Content added Content deleted
(Created page with "'''Moapuentian''' is a gender in the Scene System that can be described as, ¨a gender that feels like a mysterious, moss-covered bridge in the woods¨ <br /> == History...") |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:Moapuentian flag.jpg|thumb|Moapuentean flag by Reign of the breadsticcs]] |
|||
⚫ | |||
[[File:Moss bridge.png|thumb|Concept art for moapuentian, provided by Reign of the breadsticcs]] |
|||
⚫ | '''Moapuentian''' is a gender in the [[Scene System]] that can be described as, ¨a gender that feels like a mysterious, moss-covered bridge in the woods¨. The moss gleams golden as the sunlight seeps through the trees and gently embellishes the wood around with a genteel serenity, across which the bridge sweeps with demure gallance, draped in moss and the call of nature. |
||
<br /> |
|||
== History == |
== History == |
||
Moapuentian was coined by Fandom user Reign of the breadsticcs in early April of 2021 |
Moapuentian was coined by Fandom user Reign of the breadsticcs in early April of 2021. The flag was designed by the same user on April 30, 2021. |
||
== Etymology == |
|||
Moapuentian comes from the Frisian word for moss, "moas", and the Spanish word for bridge, "puente". |
|||
[[Category:Xenogender]] |
[[Category:Xenogender]] |
||
[[Category:Scene System]] |
[[Category:Scene System]] |
Latest revision as of 20:51, 30 April 2021
Moapuentian is a gender in the Scene System that can be described as, ¨a gender that feels like a mysterious, moss-covered bridge in the woods¨. The moss gleams golden as the sunlight seeps through the trees and gently embellishes the wood around with a genteel serenity, across which the bridge sweeps with demure gallance, draped in moss and the call of nature.
History
Moapuentian was coined by Fandom user Reign of the breadsticcs in early April of 2021. The flag was designed by the same user on April 30, 2021.
Etymology
Moapuentian comes from the Frisian word for moss, "moas", and the Spanish word for bridge, "puente".