
he simply took it upon himself to unlighten some poor uneducated scribbler about what he'd just happened to draw.
It's a rude question.
( ,
Tue 22 Apr 2008, 22:33,
archived)
It's a rude question.

'Why do you have a picture of a bird saying Melekh or maybe Molok?'
and
'so... which one did you mean?'
both civil, niether rude, and if you didn't have a blobstrop on, you'd see that
( ,
Tue 22 Apr 2008, 22:35,
archived)
and
'so... which one did you mean?'
both civil, niether rude, and if you didn't have a blobstrop on, you'd see that

that's just condescending
( ,
Tue 22 Apr 2008, 22:37,
archived)

and all I said was that a hebrew speaker 'might' get the whole melekh, molok thing - not that all would nor that I did.
So uh... stop trolling, silly sticky.
( ,
Tue 22 Apr 2008, 22:39,
archived)
So uh... stop trolling, silly sticky.

both words share the same etymology and as such can be applied to many different "kings", not specifically the one you mention
but in a wider sense it can also apply to "pretender" gods in general from the bible, including the milton version, an angel who falls with lucifer.
The bird itself is a facile cartoonisation of the "yellow sign", something said to hearald the King In Yellow.
To be honest, I was just fucking about symbols in my sketchbook and liked the anime-weirdness of the combination.
Not still confused; I was confused.
( ,
Tue 22 Apr 2008, 22:42,
archived)
but in a wider sense it can also apply to "pretender" gods in general from the bible, including the milton version, an angel who falls with lucifer.
The bird itself is a facile cartoonisation of the "yellow sign", something said to hearald the King In Yellow.
To be honest, I was just fucking about symbols in my sketchbook and liked the anime-weirdness of the combination.
Not still confused; I was confused.