Talk:Enbunjulated: Difference between revisions
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This posture has never been used in the SCA and its inclusion here is either misinformation or simply unadvisable. I'd really like to see this entry deleted - SCA heraldry has enough problems without us perpetrating more on ourselves. [[User:Teceangl|Teceangl]] (College of Arms Herald) |
This posture has never been used in the SCA and its inclusion here is either misinformation or simply unadvisable. I'd really like to see this entry deleted - SCA heraldry has enough problems without us perpetrating more on ourselves. [[User:Teceangl|Teceangl]] (College of Arms Herald) |
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May I (on one of my now-brief visits here (due to access at work being restricted)) concur with Master Teceangl. Whilst it may well fall into the funny-once category, I submit that it does not merit the formal recognition that en-wiki-ing would involve. Perhaps when a couple of new Kingdoms have used this in their armorial (and regalia includes ''the crowns of the seven kings, and the rods of the Five Wizards'') we could revisit a draft of the entry -- [[User:Simoncursitor|Simoncursitor]] 19:39, 4 March 2009 (EST) |
Revision as of 19:39, 4 March 2009
NOTE: This was an odd thing to stumble across. I invented "enbunjulated" many years ago as a joke. The actual meaning was "attached with a bunji cord" and the first blazon I gave was "a weaselope enbunjalated on a cross," which was a reference to the fact that certain drawings of Celtic deer look more like weasels with horns, thus "weaselope" by analogy with "jackalope" [[1]]. I note that the only reference that pops up on a google search is this: "Sable, a lemming proper in its stupidity enbunjalated to chief." Bunjie-jumping weaselopes, which still makes me giggle. AlexandreDavigne 00:23, 23 January 2008 (EST)
This posture has never been used in the SCA and its inclusion here is either misinformation or simply unadvisable. I'd really like to see this entry deleted - SCA heraldry has enough problems without us perpetrating more on ourselves. Teceangl (College of Arms Herald)
May I (on one of my now-brief visits here (due to access at work being restricted)) concur with Master Teceangl. Whilst it may well fall into the funny-once category, I submit that it does not merit the formal recognition that en-wiki-ing would involve. Perhaps when a couple of new Kingdoms have used this in their armorial (and regalia includes the crowns of the seven kings, and the rods of the Five Wizards) we could revisit a draft of the entry -- Simoncursitor 19:39, 4 March 2009 (EST)