A Glossary of Terms
 



 

   
dilin striving to make sure everyone's views and positions are communicated and understood
this also means that hypocritical views are exposed, which so many people work VERY hard to avoid.
dimin striving to at least de-escalate conflicts and/or efforts at overpowering, dominance and so on
   
guyl(s)  someone who is working to get female and male to integrate in their spirit - inside and outside
it is pronounced so it sounds the same as guile
this word has been formed using the English word guy and appending the l from the end of the word girl
prex (in English - pronounced with a short e in English)
he and/or she and/or him and/or all kinds of other gender related pronouns
prede
prede's
pre - de (pronounced with two syllables -
both short e's in English)
his and/or hers and/or all kinds of other possessive gender related pronouns
- I have added the prede's option because it is what is often used in English
prezz is short for presence and how someone is referred to regardless of gender and/or homeworld
putemocorp all those from other planets/systems don't really care for how Earthers refer to them as species and/or its and/or aliens (among other references)

this word is intended to make use of

  • put developed from the Latin for think
  • emo developed from the Latin for feeling
  • corp developed from the Latin relating to the physical, corporeal

it should be pronounced more like it should sound in more  Latin based languages poo-tay-mo-corp

   
zap a prezz who is working to develop their warrior healer abilities
zaparch a prezz who has worked to develop their warrior healer abilities and exhibits some obvious abilities
zaparcha a prezz who has worked to develop their warrior healer abilities so that they can use them from some distance
zaparchacorp a prezz who has worked to develop their warrior healer abilities so that they can use them when working outside of their physical body
   
   
   
In English, most authorities quibble about whether certain words can be used as a verb, noun, adverb and/or adjective and so on.  I'm a design engineer who strongly believes that the absence of such word types says more about the inadequacy and inadaptability of the language rather than the word user.

For example,