Samantha Klease
Posts : 139 Join date : 2009-04-12 Age : 33 Location : Springwood Ohio
| Subject: Wraith(Johnathan Lore) Thu Apr 16, 2009 11:17 am | |
| Name: Wraith(But Was Known As Johnathan Lawrence In His Human Years) Nickname: The Boss, Head Ghoul, Eater Of Souls Gender: Male Age: 12,000 Height: 12 Meters(Changed form it's 5,10) Weight: Unknown(In Changed form is 120) Appearence: A Long Dark Rob As Black As Night. The end of the rob is torn and cut as if someone had torn it themselves. The sleeves are long and hook like. With straps almost sholder length strapping it tightly to the boney flesh. A Hood is covering the face. With a pointed end at the hood, As it motions back. Straps are tightend around the waist. When his hands are visible they are boney and fleshy almost to skeleton form. The eyes are pure blood red, With a fangy grin or smirk. When inraged they become very cold as ice, or fiery as hell. In human he is seen wearing dark blue jeans, With black shoes, And a Black jacket with a blood red shirt that is slightly torn, With very dark type of eyes. His hair is short dark brown, That is a bit scruffed, having white skin. ~~ Personality: Gleeful,Megalomatic,Evil,Sinister,Twisted,Flirtatious to a girl he likes,Suggestive, Can get jelous Easily Sexual orentation: Straight Likes: Power,Possesing people, Picking on Sam, Teasing Sam, Flirting with Sam, Samantha Klease, Destroying others lives, Sucking souls Dislikes: Almost all humans in general Biography: Unknown Family: Mother and Father were killed in a shooting Job in the group: None. The job he does is: The word wraith is a Scottish dialectal word for "ghost, spectre, apparition". It came to be used in Scottish Romanticist literature, and acquired the more general or figurative sense of "portent, omen". In modern fantasy literature, it usually designates dangerous and evil beings following use of the word in J.R.R. Tolkien's Ringwraiths. The word "wraith" according to the OED first attested in 1513, in Gavin Douglas' translation of the Aeneid with a meaning of both "ghost, apparition of a deceased person" and "an immaterial or spectral appearance of a living being".
In 18th to 19th century Scottish literature, it was also applied to aquatic spirits. In 19th century usage, it came to be used in a metaphoric sense to refer to wraith-like things, and to portents in general. | |
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