Subject: Wow...
Author:
Posted on: 2013-12-11 21:16:00 UTC
Sorry to hear about that, but I'm glad that you were able to rise above it.
BTW: Please be more careful not to confuse "its" and "it's."
Subject: Wow...
Author:
Posted on: 2013-12-11 21:16:00 UTC
Sorry to hear about that, but I'm glad that you were able to rise above it.
BTW: Please be more careful not to confuse "its" and "it's."
Hello, PPC!
Given that there have been quite a few new people since this question was first posed, I want to ask the entire Board: What is the story behind your username? (I originally wanted to ask because certain oldbies' usernames intrigued me, but alas! as I was typing this, I decided to take a closer look at the original thread, and guess what I should find!)
Since there has been a thread on this very topic before (hence why I've called this "Act II"), and that some Boarders have explained their usernames elsewhere, please feel free to link back to that post if you're one of those people and do not care to retype your story.
That said, I'll ask again: what's the story behind your username?
---------------
Of course, since I asked, I should begin with the story of my username. It traces back to neopets.com; when I first created my account, I did not want to use my usual username. At the time, I wanted my username to reflect on my Christian faith. Though sonofgod would make sense for reasons that might not be so obvious, it just would not do for reasons that should be obvious. So I decided to change it to sonofheaven.
The number is of no significance; it just so happened that someone had already taken the handle sonofheaven, so Neopets recommended some alternates. Thus my username became sonofheaven176, and it is now one of three handles I go by on the Internet.
However, with seven being a favorite number of mine (an oddity, since the sevens were one of my weakest times tables!), it is quite a happy coincidence that the digital sum of 176 is 14, which is twice seven!
It's a really fascinating story, I was 14 and I was trying to think up the perfect username, so of course I came up with 'Beauty In Disguise'. After a while I started to think it was a bit silly, and I was also sick of typing it out, so I shortened it to BeautyID. Then people started calling me BiD, which someone said made them think of dog food... so there's that.
I honestly don't remember. I think I was browsing the Pit and found a passable author who's name was something like thisblueeyeddemon or something. Yeah, I'm a copycat, but it's been years since I chose that as my mostly default online name so, why feel bad?
Thanks. I don't usually make mistakes like that.
It is, simply, my own real name. When I first made my way onto the internet, unsupervised, I couldn't think of a username to introduce myself by on the Board, so I just gave my real name.
I've got variations around the internet, but nothing very extreme.
I already answered this back in the other thread. This time around, I've brought you the quote that first put the name in my head. It is from "Gates of Fire" by Steven Pressfield:
“Answer this, Alexandros. When our countrymen triumph in battle, what is it that defeats the foe?”
The boy responded in the terse Spartan style, “Our steel and our skill.”
“These, yes,” Dienekes corrected him gently, “but something more. It is that.” His gesture led up the slope to the image of Phobos. Fear. Their own fear defeats our enemies. “Now answer. What is the source of fear?” When Alexandros’ reply faltered, Dienekes reached with his hand and touched his own chest and shoulder. “Fear arises from this: the flesh. This,” he declared, “is the factory of fear.”
I'd recommend the book, if you haven't read it. It is quite good.
-Phobos
(If there was one, I don't remember.)
Barid comes from Barid Bel Medar who is a character from the Wheel of Time series. He is better known as the Forsaken/Chosen Demandred. He was the most mysterious of the lot and, unsurprisingly, my favorite. So, I stole his original name for my first World of Warcraft character. When, eventually, I joined the PPC, I used his name as my own because I didn't really have any other name online at that point.
-Phobos
My surname can be directly translated to Crimson, or Vermilion, both of which are pretty much "bright red", while my given name: 翾, can be translated as "flight".
I'm guessing...is it Hong Xuan?
Mine translates to Thousand Wisdom, but I never thought of making it my Board name. Plus, it'll sound too arrogant anyway. :)
Ssssssoooo, where do you come from?
~Autumn
Think "ruling dynasty of Ming China" than the colour.
Australia, although my family comes from south of the Yangtze.
Hong Wu? I'm not too sure about what you said there, the "ruling dynasty of Ming China", considering the Ming Dynasty is a dynasty itself...
And so, I did a little research on the web, found out Emperor "Hong Wu" ruled for a period of time. My knowledge on the history of China dating before the Qing dynasty is very limited. Which means my entire knowledge of the history of China is very limited. I'm generally more familiar with the Qing Dynasty, the 1911 Revolution, the Cultural Revolution, and its aftermath.
~Autumn
My username came about after I decided I wanted something relatively unique to use on message boards and so on. I tend to use it and a variant (steampunk_pretzel) as usernames, but as an online nickname/handle, I usually go with 'Owl', as I've always loved owls, particularly barn owls. Not the most epic of stories, but that's how it goes. Funnily enough, I can't stand most pretzels; the yeasty taste throws me right off.
Originally I was on this community with basically my real name, but I changed it up for security stuff. Basically, I try to keep all my online stuff separate from each other and there was a lot of overlap building up.
I was very much Hermione when I was a little kid - brown haired, slightly arrogant bookworm with good intentions. Honestly, I'm the same way now, but without the straight A's. But obviously just Hermione would be taken, and it felt incomplete anyway. So my Star Trek obsession filled in the rest. I'm not really all that stoic, though.
Fun fact, though - if I'd created my online username earlier, it would probably be Dorothy something. Like the Wizard of Oz. It was my first fandom, and even now you don't want to get me started on Oz because I'll never shut up about how awesome it is and how everyone needs to read the books.(Seriously, read the books.)
Storme Hawk is the latest (and third-most permanent) name I've used on the internet.
The journey truly begins about 5 years ago, when I first started creating internet accounts and I'd go by the name of Thorn94, Thorn having been the name of the hero in a piece of creative writing that remains to this day one of two bits of work I've ever got an A* in (the other was an RE essay) despite me being overall, a mathematician. That piece of writing was also the start of me trying to write a book/piece of original fiction that is still in work today (see Agent Apollo and my permission piece for proof). 94, because well it's year I was born in.
From there I shortened it to Thorn shortly before expanding it to Thorne, something I still use today on a couple of sites (Pokemon Online being the most used).
When I got Steam and hence worked my way into the gaming community I wanted a new username, and Pulse Eagle was born, birds of prey have always been a fascination of mine and I'd recent begun playing Warhammer 40k as the T'au, their basic weapon being a Pulse Rifle. So there are probably still records on TF2, Dawn of War, BF1942 and a small collection of other games of Pulse Eagle. After about a year I liked the structure of my name but agreed with my best friend that it didn't quite sound right (which sounds weird but we both agreed that it could be better), Whilst trying to come up with a new name I went back to using Thorne on Steam and continuing to use Pulse Eagle elsewhere. I came up with Hawk pretty quickly, following the bird of prey theme and realizing that Owl just wouldn't fit and Hawks are my third favorite type of bird (Eagle's being second). The first part of my name I wanted to be something fast, so I tried various things before I thought of Lightning and from there Storm. Why did I want it to be something fast? because I wanted my name to be a literal description of me, especially in strategy and FPS games, I hit hard, hit fast and get the **** out of there before anyone can realize what hit them, so I needed my name to be quick, strong and potentially deadly something both a Storm and a Hawk can be.
I added the 'e' to Storm shortly after I got to Uni, having joined the uni's gaming society I obviously started to play games with them both inside and outside the club hours, however if you look on Steam for StormHawk, well let's say there's a lot of results and even having a picture of Genghis Khan as your image (long story) doesn't help. However, look up StormeHawk and there's one hell of a lot less people who share the name.
BTW, I did not intentionally name myself after a children's cartoon series called Storm-Hawks that I watched as a kid, I only realized it afterwards (although it may be another reason why I added the 'e')
Storme Hawk
the guy who probably wrote WAY too much, but hey.
I just wrote down a list of possible names and picked my favorite, which happened to be Legacy.
Jesus is Lord. :)
... by a Danish band called Sort Sol, who are very well known here, but not in the rest of the world. I couldn't even find it on Youtube or find the lyrics.
Anyway, the song doesn't have any special meaning for me, but it's a nice upbeat song with some cool lyrics and I started using it as my username in various places, because it was always free. So when I joined the PPC it was the natural choice.
But I forgot to continue and now it's just a dormant idea.
Ok, maybe not so long time ago (like, four years) I was obsessed with the meaning of the Phoenix animal, a bird that rises from the ashes of it's old-self.
I was pretty badly bullied, so I liked to imagine myself as a Phoenix risen from my constantly kicked around old self. Of course, I was also ten so I misspelled it on my original ff.net user "A Pheonix Rises Inside of ME" (caps included) where I then posted a really, really bad series of House fics. I wrote one good poem which I then ruined by writing subsequent chapters. Those were then deleted into oblivion, after thankfully not having been read by anyone. Now I have an eclectic collection of Sherlock fics and omegle RPs posted.
Sorry to hear about that, but I'm glad that you were able to rise above it.
BTW: Please be more careful not to confuse "its" and "it's."
When I first came to the board I was unsure how much I wanted people who knew me by my other two net handles to be able to trace me to sporkings. Because I used to worry about stuff like that. Also because I used to think that I'd get permission in three months and then spork all the things... which, due to my course schedule and the fact that I now know that my usual writing style is quite different from the usual PPC antics (hooray for self-awareness!) didn't exactly happen.
Long story short, I'd been reading fairy tales for work on some original fiction of mine, and the last one I'd read and seen analyzed was the one where the little sister has to save all seven (sometimes nine, but I like alliteration) of her brothers who were turned into swans.
Also, Seven Swans a swimming... it will get quite confusing if we get anyone named Sixgeese in the future.
It is my name, although I changed my last name slightly.
So your actual first name is "Kitty"?
...here, so I won't repeat that. Instead, I might as well put in some more detail!
I have to assume I pulled the two component words - 'huine' and 'soron' - from the end of The Silmarillion, since the name predates my possession of The History of Middle-earth and my knowledge of the awesome Ardalambion. 'Soron/thoron' would definitely be in there - it's part of the name of the Lord of Eagles - but I don't know where 'huine' is in Silm. Rather distressingly, Ardalambion suggests that the term was associated with Sauron's coming to Numenor - so that's fun.
Interestingly, the alternate form of 'huine' is 'fuine', which is apparently Telerin rather than Noldorin Quenya. The older form of 'soron' is 'thoron' (this change was resisted by Feanor). So it's just as valid to use the form 'Fuinethoron' - though I don't think it's as nice.
(As to what the Telerin for 'eagle' would be - I'm not that good of an etymologist, but Ardalambion suggests 'Thoron' may well be the Primitive Eldarin for 'eagle', so this suggests it might be 'foron' - which gives 'Fuineforon', which is just embarassing)
hS (or fTh, or fF... let's stick with hS)
Oh, that's right--I've spent so long with Tolkien's languages that I actually understand what you're talking about. I don't know whether to headdesk or grin proudly.
Although I agree with the Irish Samurai (okay, what exactly do I nickname him...hm)--Mortic's 'Hunnysoron' works fairly well--
Oh dear. Remember that story I was writing for the Badfic Game before I ran out of time and energy and so on? The one with Agent hS as a villain? Well...my brain may have just more or less guaranteed that someone will call him 'Hunnysoron' at some point.
...behold my writing process:
1. Crazy idea acquired!
2. Keep it? Y/N-->Y!
3. Profit! Write!
Very logical, huh?
~DF
...I think that Mortic's 'Hunnysoron' has more chance of sticking than any of those others :)
My name? Oh glod. *runs fingers through hair* I have no idea why I chose this name out of others. But I can give you a vague idea of how I pieced together "Autumn68".
1)"Autumn" Weeeeeeeeeeell, autumn's my favourite season, and it also sounds good as a name. Completely random pick, other than that.
2)"" The underscore serves as division between "Autumn" and "68". Thought it looks better than "Autumn68"
2)"68" 68 is derived from 628, a number that means quite a lot to me. 628 is not only the date of my mum's birthday (28 June), but it also means something about luck in Cantonese (Chinese dialect). However, I thought "Autumn_628" sounded too long, so I chose the two numbers than means most to me: "6", my favourite number, and "8", the Chinese's lucky number.
So there you have it; how I picked my name.
~Autumn
Given your reasoning behind the number, it looks like you are Chinese. Am I right?
But where I come from, we speak heavily accented (if not, broken) English all the time. I do speak Chinese and Chinese dialect at home, however.
~Autumn
And which type of Chinese do you speak? I'm guessing Cantonese, since that's the dialect you mentioned in your post.
Um...for the Chinese part, I don't actually speak Cantonese, though my family and my maternal grandparents do. I never seem to pick it up even when I come from a Cantonese-speaking family, though I can understand it perfectly well. Okay, we don't speak Cantonese all the time. It's more of a mixture of Cantonese, Chinese, and English. With a few Malay, Hokkien and Indian words thrown in as well. So you can see how much we butcher the languages. ;) I can speak fluent Chinese though.
For your first question, I come from Singapore, a British settlement from 1826-1963, so everyone speaks English here (some of the Chinese citizens are even brought up speaking English). At first there was only the Malay fishermen on our island, but Stanford Raffles found it and thought,"Hey! This will make a great port for trading ships!" And so, modern Singapore was founded.
Singapore then became a huge British trading post, where merchants from all over the world came here to trade. So steadily, the Chinese merchants started piling into Singapore, plus the people who escaped China during the Qing dynasty and World War II, until Singapore was mostly populated with the Chinese. Our national language is still Malay though, and even though a lot of us (like me) aren't fluent in Malay, our National Anthem is in Malay.
So...sorry for the history lesson, I didn't actually meant for it to be so long, just a brief flash on my country's history, but I got carried away, so...
Oh, and happy birthday, as I say once again!
~Autumn
...Always wondered what it looks like outside of the airport.
To clarify the above statement I've only ever been in Singapore twice, both times as a stop between England and Borneo, the first was a half hour rush to the plane, the second was a long 9 hours stuck in one terminal of the airport, and it wasn't even the entertainment one (or the one with the massive waterslide) :( . On the plus side I can now say I've been in a Hard Rock Cafe.
Storme Hawk
http://www.layoverguide.com/2012/02/singapore-layover.html/singapore-skyline
That's the "City". Technically, the entire island is a city, but that's the "financial area", where all the banks, the offices, the big, tall buildings are located, so it's the City.
Ah yes, same with the ships from the past. The ships, when on a long voyage (e.g. England to China. Or something like that.), stop at Singapore for fuel and provisions, and come down to trade. They still do, so now if you look out at the sea, you see the shore of Indonesia/Malaysia, and many, many ships. They do that with the planes now, too.
Ah...I'm guessing you were stuck in Terminal 2. Terminal 3 is much nicer, newer, shinier (ooooh), and prettier. There's a Butterfly Garden, a 5-storey slide, a cinema, lots of branded goods, indoor greenery, natural light, etc. Sometimes they'd built something fun for Christmas too. Like this year, they built Spongebob's pineapple that plays "Jingle Bells" in French once every hour. You can go into the log cabin/pineapple, redeem something from a booth outside, or take pictures.
I thought it was an improvement from last year's Angry Birds.
Ah well, enough of my rambling. Visit sometime! (if you can)
~Autumn
Wow, because, well that skyline looks pretty nice
and Dang it cos I was in Terminal 3, a few of us went into the butterfly gardens and almost bought out one of the butterfly's which was hiding on one of our daysacks. I remember the branded goods and the large amount of shops though.
May do, I'd like to go back to Borneo again, especially Mantanani Island, SCUBA diving off of there and seeing turtles was AMAZING!
Don't worry I ramble too
Storme Hawk
So, what you're saying is...
... Singapore is basically Coruscant?
hS
well...not exactly. Not as city-dense as Coruscant anyway. There are a few patches tropical rainforests here and there, and a couple of forested islets, but other than that, most places in Singapore is inhabited by people. But I guess I shouldn't have put "technically" in front of the sentence.
The beach is a park, behind the park is a highway, behind the highway are residential buildings. And the government has already reclaimed quite a lot of land, and where my house stands used to be the shore.
So you get the idea. Most of Singapore is a city. :)
~Autumn
Fasoula is a (almost) phonetic mishmash of the second set of three syllables from solfège. I chose it over my old "Matthew72" handle as I was never quite fond of the nickname-number combo. "Fasoula" is leftover from a relatively recent infatuation with and envisioned talent for music. This notion lasted for all of three months, and I have learned nothing more about music for it! But the name stuck with me, as with its sister "Doureimi" (which didn't seem quite as suitable). This is mainly due, I think, to my huge soft spot for bizarre and silly names!
My father thought my name meant Divine Queen, so I went by that meaning when I entered Tolkien phase. I translated it and changed the Queen to Lady, because I thought addressing myself as Queen was too arrogant. Erquentien just means Daugther of Sam. Sam is Erquent, One's Word, because I wasn't going to put Eruquent or something so disrespectful.
It's amazing how many people will use the name of the One constantly, despite the canonical statements that the Eldar (and Numenoreans) only spoke it on extremely rare special occasions. I guess it's because 'Iluvatar' sounds rather more impressive than 'Eru', so people assume it's the one to be avoided.
(This actually raises the question of whether 'Eru' is the actual Name, or just another way of avoiding saying it. However, given the opening of the Ainulindale reads 'There was Eru, the One, who in Arda is called Ilúvatar', I think we have to conclude that 'Eru' is the actual name)
hS
... That makes them rather similar to practising Jews, in that respect: saying the name of God (YHVH, that's Yod-Vav-Heh-Vav) is prohibited. Saying 'Elohim' (which roughly translates to God, but actually means 'gods') or writing the contration ה' (Heh) is frowned upon, so Haredi Jews say 'Elokim' and write ד' (Dalet) instead.
That said... what's the Sindarin version of your name, hS?
but aren't the letters Yod-Heh-Vav-Heh? You wrote "Yod-Vav-Heh-Vav"
Quite right, you are, but that's the best you'll get from a pointedly non-practicing agnostic like me.
/Lame Excuse
You would be correct--I'm guessing Des was a little tired when he made that post. (Mind you, I'd transliterate 'yod' a bit differently--as 'yud', which doesn't actually convey the proper sound much better, to be fair...)
Another thing is that, according to tradition, the Tetragrammaton (okay, okay, sorry, it's just, I learned that in my fancy uni course and I had to use it--okay), that is, the YHVH...well, pronouncing it properly is a very powerful thing to do. Also, the correct pronunciation has been lost. Just a bit more insight into that.
And yes, it really is called the Tetragrammaton by scholars. I swear.
~DF
As a lover of the Bible, I happen to be familiar with the term "Tetragrammaton," which comes from Greek.
...although that makes sense, seeing as I normally do my Torah study in, well, Hebrew. I actually sat next to someone reading...it must have been the New Testament...on the bus, and was kind of weirded out by the fact that it was *entirely in English*.
...lookit me, I'm *sheltered*.
/walks off laughing hysterically/
(But seriously, I'm so used to seeing the Hebrew and English side-by-side that a full-English Bible of any sort looks strange to me. It's kind of amusing, actually...at least, to me it is.)
~DF
Unless I am mistaken, you're part Canadian.
*looks through the posts in "The World of PPC"*
There it is: you're American, just born in Canada! So, how long have you been living in Israel that an English Bible seems odd to you?
Really, I do. Mostly because it's a wee bit mistaken, and the mistakes are amusing me. This is not your fault at all, though--you don't have the background knowledge, which I shall now clarify...
Basically, yes, I'm from those three countries. However, um, America's actually the country I've spent the least amount of time in--I lived there for all of two years, right before moving to Canada. So I was born in Canada, lived in Israel for just under a decade, moved to America for two years, and have now been in Canada for approximately a decade. And I spent the last year in Israel, which was awesome.
On the other hand...the Bible thing isn't actually related to living in Israel. My encounters with Bible (using that as a simplifying term, since otherwise I'm going into Torah, Tanach, and half a dozen other things--at least if I say 'Bible', everyone knows what I mean...*refrains from going on about why a Bible is called a Bible*) when I lived there were more in the form of children's versions of some of the stories, until last year...okay, it's slightly connected. Most of the Bibles I saw last year were purely in Hebrew, except for the one I brought with me (it was recommended for the program I did) and the ones that the other girls from abroad brought with them.
Mostly, however, it's just that the Jewish Day Schools I've attended in Canada have taught any Bible--oh, blast it, Tanach--classes in Hebrew. All my textbooks for those classes were pure Hebrew; I didn't even own a purely English translation until it was required for a class I took in high school (at home we have it with the Hebrew and English side by side). So, you see, it's not that I've been living in Israel so long that an English Bible seems odd to me--it's that I didn't have a purely English edition at home until, oh, grade 10 or 11 (or maybe 9, I don't know), and that every Tanach class I ever took in school was taught in Hebrew and with a Hebrew text. So I'm just much more used to seeing only the Hebrew, or to seeing the Hebrew and the English side by side.
And that's why it was really weird for me to glance over at what that woman on the bus was reading and find that not only was it about Jesus--she was reading one of the gospels, I think--it was also completely in English. And I caught myself looking around for the Hebrew before realizing that while I'm pretty sure the original is in Aramaic or Greek or another language that isn't coming to mind right now, it certainly wouldn't be common practice to put it in. And I don't think I'd ever actually considered that before--I mean, you hear about people using the King James translation, or something, and I used to see Gideon bibles in hotel rooms sometimes, but...I don't think I had really properly considered it properly before.
And on that note, I really hope you don't mind getting long answers, because that happens rather a lot when people talk to me--especially if they get me talking about my own experiences or about something else that I really care about and/or know a lot about. So...yes. Hope this clears things up...and, uh, get used to long answers if you keep having conversations with me, I guess :)
~DF
One can learn a lot from long stories; sometimes the answerer actually anticipates a question that the questioner would otherwise have asked.
And in actuality, it would be weird to see someone with a New Testament in both English and Greek (the New Testament was originally written in Greek). In fact, if you see any Greek, it's either purely Greek or an "interlinear," that is, the Greek text with English words under the Greek ones. (Here's an example of what an interlinear looks like.) If you find someone reading from a Greek New Testament, then it's a good bet that that person is studying to be a pastor. Otherwise, that person might just be someone weird like me, who actually is interested in ancient languages (recall that I took classes in both Latin and Greek).
It's exactly the sort of thing Tolkien would have done, after all, drawing on real-world mythology* to build his secondary world.
Argh, Sindarin, you had to, didn't you? Well, 'thoron' is still 'eagle', so at least that doesn't change. And, wonder of wonders, there is actually a direct cognate of 'huine' in Sindarin - it's the 'fuin' in 'Taur-na-Fuin' (Forest under Nightshade, or Mirkwood - originally Dorthonion after the Sudden Flame, but I think it was also applied to Greenwood later).
Grammatically, the adjective should follow the noun, so it would be Thoronfuin ('f' isn't affected by soft mutation); however, grammar is boring, so let's go with Fuinthoron ('th' is similarly unmutated).
fTh
*'Mythology' is not used to state either truth or falsehood of any given set of beliefs kthnxbye.
I like the way Sindarin sounds. Probably because it's somewhat based on Welsh.
Though I think I'll stick with calling you Huinesoron, which sounds better.
Or hS when I'm lazy.
I do like cats a lot. In drama class, we were required to do an animal impersonation and I meowed like a cat for about half of the class period. Ever since then, I have received the nickname "Kat".
I chose Kittythekatty because I wanted to be a kat, but not any. I am a KittyKat. Or Kittythekatty.
See, I used to go by Starpetal, but then I got tired of that, and, since I hadn't really started making accounts until then, I was perfectly able to change my handle. I picked Ailavyn Siniyash out of my language that I'm idly making (though I feel like I really should restart it, or something, because it's going nowhere except places I'm not sure about ---that is, boring and trite, as much as a fictional language can be---) It means Light's Daughter, which, looking back, is incredibly pretentious, and I sort of wish I could change it. Maybe I'll just change the meaning of siniyash to something other than daughter... Yeah, that sounds more plausible...
...As for Aila, well, it's a very long handle. I needed a nickname.
-Aila
Hm, maybe not on the Board. Oh well.
Basically, my friend and I used to be really into the Warriors books--you know, the ones with the cats. They were pretty good, actually. Anyway, one day we played a game that ended up giving us two names--Brightshadow and Dawnfire (funnily enough, I was Dawnfire. I was also in ShadowClan, I think.*) Soon after that, I ended up needing a screenname, so I started using Brightshadow (I don't remember everywhere I used it, but I definitely commented on Deleterius once or twice under that name). At a slightly later point, I needed another screenname for some reason, so I chose Dawnfire...and wrote it as DawnFire for some reason. And that's the story.
You may also have noticed that my wiki handle is DawnFire360 (and that that's also in the email I give for beta-ing). Why 360? Very simply, I'd recently been dealing with geometry in school, and no one else had taken the username. So...DawnFire360.
Of course, now my name seems to be heading more towards simply Dawn, which I'm okay with (not least because I keep having moments where I feel that DawnFire is a little childish. I have been using it for at least seven years, though, so...makes sense :) I don't have any plans to change it, though--too confusing...although I suppose I could take a hint from hS, and translate it into Quenya or Sindarin, or take a hint from Neshomeh, and translate it into Yiddish. Although the Yiddish isn't looking very exciting or English-friendly...I suppose I could be ShacharEsh--the Hebrew--but it looks kind of odd. I think I'll just stick to DawnFire.)
And, with that bit of storytelling/rambling completed...peace out, guys :)
~DF
--
*My memory is apparently very bad right now. I'm fairly sure I was actually Brightshadow, from ThunderClan. Makes a lot more sense, as I wrote that parenthetical statement feeling that it was rather ironic.
...but this time? I'll go ahead and link to the opera itself. So here it is, guys. It's a scene from my namesake:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcVAAyP7Vhw
so I apologize for asking, but could you please give a bit more detail? Namely, why did you choose that username? Was it simply because you were a fan of that opera, or did you find a sort of affinity with the titular character?
Berg was a friggin' musical genius, and it shows most of all in his musical treatment of the subject.
Back in '08, I really wanted this game called Spore (just search it up) and got it on its day of release. After a few weeks if playing singleplayer, I wanted to sign up for online. Since I was obsessed with Sonic, I tried "Hedgehog" as my username but it didn't work so I put "99" in front of it and that has been my online handle ever since.
I also discovered the Internet in general through a group of RPers (THE Spore RPers), since my interactions with it were minimal at best.
The Emperor Protects!
P.S Spore is dead, I left it a while back.
I wasn't myself, but I can tell you something awesome.
Svenolutions still exists, under a different name and different moderators, here. I'm actually a moderator, though rather intermittently due to school and health issues. I'm not 100% up to date on the current progress of the actual game (I'm the science officer/lady queen of biomes, chemistry, and translations, and can't program my way out of a paper bag) but the spiritual successor of Spore still lives, with a greater focus on actual evolution.
/shameless promotion of Thrive, AKA the game that we will finish sometime this decade.
...I hung around Sporepedia & the official website. We RPed with creations.
The Emperor Protects!
I just liked the word "Armada", and since I usually put some sort of adjective before nouns when it comes to names, I choose "Green" (because it sounded better than other colors and because I like green).
...but I might as well say it again.
My name comes from a character I was, and still am, writing when I first found the PPC: Jumper. I created him out of a mixture of wanting a character that could travel to fictional worlds, and and wanting to prove that such characters could be written well. Unfortunately, the first incarnation of Jumper was very much a Stu. Just take a look at Jumping In to see why. When I found the PPC, I was looking for multiverse-spanning organizations on TV Tropes and found the PPC entry. Because Jumper was the reason I found the PPC, I thought I might as well introduce myself with that name. Ergo, World-Jumper; the guy who keeps talking about ponies insistently and insists he is this close to finishing his mission after 8 months of 'writing.' By the way, first mission, this close to being done!
Since I'm lazy and have nothing to add, I'll just leave a link to my reply to the old thread. And a plate of Belgian pralines.