In Character: Difference between revisions
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Here is the section which shows a very good use of vocabulary and language in a medieval style. | Here is the section which shows a very good use of vocabulary and language in a medieval style. | ||
Greetings sir, how has your day been? | |||
Ay! A rat. I will vanquish thee, my vile foe! | |||
==Bad In Character Language== | ==Bad In Character Language== | ||
Here is the section which shows a good use of bad medieval language without being vulgar. | Here is the section which shows a good use of bad medieval language without being vulgar. | ||
Hey. Wassup? | |||
Whoa. I'm gonna screw this rat up real bad. | |||
[[Category:Definitions]] | [[Category:Definitions]] |
Revision as of 19:53, 26 January 2008
In Character is the term used for text that is said by the character and not the player. For example "Have you seen this queer folk lately" would be considered as In Character whereas "Did you see yesterday's football match?" would not. There is also the language used which can determine whether something is In Character of Out Of Character, for example "Greetings sir, how has thou's day been?" would be considered In Character whereas "Yo, wassup?" would. However some medieval slang could be accepted as well as some purposely made mistakes. For example "Greetingz zir, how haz zou'z day been?" would still be considered in character, but again, the "zou" might not be understood as a mis-said "thou".
Good In Character Language
Here is the section which shows a very good use of vocabulary and language in a medieval style.
Greetings sir, how has your day been?
Ay! A rat. I will vanquish thee, my vile foe!
Bad In Character Language
Here is the section which shows a good use of bad medieval language without being vulgar.
Hey. Wassup?
Whoa. I'm gonna screw this rat up real bad.