people get offended if they have to so much as breathe the same air as other people nowadays...if not the name, someone will find something else about the character to be offended about
so as long as you aren't doing it to mock or disparage little people, do whatever the fork you want and don't give a cat's ash about what anyone else thinks of it
Depends on context, really. "Jimmy the Dwarf" would probably come across as pretty offensive; "Dwarf Star", for say a toon with energy powers, should be okay, I would think. (I have a 4' 6" electrical toon named "Short Circuit".)
"Science teaches us to expect -- demand -- more than just eerie mysteries. What use is a puzzle that can't be solved? Patience is fine, but I'm not going to stop asking the universe to make sense!"
Yeah, DwarfStar was one of my favorite characters back in City of Heroes, and I believe the name was first used [to my knowledge] in a Gurps Supers IST setting book, or the base Gurps Supers example Characters section. Great name.
Some synonyms from Merriam-Webster for midget. Interesting how some of these terms would likely be seen as perfectly acceptable, while others would be seen as pejoratives.
Synonyms of midget
diminutive, dwarf, mite, peewee, pygmy (also pigmy), runt, scrub, shrimp, Tom Thumb
Words Related to midget
nubbin
mini, miniature
bantam
homunculus, hop-o'-my-thumb, manikin (also mannikin)
half-pint
a homunculus is an artificial humanoid construct created through magic (or alchemy) - it has nothing to do with small people
It literally means "little person" in latin.
And "robot" literally means "worker" in Czech (robota), but you wouldn't refer to a carpenter as a "robot", because you know that its usage in modern English is not its usage in Czech in 1922. I mean, there's pedantry, and then there's this.
"Science teaches us to expect -- demand -- more than just eerie mysteries. What use is a puzzle that can't be solved? Patience is fine, but I'm not going to stop asking the universe to make sense!"
And "robot" literally means "worker" in Czech (robota), but you wouldn't refer to a carpenter as a "robot", because you know that its usage in modern English is not its usage in Czech in 1922. I mean, there's pedantry, and then there's this.
And with that last sentence, irony exploded whilst waving a white flag.
A homonculus is generally defined as "little person" or "little man" in most English dictionaries also. They're also usually depicted in images as little men, albeit a bit malformed. It's not comparable to your example of 'robot' (see post below )
It is inherently connected to the term "small people" contrary to the opinion below (the context of my first comment )....
And "robot" literally means "worker" in Czech (robota), but you wouldn't refer to a carpenter as a "robot", because you know that its usage in modern English is not its usage in Czech in 1922. I mean, there's pedantry, and then there's this.
Actually, the original term 'robota' in Czech means means servitude or forced labor. The modern word 'robot' ('roboti' in Czech) was coined by artist Josef Čapek, the brother of famed Czechoslovakian author Karel Čapek. Karel Čapek was, among other things, a science fiction author before there was something officially known as science fiction, in subject matter along the same vein as George Orwell. He introduced the word in a play called R.U.R. The full title translated into English as Rossum’s Universal Robots, which debuted in January of 1921.
He actually invented the word 'roboti' (derived from the Czech word robota), which became robot in English. In the play it referred to manufactured, living, simplified people called robots that were created in a factory using a chemical substitute for protoplasm.
As an adept of pedantry, I thought you might like this.
And the term "homonculous" was coined to describe the (imaginary, obviously) servant of a wizard, being a small humanoid animated by magic to scurry around the wizard's lair performing all manner of simple tasks. Its meaning in Latin comes from this fact; in usage, it has only been used to describe actual humans in an insulting manner, just as it would be difficult to take "golem" as a complimentary term for a large person.
The meaning of words is dependent on more than their ultimate derivation. As I said, there's pedantry, and then there's this.
"Science teaches us to expect -- demand -- more than just eerie mysteries. What use is a puzzle that can't be solved? Patience is fine, but I'm not going to stop asking the universe to make sense!"
And the term "homonculous" was coined to describe the (imaginary, obviously) servant of a wizard, being a small humanoid animated by magic to scurry around the wizard's lair performing all manner of simple tasks. Its meaning in Latin comes from this fact; in usage, it has only been used to describe actual humans in an insulting manner, just as it would be difficult to take "golem" as a complimentary term for a large person.
The meaning of words is dependent on more than their ultimate derivation. As I said, there's pedantry, and then there's this.
And yet, you still proved his point. So, this argument is rather pointless in the end of all thing. Homonculi are nothing more than little golem people. End of discussion.
And the term "homonculous" was coined to describe the (imaginary, obviously) servant of a wizard, being a small humanoid animated by magic to scurry around the wizard's lair performing all manner of simple tasks. Its meaning in Latin comes from this fact; in usage, it has only been used to describe actual humans in an insulting manner, just as it would be difficult to take "golem" as a complimentary term for a large person.
The meaning of words is dependent on more than their ultimate derivation. As I said, there's pedantry, and then there's this.
So you're in agreement that the term basically means "little people" which is akin to "small humanoid".
And the term "homonculous" was coined to describe the (imaginary, obviously) servant of a wizard, being a small humanoid animated by magic to scurry around the wizard's lair performing all manner of simple tasks. Its meaning in Latin comes from this fact; in usage, it has only been used to describe actual humans in an insulting manner, just as it would be difficult to take "golem" as a complimentary term for a large person.
The meaning of words is dependent on more than their ultimate derivation. As I said, there's pedantry, and then there's this.
So you're in agreement that the term basically means "little people" which is akin to "small humanoid".
The only real pendatry I see is coming from you.
The question was whether the name selected might be offensive to a little person. As I noted, it's all in context - "Jimmy the Dwarf" could hardly be anything but offensive, while "Dwarf Star" clearly is not, even if the toon in question in fact has dwarfism. If you call your toon "Homonculous", then it's not automatically offensive, precisely because the term does not reference human beings (the derivation of the word is unimportant). On the other hand, if you want to use "homonculous" as a descriptor for someone else who happens to be small, that's pretty doggone offensive, and attempts to deflect from this can only be seen as appeals to pedantry.
The meaning of a term is often unrelated to its ultimate derivation. "Awesome" once meant "deserving of awe and terror", but is now understood to be a term of general approval, often of things that don't inspire awe in the least. (I can think of several examples of incredibly offensive terms which, on a strictly pedantic level regarding literal meanings, could be "defended", but I'm far too nice a person to cite them here.)
"Science teaches us to expect -- demand -- more than just eerie mysteries. What use is a puzzle that can't be solved? Patience is fine, but I'm not going to stop asking the universe to make sense!"
The context of my statement that you decided to take exception to was stated clearly, I was responding to an exact statement from another poster and even quoted the person I was replying to.
POWERFRAME REVAMPS, NEW POWERS and BUG FIXES > Recycled Content and Events and even costumes at this point Introvert guy who use CO to make his characters playable and get experimental with Viable FF Theme builds! Running out of Unique FF builds due to the lack of updates and synergies! Playing since 1 February 2011 128 + Characters (21 ATs, 107 FFs) ALTitis for Life!
Apparently you can get called out for a rename if someone finds it 'rude'.
You get renamed if you come to a GMs attention and he deems the name inappropriate. Someone filing a bug report brings you to the GMs attention, but doesn't force any decision about appropriateness.
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so as long as you aren't doing it to mock or disparage little people, do whatever the fork you want and don't give a cat's ash about what anyone else thinks of it
- David Brin, "Those Eyes"
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As a short person, I have no problems with this word u3u
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Synonyms of midget
diminutive, dwarf, mite, peewee, pygmy (also pigmy), runt, scrub, shrimp, Tom Thumb
Words Related to midget
nubbin
mini, miniature
bantam
homunculus, hop-o'-my-thumb, manikin (also mannikin)
half-pint
It literally means "little person" in latin.
Click here to check out my costumes/milleniumguardian (MG) in-game/We need more tights, stances and moods
- David Brin, "Those Eyes"
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My super cool CC build and how to use it.
And with that last sentence, irony exploded whilst waving a white flag.
Click here to check out my costumes/milleniumguardian (MG) in-game/We need more tights, stances and moods
It is inherently connected to the term "small people" contrary to the opinion below (the context of my first comment )....
Click here to check out my costumes/milleniumguardian (MG) in-game/We need more tights, stances and moods
Actually, the original term 'robota' in Czech means means servitude or forced labor. The modern word 'robot' ('roboti' in Czech) was coined by artist Josef Čapek, the brother of famed Czechoslovakian author Karel Čapek. Karel Čapek was, among other things, a science fiction author before there was something officially known as science fiction, in subject matter along the same vein as George Orwell. He introduced the word in a play called R.U.R. The full title translated into English as Rossum’s Universal Robots, which debuted in January of 1921.
He actually invented the word 'roboti' (derived from the Czech word robota), which became robot in English. In the play it referred to manufactured, living, simplified people called robots that were created in a factory using a chemical substitute for protoplasm.
As an adept of pedantry, I thought you might like this.
Click here to check out my costumes/milleniumguardian (MG) in-game/We need more tights, stances and moods
My super cool CC build and how to use it.
The meaning of words is dependent on more than their ultimate derivation. As I said, there's pedantry, and then there's this.
- David Brin, "Those Eyes"
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And yet, you still proved his point. So, this argument is rather pointless in the end of all thing. Homonculi are nothing more than little golem people. End of discussion.
Click here to check out my costumes/milleniumguardian (MG) in-game/We need more tights, stances and moods
So you're in agreement that the term basically means "little people" which is akin to "small humanoid".
The only real pendatry I see is coming from you.
The meaning of a term is often unrelated to its ultimate derivation. "Awesome" once meant "deserving of awe and terror", but is now understood to be a term of general approval, often of things that don't inspire awe in the least. (I can think of several examples of incredibly offensive terms which, on a strictly pedantic level regarding literal meanings, could be "defended", but I'm far too nice a person to cite them here.)
- David Brin, "Those Eyes"
Get the Forums Enhancement Extension!
The context of my statement that you decided to take exception to was stated clearly, I was responding to an exact statement from another poster and even quoted the person I was replying to.
Scroll back to see or continue in your futility.
Click here to check out my costumes/milleniumguardian (MG) in-game/We need more tights, stances and moods
My super cool CC build and how to use it.
Click here to check out my costumes/milleniumguardian (MG) in-game/We need more tights, stances and moods
Click here to check out my costumes/milleniumguardian (MG) in-game/We need more tights, stances and moods
Epic Stronghold
Block timing explained
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"Okay, you're DEAD, what do you do NEXT?"