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Ferrins was similarly clueless in the matter of the nature of Sannico.
Ferrins’ world, commonly called Chron by its inhabitants, at least by the ones who bothered to call it anything at all, had exactly two continents, Chronos and Chronita. While slightly smaller than Earth, being only twenty-four thousand miles in circumference, it had roughly the same gravity. This was due to a higher core density, of course.
One might opine that the naming conventions of the Chronians was without imagination, and that was indeed the case. Chronos was a large land mass that occupied the northern hemisphere and was roughly circular, beginning at roughly thirty-eight degrees of latitude, varying a bit as one circumnavigated. Its most northern shore was at forty-seven degrees, and its most southern at thirty-five degrees.
Chronos’ most prominant feature was the polar lake, which was a massive and nearly circular fresh water lake some one thousand miles across. Oddly, the lake was not the repository of inflowing rivers, but the source of them. It was formed by the local polar vortex, which was quite stable, there being no axial tilt to speak of and a nearly circular orbit.
The appearance of Chron led the discoverers of it, in their decrepit and crumbling ship, Total Diaspora, to remark that it looked like two Cheerios. After a few generations of being dirtside and the disappearance of most technology, the common appellation, Cheerios Land, became Chron, and the two major land masses Chronos and Chronita. So we cannot be too hard on the Chronians. They came by it in an honest fashion.
Eragrostis rotifer är en gräsart som beskrevs av Alfred Barton Rendle. Eragrostis rotifer ingår i släktet kärleksgrässläktet, och familjen gräs. Inga underarter finns listade.
Meh~tdology, fka Pepelaputr about 8 years ago
My name translates to valle apartado in Spanish.Is that good enough?
Superfrog about 8 years ago
Austrostipa geoffrey is a spear grass native to Western Australia.
Brass Orchid Premium Member about 8 years ago
I got nothin’.
Randy B Premium Member about 8 years ago
I got a genus of sand crabs.
INGSOC about 8 years ago
Saturniidae Kristopher – Royal Moths, family of Lepidoptera
coltish1 about 8 years ago
Lepidoptera for me, too: Luca Chacon01
Mother Thalweg about 8 years ago
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                             MOTHER THALWEG
                                     - presents -
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            Top 10 Countdown to Decennial Saturnalia
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Words/Phrases Made Famous by Frog Applause
Today’s Category: Rotifer’s Favorites
(the short list)
(the very VERY short list)
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Number 7: POORLY-ATTENDED POTLUCKS
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Did you know? 4 out 5 Overlords surveyed recommend Frog Applause to their users who hate stoneflies.
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Honorable mention: SPORK
http://www.gocomics.com/frogapplause/2007/11/17
Radish... about 8 years ago
My Taxon cannot be located, I’m unique.
Happy, happy, happy!!! Premium Member about 8 years ago
Leskea is found in plants and animals.
I’m either a fly or a moss.
I think that i would prefer being a moss.
Larry Miller Premium Member about 8 years ago
I got nothin’. I think because my actual given name is Larry. Parents had a distaste for nicknames.
songbird44 Premium Member about 8 years ago
I got Nigella degenii subspecies jenny, an annual flowering plant native to an island in the Aegean Archipelago. It’s in the ranunculus family.
What fun! Thanks, Teresa!
Brass Orchid Premium Member about 8 years ago
Ferrins was similarly clueless in the matter of the nature of Sannico.
Ferrins’ world, commonly called Chron by its inhabitants, at least by the ones who bothered to call it anything at all, had exactly two continents, Chronos and Chronita. While slightly smaller than Earth, being only twenty-four thousand miles in circumference, it had roughly the same gravity. This was due to a higher core density, of course.
One might opine that the naming conventions of the Chronians was without imagination, and that was indeed the case. Chronos was a large land mass that occupied the northern hemisphere and was roughly circular, beginning at roughly thirty-eight degrees of latitude, varying a bit as one circumnavigated. Its most northern shore was at forty-seven degrees, and its most southern at thirty-five degrees.
Chronos’ most prominant feature was the polar lake, which was a massive and nearly circular fresh water lake some one thousand miles across. Oddly, the lake was not the repository of inflowing rivers, but the source of them. It was formed by the local polar vortex, which was quite stable, there being no axial tilt to speak of and a nearly circular orbit.
The appearance of Chron led the discoverers of it, in their decrepit and crumbling ship, Total Diaspora, to remark that it looked like two Cheerios. After a few generations of being dirtside and the disappearance of most technology, the common appellation, Cheerios Land, became Chron, and the two major land masses Chronos and Chronita. So we cannot be too hard on the Chronians. They came by it in an honest fashion.
stepham about 8 years ago
I’m a South American frog that doesn’t ever get to be a tadpole. That explains a lot!
Sisyphos about 8 years ago
In desperation, I had to go all the way to my Confirmation name to get anything; viz., a species of moth. I feel cheated.
I want a full refund of what I paid for this humiliating experience, learning that my first, middle, and last names are meaningless!
Rotifer FREE BEER & BATH MATS ON FEB. 31st Thalweg Premium Member about 8 years ago
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Eragrostis rotifer är en gräsart som beskrevs av Alfred Barton Rendle. Eragrostis rotifer ingår i släktet kärleksgrässläktet, och familjen gräs. Inga underarter finns listade.
6turtle9 about 8 years ago
Apparently I am a moth found only in Argentina.