
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from France

seen from France
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from France

seen from France

seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Colombia
seen from Germany

seen from United States
Lexember 2019-3
nāsam = beautyful <- na (big) + thama (beauty)
sāmar = to get ready <- thamazu (to adorn oneself)
ku~sāmar = to prepare (an event) <- k'uo (to go) + thamazu
ku~sāmar originally meant “to get ready to go somewhere”, but then shifted in meaning to refer to the act of preparing the event. The original meaning is now more commonly expressed as “sāmar ku~kūwa” (to get ready and go).
Ku psīsit sāmar-ña. = I'm preparing the party.
Sāmar ku psīsit kūwa-ña. = I'm getting ready for the party.
Dear killing stalking fans and Antis
I’m open to talk!!!
So i’ve been seeing good points from both side of this argument and i had an idea. I want both these groups to send me questions, asks, rant whatever about why they don’t like or like killing stalking!
I promise that every last ask will be treated with the up most respect
please no “all killing stalking fan are asshole!” or “all antis are crybabys” type things. Thats not how you talk to people. i want to have a real conversation with everyone!
Magwa - Snuggles N' Cuttles
Shield of the Moon Knight
Homebrew Magic Item
A nice item for any blacksmithing minded characters out there.
Spookmas is here!
Happy Spookmas, adventures! As you go around haunting, pillaging, or extorting candy from strangers, don't forget to pack a good helmet.
Lexember 2019-9
ñūkri / ñūkra = sixty <- ñuka (hand) + -zi (animate) / -za (inanimate)
Magwa uses mixed bases for its numbers, the units are in base twelve, everything after that is alternately in base five and base twenty. The numbers are counted on the fingers of both hands in base ten, but the words for the numbers are based on the number of single hands, yielding base five, then 20 hands are counted to keep up with the base ten system.
Sixty is 5*12, that is one full hand of dozens, which is where the word ñūkra/i comes from.
Psīstun tāhu ñūkri. = There are sixty people at the party.