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ChrSan24

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Jul 13, 2002, 2:12:26 PM7/13/02
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what do "iblith" and "jaluk" translate to?

Kish

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Jul 13, 2002, 3:01:19 PM7/13/02
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ChrSan24 wrote:
>
> what do "iblith" and "jaluk" translate to?

"Filth" and "Male."

http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Labyrinth/5637/Languagesearch.html

Rune Christensen

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Jul 13, 2002, 4:36:04 PM7/13/02
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"Kish" <Kis...@pacbell.net> skrev i en meddelelse
news:3D3078B9...@pacbell.net...

It's scary what kind of information you can find on the internet
these days... I bet the author is perfectly bilingual in Drow and
English, and that no-one in his gaming group wants to sit next to
him when they game. :-)

Rune Christensen


Murphy TP

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Jul 26, 2002, 12:25:45 AM7/26/02
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I belive "iblith" mean ofal, and is used by drow to refer to non-drow.


Tom

Jan

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Aug 5, 2002, 3:32:51 PM8/5/02
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murp...@aol.com (Murphy TP) wrote in message news:<20020726002545...@mb-df.aol.com>...

> I belive "iblith" mean ofal, and is used by drow to refer to non-drow.
>
>
> Tom

I read a lot of D&D stuff (Drizzt, Dragon, Sourcebooks) and it was
quite disturbing when playing the game to realise that I could
understand what the Drow were saying in their own language! I've never
even played a Drow.

Is the language well-defined like Klingon, or is it some defined words
mixed with nonsense, I wonder?

Kharsis

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Aug 5, 2002, 10:24:24 PM8/5/02
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Try the following website. It has a complete dictionary and grammer guide.

http://www2.hawaii.edu/~normandy/drowdictionary/frames/

Kharsis

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