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Reading is equivalent to thinking with someone else's head instead of with one's own.
Arthur Schopenhauer

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Special Thanks Go To

I would like to thank the following persons for sending usefull information/bug reports. (in no particular order):

Matthew Clark (EamonNag WebMaster), Greg Boettcher, Peter Mattssons, David Whyld, A Ninny, and of course all the anonymous Beta-Testers!

Thanks also to everyone that sent an email without saying their names (which are quite few... you silly you) ;)

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2024-04-18 02:33

IFReviews Dictionary

A
- The first letter of the English and of many other alphabets. The capital A of the alphabets of Middle and Western Europe, as also the small letter (a), besides the forms in Italic, black letter, etc., are all descended from the old Latin A, which was borrowed from the Greek Alpha, of the same form; and this was made from the first letter (/) of the Phoenician alphabet, the equivalent of the Hebrew Aleph, and itself from the Egyptian origin. The Aleph was a consonant letter, with a guttural breath sound that was not an element of Greek articulation; and the Greeks took it to represent their vowel Alpha with the a sound, the Phoenician alphabet having no vowel symbols.
- The name of the sixth tone in the model major scale (that in C), or the first tone of the minor scale, which is named after it the scale in A minor. The second string of the violin is tuned to the A in the treble staff. -- A sharp (A/) is the name of a musical tone intermediate between A and B. -- A flat (A/) is the name of a tone intermediate between A and G.
- An adjective, commonly called the indefinite article, and signifying one or any, but less emphatically.
- In each; to or for each; as, "twenty leagues a day", "a hundred pounds a year", "a dollar a yard", etc.
- In; on; at; by.
- In process of; in the act of; into; to; -- used with verbal substantives in -ing which begin with a consonant. This is a shortened form of the preposition an (which was used before the vowel sound); as in a hunting, a building, a begging.
- Of.
- A barbarous corruption of have, of he, and sometimes of it and of they.
- An expletive, void of sense, to fill up the meter


If the world started to freeze.

    Author
    Trooper7

    Idiom
    English

    Authoring System
    Quest

    Release Year
    2014