Even though by the time I got to this panel of the page I was doing the serious lazy thing, I kind of liked how this one turned out as well..
Zoomed out to comic size, you can't really see his expression very well anyway, so here.
Zoomed out to comic size, you can't really see his expression very well anyway, so here.
Category Artwork (Digital) / General Furry Art
Species Dragon (Other)
Size 469 x 773px
File Size 103.1 kB
Ain't got nothing to do with it. The bracketed boy term in question has nothing to do with the kind of ambiguity and lack of distinction that saying 'he' conveys. That particular comic was posted long after an already established language distinction made on the forums by almost three months. Specifically here: http://csyelus.com/index.php/topic,482.msg17706.html#msg17706
Read up on it to grasp the real usage of the brackets. :3
I laugh at your mortal attempts to topple my god-like planning.
MWAHAHAHAHA!!!
Read up on it to grasp the real usage of the brackets. :3
I laugh at your mortal attempts to topple my god-like planning.
MWAHAHAHAHA!!!
Actually, Sasha answers to male pronouns and he identifies himself as a boy, as does family and friends and the like.
http://www.altermeta.net/archive.php?comic=52
So no, not a female herm either. Like I said, Sasha is just Sasha. Maybe I'm just not understanding these odd sub-categories.
http://www.altermeta.net/archive.php?comic=52
So no, not a female herm either. Like I said, Sasha is just Sasha. Maybe I'm just not understanding these odd sub-categories.
Eh, I don't really care to look 'em up.
The reason I'm not catching on is possibly because of the terms being used.. I think you might mean "masculine" and "feminine" herms, not male or female herms, since masculine/feminine is more descriptive of aesthetics and look (the things I'm being told as qualifiers) while male/female are more connected to identity and outward expression. I just don't see using male/female as correct, since it isn't really on the same axis as the word herm, since a hermaphrodite is a hermaphrodite.
The reason I'm not catching on is possibly because of the terms being used.. I think you might mean "masculine" and "feminine" herms, not male or female herms, since masculine/feminine is more descriptive of aesthetics and look (the things I'm being told as qualifiers) while male/female are more connected to identity and outward expression. I just don't see using male/female as correct, since it isn't really on the same axis as the word herm, since a hermaphrodite is a hermaphrodite.
If you notice, Sergei is actually perpetually amused at Sasha's misfortune of having to help out his mom.
http://altermeta.net/archive.php?comic=52
Sergei's grin in panel 2 is all about that.
http://altermeta.net/archive.php?comic=52
Sergei's grin in panel 2 is all about that.
A promise is a promise no matter how small, stop sulking! XD
I did notice some off things about the tail of Sasha but really not a big deal on one panel of one comic strip.
Also hah at the herm discussion, I don't think people are used to a thought out, functional, and sentient race that are hermaphrodites that aren't just one gender with a tacked on part(s). Star Trek had a 3 gendered race so this isn't THAT far out there is it? :P
I did notice some off things about the tail of Sasha but really not a big deal on one panel of one comic strip.
Also hah at the herm discussion, I don't think people are used to a thought out, functional, and sentient race that are hermaphrodites that aren't just one gender with a tacked on part(s). Star Trek had a 3 gendered race so this isn't THAT far out there is it? :P
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