@BLAIMGame@JaaayTooo And Chris Packham - the outspoken vegetarian who just resigned from the RSPCA because they were incorrectly certifying slaughter houses as 'ethical' - isn't against that?
@TheGriftReport@LBC Yeah, why would anybody want to stop weirdos following girls with short dresses around without consent at night? It's obviously the fuckwit time wasters they're after.
@TheTrueborn@Crossboner2200@Mud_and_Blood@Somerandomdips1 "It's in the woods by the river". What is?
A 'run' doesn't refer to a river that 'runs' past.
Winter is a season, whilst a fell is an area of open upland.
They're not bad names, they're just words put together that don't follow historical conventions.
@Crossboner2200@Mud_and_Blood@Somerandomdips1 You're focusing on the words and not the issue - why put particular words together. Newcastle and Portsmouth aren't random words thrown together. There's logic behind their names.
'Winter' is a season, 'fell' is high open land. It doesn't make sense.
@Crossboner2200@Mud_and_Blood@Somerandomdips1 It's not. Riverwood? A river, a wood. Where's the settlement? There is not one place in the UK, be it in English or a Celtic language, that resembles the name 'Riverwood'. So no, it literally isn't.
@TheTrueborn@Crossboner2200@Mud_and_Blood@Somerandomdips1 Thank you for informing me that Constantinople is named after Constantine... One thing the fantasy genre lacks is patronising fans. However, the fantasy names mentioned aren't using proper naming conventions.
@Crossboner2200@Mud_and_Blood@Somerandomdips1 I think the point he's making is that they're not created using proper naming conventions that cultures use. They're just random words put together.
@nufcpb - Become media personality
- Things go good
- Make money
- Do something stupid
- Lose money
- Things go bad
- Lose more money
- Become right-wing
A story older than time itself.
@bmassam@archer_rs Hmm, there's little-to-no evidence to prove that the 'real Britons' migrated en masse anywhere. The vast majority would have assimilated to become Anglo-Saxon, which is supported by most research. Cerdic, the name of the first King of Wessex, was a Brittonic name.
@anon_opin Tell me you're a 20-something uni graduate lefty, who grew up in a detached house worth 400k+ somewhere in the arse end of nowhere, without telling me.