New vocab?
Moderator: dlbpharmd
New vocab?
Is Donaldson making up new words?
I only ask, because I had the hard-back of 'Runes of the Earth' round my 'Out-laws' this weekend (they're Dutch) and my sister's brother (who is a BIG fantasy geek) recognised what I was reading...he's read all six of the previous installments, and the ONE thing he asked me was..."Was it an easy read?" (He had also read them in English)....at first I said 'Yes', then I looked at a single page of Donaldson's writing...I understand it due to context; yet if given the word alone I doubt I could give it's meaning...
...or is it just me?
I only ask, because I had the hard-back of 'Runes of the Earth' round my 'Out-laws' this weekend (they're Dutch) and my sister's brother (who is a BIG fantasy geek) recognised what I was reading...he's read all six of the previous installments, and the ONE thing he asked me was..."Was it an easy read?" (He had also read them in English)....at first I said 'Yes', then I looked at a single page of Donaldson's writing...I understand it due to context; yet if given the word alone I doubt I could give it's meaning...
...or is it just me?
- Briny the Pirate
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No, they are not made up, for the most part. Many of the terms are, however, obscure, archaic and, in some cases, obsolete.
Peruse a copy of The Oxford English Dictionary, sometimes acronymed as the OED, to get the full flavor of the language.
Peruse a copy of The Oxford English Dictionary, sometimes acronymed as the OED, to get the full flavor of the language.
If Earthpower is outlawed, only outlaws will have Earthpower.
- Briny the Pirate
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- duchess of malfi
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Re: New vocab?
Welcome to Donaldson in English.Glaive wrote:Is Donaldson making up new words?
I only ask, because I had the hard-back of 'Runes of the Earth' round my 'Out-laws' this weekend (they're Dutch) and my sister's brother (who is a BIG fantasy geek) recognised what I was reading...he's read all six of the previous installments, and the ONE thing he asked me was..."Was it an easy read?" (He had also read them in English)....at first I said 'Yes', then I looked at a single page of Donaldson's writing...I understand it due to context; yet if given the word alone I doubt I could give it's meaning...
...or is it just me?




- CovenantJr
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I haven't found a word yet that's totally made up. Some forms are uncommon, I believe (brunted, for one, which made its second appearance in RotE after a debut in The Wounded Land), but that's just from my own reading experience, and, for example, I haven't read Sir Walter Scott, who I think is part of SRD's lexicon. I have a list of a bunch of the more bizarre words used in the Chronicles online. It's at www.naples.net/~dsaddison/srdamd (I don't mean to be self-promotional, but I put the list online to be helpful for readers.)
On an aside, I also found much fewer new "SRD weird words" in RotE than in others, though there were a good number from the previous books that resurfaced.
On an aside, I also found much fewer new "SRD weird words" in RotE than in others, though there were a good number from the previous books that resurfaced.
The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.
-F. Scott Fitzgerald
Stephen R. Donaldson Ate My Dictionary
-F. Scott Fitzgerald
Stephen R. Donaldson Ate My Dictionary
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