On Wed, Nov 27, 2002 at 05:34:20PM -0800, Sean 'Shaleh' Perry wrote: > On Wednesday 27 November 2002 02:03, Roland Mas wrote: > > Current candidates include: > > > > hey how about something much less cryptic like "forge". Nothing worse than > having to guess what woman's name some silly coder named the program I am > looking for. > On the other hand, if you want truly obscure, here are some suggestions:
Norse: Magni As Magni and Modi grew older, they learned many things from the dwarves, whom they would often visit. When Modi came of age, he took it upon himself to teach man how to forge and fashion bronze. Magni continued to learn things from the dwarves; and after learning many things, took it upon himself to teach man how to forge and fashion iron. Note: "learned from dwarfs"; positive association with magnificent. Norse: Draupnir Draupnir was a golden ring (or belt, there seems to be some confusion), that had the property that every ninth day 8 gold rings of equal weight dropped from it. Note: No special special affiliation with forges, just a promise of riches. Gaulish: Belisama The Gaulish/Celtic goddess of light and fire, the forge and of crafts. Note: sounds kind of like bellissimo. Hawaiian: Pele The Hawaiian (Polynesian) goddess of the fire in the volcano, the mother of eruptions. She is a ravishing, whimsical goddess who resides in the volcano Kilauea on Hawaii. Note: no special affinity with forges, but mother of eruptions (and flame-wars?) seems appropriate. Aztec: Veveteotl God of fire and creativity. Darkover: Sharra The most dangerous matrix on all Darkover was the legendary Sharra. Embodied in the image of a chained woman, wreathed in flames, it was the last remaining weapon of the Ages of Chaos that had almost destroyed civilization on the planet of the Bloody Sun. Then again, forge seems much safer. > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] >