Hírumor
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Hírumor
What's in Hírumor that makes it green?
I did have a bizarrely similar (to the original poster's) accident about four years ago, in which I slipped over a cookie and somehow twisted my ankle so far that it broke
Aeetlrcreejl > Kicgan Vekei > me /ne.ses.tso.sats/What kind of cookie?
Re: Hírumor
Large quantities of methane in the atmosphere is my guess. Well that would be cyan, judging from our own Ouranos
A New Yorker wrote:Isn't it sort of a relief to talk about the English Premier League instead of the sad state of publishing?
Shtåså, Empotle7á, Neire WippwoAbi wrote:At this point it seems pretty apparent that PIE was simply an ancient esperanto gone awry.
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Re: Hírumor
Hírumor is described on the Almeopedia as "bright green", certainly not cyan.Arzena wrote:Large quantities of methane in the atmosphere is my guess. Well that would be cyan, judging from our own Ouranos
Also, what makes Imiri whitish-green and Vlerëi, a terrestrial planet, blue?
I did have a bizarrely similar (to the original poster's) accident about four years ago, in which I slipped over a cookie and somehow twisted my ankle so far that it broke
Aeetlrcreejl > Kicgan Vekei > me /ne.ses.tso.sats/What kind of cookie?
Re: Hírumor
It's because of olocuat crivecei, one assumes.
Salmoneus wrote:(NB Dewrad is behaving like an adult - a petty, sarcastic and uncharitable adult, admittedly, but none the less note the infinitely higher quality of flame)
Re: Hírumor
Due to light scattering, celestial objects from Earth appear shifted toward the red. Just as white stars (such as the sun) appear yellow, so blue objects appear greenish. I've seen both Uranus and Neptune described as "blue-green" and even "green" many times, especially in older literature before Voyager 2 visited.Aeetlrcreejl wrote:Hírumor is described on the Almeopedia as "bright green", certainly not cyan.Arzena wrote:Large quantities of methane in the atmosphere is my guess. Well that would be cyan, judging from our own Ouranos
Imiri would presumably be Uranus-colored, i.e., blue-white, and tinted by the atmosphere. Vlerei is, I guess, an Earthlike world replacing a Mars equivalent, like Minerva in Harry Turtledove's "A World of Difference".Aeetlrcreejl wrote:Also, what makes Imiri whitish-green and Vlerëi, a terrestrial planet, blue?