Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Yarg in a Book?!

Last year, I started reading Larklight by Philip Reeve and although I didn't really notice, one of the characters was named Yarg! So I thought I would share that, and yeah, look out for yarg in everyday literature.

17 comments:

  1. Oh my goodness, this is amazing! Although I completely knew of this, that someone other than me noticed is incredulous!
    Isayarg

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wow, that's wonderful, Yarg is spreading through literature!
    Yargira- Secondary Yargian

    ReplyDelete
  3. Did you enjoy the book Larklight? The title seems very yargy (in a good way.)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I should really read this book, Yargira. Is it at our library? I don't want to say where our library is because then we would be swamped with Yarg fans coming from all over the world. Because we're just that awesome, right?
      -Isayarg

      Delete
    2. They have Larklight at a certain school library, and it's currently available there but not at that certain village's public library.

      The book is written by a British author. It takes place in the 20th century where people are very formal, and traveling to other planets and meeting aliens is not unusual.

      Delete
  4. Hmmmm, If Yarg was in a book, Yarg should be in the dictionary! Now I want to read Larklight... Hmmmm, maybe in this Yarg blog there should be a Recomand Yarginess page... It would be where people recomand things with Yarg. They could recomand movies, books that have Yarg in them. Or they could recomand a movie that was Yargolishous! (In a good way)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Helpful Hinter do you know of the Yarg Project? You said yarg should be in the dictionary and that is exactly what the Yarg Project is! I hope you can help complete this project, and Yarg can be in the dictionary at last! I think your suggestion about a recommend yarginess page, is a wonderful idea! But I would have to consult with my fellow Yargians, to see if the whole comity is on board with your idea... Thank you helpful hinter, and keep spreading Yarg!
      Tereyarg (that is my true yargian name)

      Delete
    2. Tereyarg:
      I, Isayarg, solemnly swear that I am up to no good. Just kidding!! All though it is true. (said with Gru's accent) Anyway, I think this idea is wonderful. That makes two Yargians! Halfway there!! :D I can't wait for you kt and v to get back!! Oh, and how was Harry Potter World?
      -Yargian #3

      Delete
  5. Hey dude... The names Hopscotch, put people call me... D.J Hopscotch. I was recently going through my list of slang words, that me and my dudes down here (in california) use, and I found that I was running out of slang to say. So dude... I got on my surf board, caught some waves, and dude did I think. A close dude of mine told me about something about a word... Yarg on wikipedia. I decided to check it out... and It brought me here... Yarg has been added to my list of words, so Dudes... I mean Yargians, thanks for Yarg, now I don't have to say dude all the time.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I have a question for the Council of True Yargians: if yarg means anything you want it to mean, would the opposite, gray, mean nothing you want it to mean (the opposite of what you want it to mean?)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I don't want to sound unofficial, but no clue. In a very official way, that is!

      Delete
  7. When posting a comment, Blogspot asks you to type in the letters to prove you're not a robot. But what if you are a robot? Then what would you do?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Fake it and hope they don't notice. Duh! :D

      Delete
  8. Have a yargy Passover!!

    Isayarg

    ReplyDelete
  9. I read A Wrinkle in Time a few years ago, and I understood that to "tesser" is basically wrinkling space-time to get somewhere. But, I never knew the definition of a "tesseract." If any Yargians are wondering, a tesseract is the four-dimensional version of a square. It's what you get when you square a cube. If you were wondering, the fourth dimension is time. That makes it impossible to draw a tesseract on paper. Isn't that amazingly yargy?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm wondering if the fifth dimension is light. I was thinking about how we always feel like time is a constant, and put that on the x-axis of our graphs (usually,) but time is not constant at all. Einstein thought that if time isn't constant, then something has to be for our universe to make sense, so he said that the only constant thing we know of in the universe is light. But I'm wondering if our universe has to make sense. Why can't it make sense?

      Delete
  10. Iman Morky Geek (I.M.GeekApril 22, 2012 at 3:52 PM

    Thanks for the totally confusing blog! Now I will be able to sound cool like i know everything (even though I already do!)

    ReplyDelete