What did she mean by this?

What did she mean by this?

#RAPE

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Is this shitty show still running?
Has there even been good lewds yet? First season lured everyone in with lewds and then went full faggot after.

No, they did away with the lewds in the earlier seasons - now it is just bullshit feminist Mary Sue writing with some comic relief thrown in there.

Bad pussy and mel's tits

some decent tits after but they really cut down on it and instead had more dicks iirc. the south park parody is spot-on.

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the last scene of the last season is incest between an aunt and her neice, jon snow and the dragon queen

Boring af.

I seen those tits, I think I watched until season 2 and then things started getting really gay and the dragon bitch refused to show her knockers and I lost interest.

There is a sex scene between greyworm (eunuch) and forgot that black bitch's name in season 6.

I mean season 7.

And why would I want that?

Don't worry, no charge for it.

To teach you that men can be an excellent lovers even without your disgusting evil nasty oppressing degenerate cock.

What did he mean by this stare?

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the first season showed a fucking little girl's naked ass for crying out loud

It was rape, not consensual intercourse.

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Also she calls her rapist moon of my stars or some shit.

you don't mean emilia, do you?

she's never been little.

Game of Thrones is what nerds watch who tell themselves they're cultured before viewing a sex scene as poorly-acted as anything on Pornhub.

ftfy

Fake nurds BTFO

Pornstars are better at acting than the majority of the GoT cast.

delet this

Shocked me I didn't notice it on my first watch, (just rewatched the whole show)
right after cersei's "you win or you die" speech to ned in episode 7, there's a gratuitous shot of a little girl undressing and running naked into a wash-tub outside littlefinger's brothel. If you pause right, you can almost see her vagoo, too.

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Imagine if slogan was "All women must die"

They would literally kill D&D and hbo even tho it's grrm who wrote it

Men absolutely BTFO! they still haven't recovered since LOTR.

The hobbit actually killed him, user.

No, Merry saved Éowyn by hitting the Witch-King in the knee, but she got the killing blow and most the EXP for that.

Merry's blade was magic user, it was one of the few things the wraiths feared.

A woman can have a feminine penis

Tom Bombadil helped the hobbits and armed them with swords from the barrow. These swords were made to kill wraiths like the witch king. Merry's sword deals the fatal blow long not her. She's just wailing on it as the soul drain happens.

It was a matriarch blade

This

I guess the rohirrim run by person who stabbed the guy in the face is the killer rule, I remember it in my Saxon history lessons

Why the fuck does every GoT thread turn into "muh LotR"?

The trouser snake is stirring~

it's going to take a lot of exposition to even try to address the various facets of this tangled spaghetti conundrum. The death of the Lord of the Nazgûl is at the center of a veritable vortex of improbabilities and poor word choices by Professor Tolkien. Let's examine a short laundry list of related questions:

1. Was Glorfindel's "prophecy" really an instance of the kind of foresight demonstrated by other elvish lords like Finrod Felagund and Elrond Peredhel?

2. What exactly was the provenance of the blade used by Meriadoc Brandybuck?

3. Did Meriadoc Brandybuck or Éowyn (or both) strike the actual death-blow against the Lord of the Nazgûl?

4. Did the Nazgûl actually "… live and die by their Master's power"?

5. Was the Lord of the Nazgûl wearing one of the Nine Rings of Power at the time of his death?

Let's explore each question in turn.

1. Was Glorfindel's "prophecy" really an instance of the kind of foresight demonstrated by other elvish lords like Finrod Felagund and Elrond Peredhel?

So many things are wrong with Glorfindel's alleged "prophecy". First of all, it was a blatant ripoff of the prophecy from Macbeth's Act 5, Scene 3: "Fear not, Macbeth. No man that's born of woman shall e'er have power upon thee." cont.

Second, Glorfindel's statement might not have been a prophecy at all, but more a politic warning to the hotheaded Gondorian general Eärnur not to ride off and singlehandedly challenge the Lord of the Nazgûl. (Which he did anyway years later, resulting in his capture, probable torture and death. Third, Glorfindel's verbatim statement is: "Do not pursue him! He will not return to this land. Far off yet is his doom, and not by the hand of man will he fall." The problem here is, how do you define "man"? It seems that Glorfindel's use of "… man …" instead of "… a man …" means he is talking about the race of Men, not a particular individual man. But isn't a female woman 'of the race of Men'? Isn't a male hobbit – a genetic offshoot of the race of Men – 'of the race of Men'? If you choose to believe that in this instance Glorfindel was touched by the gift of foresight, then neither Éowyn or Meriadoc was 'of the race of Men.' I personally doubt Glorfindel was prophesying. I think he was trying to prudently provide a lord of Gondor with wise counsel, like Elrond before him counseling Isildur to destroy the Ruling Ring. But what do I know?

2. What exactly was the provenance of the blade used by Meriadoc Brandybuck?

These "blades" were actually knives, not swords, which makes it even more curious that a smith would spend such an incredible amount of time and effort forging a backup weapon with such skill. "For each of the hobbits he [Tom Bombadil] chose a dagger, long, leaf-shaped, and keen, of marvellous workmanship, damasked with serpent-forms in red and gold. They gleamed as he drew them from their black sheaths, wrought of some strange metal, light and strong, and set with many fiery stones.”

Several things about this description are curious. First, what was the "strange metal" of which these knives were formed? Probably not mithril, which Frodo would have been able to identify easily. Then what substance was it? Second, the Dúnedain were not known to be flashy in their designs, so setting them with "… many fiery stones" was an uncharacteristic choice. Third, the Dúnedain – like all the Free Peoples of Middle-earth hated dragons and snakes. So my guess is that the "… serpent-forms …" were actually inscriptions of power ("… spells for the bane of Mordor" as Aragorn II Elessar put it) carved in the Tengwar script. If so, that lends some small support to the notion that the Dúnedain craftsman had elvish aid. Fourth, was the "gleaming" of the blades due to reflected sunlight, some internal property of the 'strange' metal or their proximity to the evil wights in the surrounding barrows? We may never know; there is no mention of these blades "gleaming" in the Chamber of Mazarbul, whereas Glamdring and Sting are recorded as having "shone" and "glinted" due to the proximity of orcs. We really need to identify who forged these weapons. In the words of Tom Bombadil: "… these blades were forged many long years ago by Men of Westernesse: they were foes of the Dark Lord, but they were overcome by the evil king of Carn Dûm in the Land of Angmar." Westernesse is just another name for Númenor. However, the timing means that the craftsmen must have been descendants of Númenor since even the longest-lived Númenórean would have died centuries before the war with the Witch-king of Angmar began. In other words the craftsmen were Dúnedain of Arnor, probably living in the kingdom of Arthedain, but possibly of the kingdom of Cardolan or even Rhudaur. But Tolkien never wrote of a Dúnedain craftsman so amazing that he could rival the power of the elvish and dwarvish smiths of old. (Such as Elendil's famed sword Narsil which was forged by the dwarven smith Telchar of Nogrod in the First Age). Both Círdan of Lindon and Elrond of Imladris had talented craftsmen, and they were both were directly involved in the centuries-long war against Angmar. So my hypothesis is that one of the elvish lords, most likely Elrond had his smiths teach the Dúnedain craftsmen the finer arts of forging swords imbued with magical power. "So passed the sword of the Barrow-downs, work of Westernesse. But glad would he have been to know its fate who wrought it slowly long ago in the North-kingdom when the Dúnedain were young …” Except that in point of fact, the Dúnedain were not young when these blades were forged. They appear to have been forged somewhere between the year 1300, when the evil of the Witch-king first manifested in Carn Dûm, and 1409 which marked the fall of the last king of Cardolan. The barrow-downs in which these blades were recovered were located in the area which was formerly the kingdom of Cardolan. Regardless, it remains sad (and odd) that Tolkien didn't identify the actual craftsman's name.

3. Did Meriadoc Brandybuck or Éowyn (or both) strike the actual death-blow against the Lord of the Nazgûl?

Let's start with the pertinent passage from The Lord of the Rings and see where it takes us.

"But suddenly he too stumbled forward with a cry of bitter pain, and his stroke went wide, driving into the ground. Merry’s sword had stabbed him from behind, shearing through the black mantle, and passing up beneath the hauberk had pierced the sinew behind his mighty knee. ‘Éowyn! Éowyn!’ cried Merry. Then tottering, struggling up, with her last strength she drove her sword between crown and mantle, as the great shoulders bowed before her. The sword broke sparkling into many shards. The crown rolled away with a clang. Éowyn fell forward upon her fallen foe. But lo! the mantle and hauberk were empty. Shapeless they lay now on the ground, torn and tumbled; and a cry went up into the shuddering air, and faded to a shrill wailing, passing with the wind, a voice bodiless and thin that died, and was swallowed up, and was never heard again in that age of this world.” Based on this my assessment is that the Lord of the Nazgûl still lived until Éowyn thrust her sword into his head. Why? Two reasons: First, a knife thrust into the sinew behind a man's knee is not instantly fatal, even if the popliteal artery is severed. Yet it is merely a few seconds between Meriadoc's knife thrust and Éowyn's sword thrust. Second, had the Witch-king miraculously died instantly from Meriadoc's thrust behind his knee, there would have been no force present to cause Éowyn's sword to break into " … many shards". Yet shatter it certainly did. "Then he [Meriadoc] looked for his sword that he had let fall; for even as he struck his blow his arm was numbed, and now he could only use his left hand. And behold! there lay his weapon, but the blade was smoking like a dry branch that has been thrust in a fire; and as he watched it, it writhed and withered and was consumed. So passed the sword of the Barrow-downs, work of Westernesse. But glad would he have been to know its fate who wrought it slowly long ago in the North-kingdom when the Dúnedain were young, and chief among their foes was the dread realm of Angmar and its sorcerer king. No other blade, not though mightier hands had wielded it, would have dealt that foe a wound so bitter, cleaving the undead flesh, breaking the spell that knit his unseen sinews to his will." So the logical sequence of events appears to be that Meriadoc's knife thrust "broke the spell" warding the Witch-king from non-magical weapons then Éowyn's plain steel sword thrust into his head struck the death blow.

4. Did the Nazgûl actually "… live and die by their Master's power"?

Of course not! Sauron is merely a Maia while Men are the Children of Ilúvatar, who enjoy the Gift of Death. So Sauron does not have the power of life and death over the Nazgûl. And yet all nine of the Ringwraiths were caught in the flood at the Ford of Bruinen which would undoubtedly have destroyed their mortal bodies. But were they saved by the power of the Nine Rings or Sauron? Gandalf seems to think it was Sauron."And is that the end of the Black Riders?’ asked Frodo.
‘No,’ said Gandalf. ‘Their horses must have perished, and without them they are crippled. But the Ringwraiths themselves cannot be so easily destroyed." "I thought they were all destroyed in the flood,’ said Merry. "You cannot destroy Ringwraiths like that," said Gandalf. "The power of their master is in them, and they stand or fall by him." Supporting Gandalf's assertion is the fact that Sauron was previously known as "The Necromancer", a sorcerer who is able to (temporarily!) entrap the spirit in flesh that should long ago have withered away into dust. [Isildur's curse at the Stone of Erech also activated their earlier oath which entrapped the spirits of the Dead to Middle-earth beyond the physical death of their bodies.] However, in the long run Sauron and even Morgoth lacked the power to deny humans their gift of true death.

5. Was the Lord of the Nazgûl wearing one of the Nine Rings of Power at the time of his death?

Nope. Sauron had wisely taken back the Nine Rings from the Nazgûl after they had been completely enslaved and turned into wraiths. This ensured their loyalty was to Sauron himself and that even if some other powerful person mastered the Ruling Ring, he or she might not be able to take possession of the Nazgûl. If the Witch-king had been wearing his ring, the perpetually curious Peregrin Took would probably have stumbled across his corpse, found the ring and tried it on for size before being soundly scolded by Gandalf. Silly hobbit.

Tolkien was a hack. All that autism about languages and he just squandered it to do a pop-culture reference and shitty English pun which he definitely knew was result of the British creole of French being a retarded mongrel tongue.

This is conjecture. Sauron might have taken them back based on a comment by Tolkien.

because Tolkien is the English GRRM

In other words Merry killed the nazgûl
I actually think in the Peter Jackson
( I know it doesn't matter) movies the CGI ghost form of the Wraith is wearing a ring.

Because both are overhyped, but LotR is actually enjoyable and GoT is just hot garbage that does something mildly entertaining every once in a while.

aside from the war scenes, I think it is all shit and the characters are either incredibly gay or really fucking annoying. At least GoT had decent characters. The plot still was retarded but it was kind of fun.

You better be refering to ones like The Hound, and not ones like that dumbass thot Khaleesi.

I thought she was a lame character but my cock actually got hard every time I saw her.

Beat it nerd.

your cock needs better taste.

you should kill yourself

Where the fuck do you think you are?Look at him user's look at him and laugh

Can we rape and kill these whores yet?

#COMEONLETSFUCKINGDOIT

if you kill them then you can't rape them anymore.

With some perspective, this scene is actually retarded. Lord of the Rings is conceivably set in an ancient time, back when the word "man" actually was gender neutral. In Old English they used to use the prefixes wer- and wyf- to distinguish between adult male and female. This scene is only clever in our gender-confused world of modern English where every old English idiom has to be reinterpreted in terms of modern word usage.

kill yourself

people ask "wtf happened to game of thrones? It used to be good. And whats with all the feminist bullshit and the fucking dicks everywhere?"
To them I say…

you can still fuck their dead bodies without consent

hahahahahaha. Yea that's about right. That's exactly what happened

Your cock needs an adjustment then.

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no

yes

>attracted to women garbage