Welcome to the Guild Ryuuku! Good luck, and have fun.![]()
I am Ryuuku, er..I really don't know what to put here, but here we go. I'm from Brazil so I'm still learning how to speak English properly, in case of any mistake in a possible future roleplay, I hope you please correct me, send me a private message or something, it'll be helping me to improve my grammar.
I'm usually more into the adventure and action kinds of roleplays, it doesn't matter if they're original or come from some sort of movie, book, anime or game. I have some free time to spend so I hope we all can become good friends. And for now I say farewell.
Welcome to the Guild Ryuuku! Good luck, and have fun.![]()
"Though we live on the US dollar, you and me we got our own sense of time."
Order of the (spacey) Advanced Roleplayer
Aww, that title is cute. You seem so sociable and nice. Maybe a bit shy, at first. Why be shy on the internet? Nah, that doesn't make much sense.
Anyhow, welcome to RPG! Hopefully, you'll have fun and improve your grammar! Don't be afraid to ask someone questions when you're unsure of your English. Nobody here will eat you up for grammar mistakes, not even the Grammar Nazis. I speak out of experience :P. Enjoy your time and make a lot of friends! ^^
All I ever lead to is chaos.
If, after we have recognized intuitively a number of simple truths, we wish to draw any inference from them, it is useful to run them over in a continuous and uninterrupted act of thought, to reflect upon their relations to one another, and to grasp together distinctly a number of these propositions so far as is possible at the same time. For this is a way of making our knowledge much more certain, and of greatly increasing the power of the mind.
We ought to give the whole of our attention to the most insignificant and most easily mastered facts, and remain a long time in contemplation of them until we are accustomed to behold the truth clearly and distinctly.
The Meditator reasons that he need only find some reason to doubt his present opinions in order to prompt him to seek sturdier foundations for his knowledge. Rather than doubt every one of his opinions individually, he reasons that he might cast them all into doubt if he can doubt the foundations and basic principles upon which his opinions are founded.