bngenoh
The Living Force
Featured = Feat + Ur + red
Feat:
Red:
Ur:
Red feat, feat pronounced feet, of the original bloodlines anyone?
Ruddy, Rubicund, Rubicon:
Ruddy:
Rubicund:
Rubicon:
When the blood of the original line becomes ripe, it is ready to cross the Rubicon.
Feat:
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/feat?s=t said:1. A noteworthy or extraordinary act or achievement, usually displaying boldness, skill, etc.: Arranging the treaty was a diplomatic feat.
2. Obsolete . a specialized skill; profession.
Origin: 1300–50; Middle English fet, fait < Anglo-French, Old French < Latin factum fact 1400–50; late Middle English < Middle French fait made (to fit) < Latin factus, past participle of facere to make, do Sense of "exceptional or noble deed" arose c.1400 from phrase feat of arms (Fr. fait d'armes).
Synonyms: accomplishment. See achievement.
Red:
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/red?s=t said:1. Any of a group of colours, such as that of a ripe tomato or fresh blood, that lie at one end of the visible spectrum, next to orange, and are perceived by the eye when light in the approximate wavelength range 740--620 nanometres falls on the retina. Red is the complementary colour of cyan and forms a set of primary colours with blue and green Related: rubicund , ruddy
2. Archery Also called: inner a red ring on a target, between the blue and the gold, scoring seven points
3. A native English suffix, denoting condition, formerly used in the formation of nouns: hatred; kindred.
Origins: Middle English -rede, Old English -rǣden, rēad ; compare Old High German rōt , Gothic rauths , Latin ruber , Greek eruthros , Sanskrit rohita
Ur:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ur- said:1. A German prefix, meaning "original, primitive",
2. A commune of the Pyrénées-Orientales département in southern France
Red feat, feat pronounced feet, of the original bloodlines anyone?
Ruddy, Rubicund, Rubicon:
Ruddy:
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Ruddy?s=t said:1. (of the complexion) having a healthy reddish colour, usually resulting from an outdoor life
2. coloured red or pink: a ruddy sky
Origin: before 1100; Middle English rudi, Old English rudig. See rudd, -y1 Origins: [Old English rudig , from rudu redness (see rudd ); related to Old High German rot red 1 , Swedish rod , Old Norse rythga to make rusty]
Rubicund:
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Rubicund?s=t said:red or reddish; ruddy: a rubicund complexion.
Origin: 1495–1505; < Latin rubicundus, akin to ruber red1
Rubicon:
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Rubicon?s=t said:1. A stream in N Italy: in ancient times the boundary between Italy and Cisalpine Gaul. By leading his army across it and marching on Rome in 49 bc , Julius Caesar broke the law that a general might not lead an army out of the province to which he was posted and so committed himself to civil war with the senatorial party
2. ( sometimes not capital ) a point of no return
3. cross the Rubicon , pass the Rubicon to commit oneself irrevocably to some course of action
4. In phrase "to cross (or "pass") the Rubicon "take a decisive step," 1626, in ref. to small stream to the Adriatic on the coast of northern Italy, which in ancient times formed part of the southern boundary of Cisalpine Gaul; crossed by Caesar Jan. 10, 49 B.C.E., when he left his province to attack Pompey.
When the blood of the original line becomes ripe, it is ready to cross the Rubicon.