LeveIing
|
  |
| Joined: 12 Jul 2015 |
| Total Posts: 11207 |
|
|
| 06 Oct 2015 09:11 AM |
| http://www.roblox.com/users/95669888/profile |
|
|
| Report Abuse |
|
|
|
| 06 Oct 2015 09:15 AM |
| that's pretty terrible bud :/ |
|
|
| Report Abuse |
|
|
LeveIing
|
  |
| Joined: 12 Jul 2015 |
| Total Posts: 11207 |
|
|
| 06 Oct 2015 09:17 AM |
thanks, I tried my best anyways its 2015 all the good names are taken |
|
|
| Report Abuse |
|
|
kistvaen
|
  |
| Joined: 25 Jul 2009 |
| Total Posts: 10413 |
|
|
| 06 Oct 2015 09:18 AM |
you could go through a list of unusual words
<--
"Deathcore is just watered down Deathcore" |
|
|
| Report Abuse |
|
|
LeveIing
|
  |
| Joined: 12 Jul 2015 |
| Total Posts: 11207 |
|
|
| 06 Oct 2015 09:19 AM |
then no one would know what it means and I don't like that also your username is a real word? |
|
|
| Report Abuse |
|
|
| |
|
LeveIing
|
  |
| Joined: 12 Jul 2015 |
| Total Posts: 11207 |
|
|
| 06 Oct 2015 09:19 AM |
| nice but needs more maymays ^ |
|
|
| Report Abuse |
|
|
kistvaen
|
  |
| Joined: 25 Jul 2009 |
| Total Posts: 10413 |
|
|
| 06 Oct 2015 09:20 AM |
A kistvaen or cistvaen is a tomb or burial chamber formed from flat stone slabs in a box-like shape. If set completely underground, it may be covered by a tumulus.[1] The word is derived from the Welsh cist (chest) and maen (stone). The term originated in relation to Celtic structures, typically pre-Christian, but in antiquarian scholarship of the 19th and early 20th centuries it was sometimes applied to similar structures outside the Celtic world.
Kistvaen to the south of the stone rows at Merrivale on Dartmoor One of the most numerous kinds of kistvaen are the Dartmoor kistvaens. These often take the form of small rectangular pits about 3 ft. (0.9 m) long by 2 feet (0.6 m) wide. The kistvaens were usually covered with a mound of earth and surrounded by a circle of small stones. When a body was placed in the kistvaen, it was usually lain in a contracted position. Sometimes however the body was cremated with the ashes placed in a cinerary urn.
Kistvaens and Celtic saints[edit] Kistvaens are also found associated with holy sites or burial places of early Celtic saints, who are often semi-legendary. Saints associated with kistvaens include Callwen daughter of Brychan, Geraint,[2] Begnet,[3] and Melangell.[4] Foundation remains of stone slab- or gable-shrines, or the cella memoriae of Mediterranean origin, may sometimes have been misunderstood in an earlier era of scholarship as a kistvaen, and the subject is complicated by this "woolly nomenclature."[5] |
|
|
| Report Abuse |
|
|
| |
|
LeveIing
|
  |
| Joined: 12 Jul 2015 |
| Total Posts: 11207 |
|
| |
|