Hmm, i think maybe reverse, where intelligence decides the speed and willpower is how many, fi you thinka bout it. Willpower decides how many languages you can get yourself to learn, whereas intellgience decides how easily you can grasp ther concepts, and thus how quickly.Xalliar wrote:Hmm... What if INT would affect the actual Number of languages you canl earn and WIL how fast you learn them in the end?
I think it is more a thing of intelligence, WHAT you nderstand ,but a thing of will how mucho f that.
Like:
Int 1-3: Common + Own language
3-7: common + own + 1
7-11: common + own + 2
11-16: common + own + 3
16 - 18: common + own + 4
18 +: every language ig
Wil 1-3: No learning at all
3-7: Very, very slow learning. ( and i MEAN very slow! You'll need months to complete a language... )
7-11: slow - normal learning ( everything under 9 slow, above normal? )
11-16: Normal - Faster learning ( up to 13 normal, above 13 faster one)
16-18: Fast learning
18+: Very fast learning
This would be quite fair, imho...
EDIT @ Cain: This is just what we try to prevent in setting bordersSo nub whining! *pats*
Dwarven language teacher?
Moderator: Gamemasters
I bet for a million dollars you cannot pronounce "Erik" the dutch way.AlexRose12345678910 wrote:But they sound the same, plus anyway, if you met a french guy named michel you wouldn't call him Michael because you're english. The name can be changed in different languages, yes, but you wouldn't call someone your langauge approximite of it. You'd call them by their original name. But place names could be different, yes.
This isn't written down. If you think about it, if someone says "My name is Erik"; pronouncing Erik the dutch way, you'll call them Erik the dutch way, you won't call them the english way of saying it. Maybe you can pronounce it incorrectly if you see it written down, but if someone pronounces their name to you, you call them by what they told you, not by your language approximation of that or by how you would read it written down.Misjbar wrote:The "eh" is already wrong.Hadrian_Abela wrote:eh-ritch?Misjbar wrote:I bet for a million dollars you cannot pronounce "Erik" the dutch way.
or
eh-rihhh
- Jon Childs
- Posts: 727
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2005 5:25 pm
- Location: Location not edited since 5/12/05-Join me in my quest for locations that are overly long and dated
*Hits his forehead*Jon Childs wrote:Shut up....If someones name in dutch is eh-rrrih (or whatever) and they live in the Netherlands (is that right?) you should respect how that is said.
Did you read a thing I said? I just said that if someone pronounces their name in the dutch way, you would also do that, you wouldn't pronounce it in the english way unless you'd only ever seen it written down.
- Jon Childs
- Posts: 727
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2005 5:25 pm
- Location: Location not edited since 5/12/05-Join me in my quest for locations that are overly long and dated