Closed [22 Questions] Well Versed

Flag

V.I.L.E.
Best answers
0
AMA
findcarmen.com
Color #
808080
Is it Scheherazade?
It is!

I love this character because she found a non-violent way to solve a very violent problem (which is something that's been on my mind a lot lately) and is attributed for so many stories we see in modern media.

My first introduction to her was through "Song of Scheherazade" by Renaissance. I was reminded of her via this painting by Robert Venosa:

juttamir.jpg

Gotta confess, the english translation of 1001 Nights is soooooo dry. Genie Inception was worth it though.

(Hehe. I guess I could have been done in 11 questions. )
 
Last edited:

Latest threads

New Journals

Neutral Grounds
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
  • Lucy Lucy:
    Okay seriously....what is it with dad's and someone touching the thermostat? lmao :D
    Quote Link
  • Lucy Lucy:
    No....it has finally happened. I am turning into my mother. Say it isn't so 😆 😂
    Quote Link
  • Lucy Lucy:
    Did you know...SF locals affectionately have a name for the fog? Karl :)
    Quote Link
  • Tenchi Masaki Tenchi Masaki:
    He seems very mysterious and I heard his girlfriend is Misty
    • Haha
    Reactions: Lucy
    Quote Link
  • Lucy Lucy:
    popularized by a Twitter account in 2010. It is named after the misunderstood giant in the 2003 film Big Fish. Older or alternative terms used locally include simply "the fog" or sometimes "Big Mama", Seasonal Names: It is often associated with the terms "June Gloom" or "Fogust" due to its prevalence in the summer months.
    • Wow
    Reactions: Jade
    Quote Link
  • Jade Jade:
    Twitter is now X; Lucy and I bet everyone knows that already.
    Quote Link
  • Lucy Lucy:
    Did you know......that you could eat the leaves of the Zucchini flower?
    • Like
    Reactions: Jade
    Quote Link
  • Lucy Lucy:
    ha ha now I have another what I learned....why can you only eat certain flowers but not others? :D
    Quote Link
  • Lucy Lucy:
    Did you know....the horns on the viking's helmets are a myth? The popular image of the "horned Viking" can be traced back to the 1870s. Costume designer Carl Emil Doepler created horned helmets for Richard Wagner’s opera cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen to enhance the characters' theatrical presence. (I BELIEVE in the Where in Time game, they tell us this too....)
    Quote Link
  • Lucy Lucy:
    (Got it from History.com)
    Quote Link
    Lucy Lucy: (Got it from History.com)
    Top