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My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Fanfiction
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Will this story have any m/f sex scenes, implied or otherwise, where the woman does most or all of the work?
9701086
It's played poorly here, is the issue. Ponies, even if a bit grittier, can't truly hold the values and virtues they do if they act like we do when it comes to war and oppression. Which would mean the Windigoes would have killed them a long time ago, or even have come back to kill them by now.
But whenever there's a changeling main character, ponies are devils who only care about murdering changelings, and changelings are sad, misunderstood lovebugs who 'were forced to invade by the evil ponies starving them to death' or some such nonsense. Eventually I just gave up on this story once it started getting too ridiculous. I don't even remember what it was, but it probably had something to do with bastardizing a number of characters to spin the aforementioned narrative.
9701176
Fucking english
9704531
Fucking Greek, actually. So the Greeks were pretty big into this whole astronomy thing, and they started giving names to things like Earth (Gaia) and the Sun (Helios). About halfway through all of that, some extra woke sheeple decided that the sun was the important celestial body, not our puny little space rock. So while apogaion (apo-: of/from/off, gaia: earth/land) was a (then) modern turn of phrase for the point of the moon's orbit furthest from the earth, those smug sun-blinded bastards decided to rub their victory in the etymological faces of their peers with the concept of an apoheliou (apo-: of/from/off, helios: sun). A couple hundred years later and a brief detour to Germany by way of a guy named Kepler, and we got apogee and aphelion.
Of even stranger curiosity, the Greek helios, Latin sol and Old English sunne all started as the Proto-Indo-European root *sawel-, which is why we have the sun's element helium derived from Greek, of the sun solar derived from Latin, and the sun's day sunday derived from Old English
So to make yet another point while we're riding the crazy train of etymological absurdity, let's take a look at the word Apocrita, for the suborder of Hymenopterans (primarily winged insects) that feature a distinct "waist" separating their lower abdomen from their thorax. This suborder includes bees, wasps, and ants. But where did that word come from? Answer: Greek, again. Apocrita, or in the original Greek apokritos, can mean separated (as in the segmented abdomen), but it can also mean chosen. Breaking it down into its constituent root and prefix is similarly enlightening, apo- should still be familiar, but kritos is new. But it turns out kritos made it to our modern English lexicon too - like criteria. So we have Apocrita - apokritos - (that which is) set aside by criteria. So, uh, turns out the greatness of best moth bugqueen was preordained by the ancient Greeks.
Now don't get me started about the family Chrysididae - also known as emerald wasps for their brilliant metallic green colors, or cuckoo wasps for their tendency to lay their eggs in the nests of other species. Did I mention that they're Kleptoparasitic, which means they thrive on sustenance prepared by other animals.
...Metamora stole her name from a small town in Illinois that stole its name from a play that got its name by way of a dude that thought that's a reasonable name a Native American might have. It doesn't actually mean anything, even if you might notice the Latin/Greek meta- normally meaning beyond or the similarity to other words like metamorphosis. So, uh, guess I'm the boring one. uwu
9704801
With two words, I've somehow made you write an essay. Now if only I could learn to control this power...
9710061
It only works when I'm avoiding writing something else. Like the last bonus chapter.
...also helps that I find language and etymology deeply fascinating. Nothing charts the unity of the human race better than the development of languages.
I'm assigning you a 30 page essay on the effects of dialects creating new languages between societies that formerly shared the base language. Ha! Now you'll have to avoid doing that instead!
Apart from the gay and glitch chapters, this is the only one that I didn't like. Somehow it's too strained, too salty, and to go from hate to love in one fuck? Meh.