Difference between revisions of "NotSpellingMistakes"

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(New page: This page exists to collect some notes for non-native speakers of English, who have a tendency to read certain archaic dialect words and usages as incorrect. In ''Son Of The Black Eye'', ...)
 
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In ''Son Of The Black Eye'', "whupping" is a Southern American rural dialect word - a rather rough and rude one - that means "a severe beating", either as verb or noun. It is an appropriate word for Orcs to use.
 
In ''Son Of The Black Eye'', "whupping" is a Southern American rural dialect word - a rather rough and rude one - that means "a severe beating", either as verb or noun. It is an appropriate word for Orcs to use.
  
In ''An Orcish Incursion'', "march" is ''not'' a typo for "marsh".  "The marches" is archaic English for the border country of a kingdom.
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In ''An Orcish Incursion'' and elsewhere, "march" is ''not'' a typo for "marsh".  "The marches" is archaic English for the border country of a kingdom.  The word was originally Norse "mark" and is related to the ordinary English word "mark"; it also appears as an element in the place name "the Estmark Hills" which is "the hills of the eastern border".

Revision as of 04:45, 2 September 2009

This page exists to collect some notes for non-native speakers of English, who have a tendency to read certain archaic dialect words and usages as incorrect.

In Son Of The Black Eye, the phrasing "the River Bork" is correct. Modern English usage would favor "the Bork River", but "the River Bork" is historically common and still used in fantasy literature.

In Son Of The Black Eye, "whupping" is a Southern American rural dialect word - a rather rough and rude one - that means "a severe beating", either as verb or noun. It is an appropriate word for Orcs to use.

In An Orcish Incursion and elsewhere, "march" is not a typo for "marsh". "The marches" is archaic English for the border country of a kingdom. The word was originally Norse "mark" and is related to the ordinary English word "mark"; it also appears as an element in the place name "the Estmark Hills" which is "the hills of the eastern border".