Word of the Day
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Exile (noun) – Enforced banishment, removal from one’s country, removal from one’s native land by official or authoritative command; the period of time spent in exile or separated from one’s native country; the state of being banished (again, this is a big concept in Old English literature – they took it very seriously) (from Latin exul meaning one who is exiled)
Word in a Sentence: In my novel Choices Meant for Gods, no one but Chariss realizes that Hrazon of Mon’dore has, essentially, been exiled from his native land to keep her from Drake’s clutches all her life.
Your turn! Do you have any medieval thoughts you can turn into sentences for me today? (Non-medieval thoughts are also allowed.)
“Some days, I just want the dragon to win.”
Tags: Choices Meant for Gods, Sandy Lender, grammar, word, Old English, Anglo-Saxon, exile
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Exile (noun) – Enforced banishment, removal from one’s country, removal from one’s native land by official or authoritative command; the period of time spent in exile or separated from one’s native country; the state of being banished (again, this is a big concept in Old English literature – they took it very seriously) (from Latin exul meaning one who is exiled)
Word in a Sentence: In my novel Choices Meant for Gods, no one but Chariss realizes that Hrazon of Mon’dore has, essentially, been exiled from his native land to keep her from Drake’s clutches all her life.
Your turn! Do you have any medieval thoughts you can turn into sentences for me today? (Non-medieval thoughts are also allowed.)
“Some days, I just want the dragon to win.”
Tags: Choices Meant for Gods, Sandy Lender, grammar, word, Old English, Anglo-Saxon, exile
1 Comments:
Sometimes, people put themselves in a self-induced exile by hiding from problems or out of fear of a multitude of situations.
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