if cute is the right word, it's just the best word I can muster. They don't just apply cute names to things like the Japanese do, but apply cuteness and expect everyone to take it seriously. I can't get into Harry Potter, though I'm sure it's brilliantly written, just because non-magic users are referred to as Muggles. To compare, the Final Fantasy series has creatures called Moogles, but FF doesn't force us to take them seriously.
Again, it might just be the fact that I'm American. I'm used to mystical things sounding sort of Asian or Middle Eastern and putting apostrophes in random places. An ancient secret society should be called Kal'sur and the mystical weapon should be Dor'salim. So if non-magic using people in the HP universe were called Cara'sin instead of Muggles, maybe I wouldn't be posting this on the net, but as it is, Muggles is a word that forces me to accept the fact that I'm reading a book written for an 8 year old even though the later novels grow with the audience.
As it is, I hate British naming of Fantasy things. Posters should feel free to add their own grievances.
Oh why sir, we are British.The_Graff said:thankyou sir.Mozza444 said:^^ Well said sir.The_Graff said:as an englishman i think its not so much that you're an american, but rather that you have no idea what you are talking about.
I agree with this 100%
i think the only way to redeem this thread now is for us brits to start laughing at the idiocy of those poor, inbred, stupid little colonials. don't you think?
(fixed, sorry - keyboards on the blink)
So after 7 or 8 or 9 years, an 8 year old is magically an old adult now?irrelevant83 said:So if non-magic using people in the HP universe were called Cara'sin instead of Muggles, maybe I wouldn't be posting this on the net, but as it is, Muggles is a word that forces me to accept the fact that I'm reading a book written for an 8 year old even though the later novels grow with the audience.