achievementhunter: (haha good lord you're boring)
Chara Dreemurr..? ([personal profile] achievementhunter) wrote in [community profile] solnet2016-04-12 06:55 am

GAME START!

[For a kid who's pretty much constantly sauntering about shooting people creepy grins and running off their mouth, Chara seems fairly relaxed, this feed. Could be the fact that they're in the library. Or perhaps it's just a nice day outside.]

Would you like to play a game, fellow foot soldiers?

[Or maybe it's the fact that they're making a mildly off-kilter Saw joke, whatever.]

The past few weeks, I've noticed when talking to others that even the most unassuming words can have significantly different meaning; mark me curious. So here's the rules;

Each of us will have our turn in choosing a word. Perhaps this word has no real meaning to us, or perhaps it does.

The receiver of said word goes on to define it; either in a social...or personal context. Then they also pick a word to be defined. And thus the cycle continues until one of us gets bored.

[A bright smile, and the camera swings wildly askew as it's holder reaches over the side of the lounge for another book.]

I'll even start it off. Your word, is 'monster'.
oldschoolghostbuster: (Ehhhhh...)

[personal profile] oldschoolghostbuster 2016-05-20 01:08 am (UTC)(link)
Not the stem though. Those don't taste very good.

[He tried it once. It was a bad idea.

And now he has to stop and think very hard, because while the autotranslate thing this place has going tends to work pretty well, the word presented without context leads to two pretty distinct concepts.]

Heeeh... Well, there's the blood pushing organ that a lot of creatures have, but there's also the kokoro. I think that would loosely translate to something like 'spiritual heart' or 'soul'? It's a concept along those lines.

Uh... 'Youkai'.
oldschoolghostbuster: (actually linefacing for once)

[personal profile] oldschoolghostbuster 2016-06-03 09:43 pm (UTC)(link)
[Wow, harsh. Not untrue from a human perspective, but harsh.]

It's a berry, but it's treated like a vegetable. Funny how that works, ne?

'Natto'.