This article details minor Discworld concepts: concepts and ideas from the Discworld of novels by Terry Pratchett which only appear in the background, or are not well fleshed out.
In Maskerade, Granny Weatherwax remarks that a girl named Colette is wearing "interesting earrings." This is a reference to a fan that Terry met at a convention; being impressed with her Anorankh earrings, he offered her a cameo in his next novel.
Images of both Holy Anorankh designs are available on the Clarecraft website if you're having a hard time finding it there, you can see one [http://www.moleskinerie.com/2005/01/the_holy_anoran.html here.
The L-Space Web's A.F.P (alt.fan.pratchett) Timeline Martin Walser's anorak post
... be done in such a way that it causes outrage and/or humiliation to the victim. Merely giving someone something is not enough. Examples of this type include breaking-and-decorating, proffering-with-intent, and whitemailing (for example threatening to reveal a mobster's donations to charity).
Even on the Discworld, or more likely, especially on the Discworld, anti-crime has never really caught on.
If you prefer to remain the same species, shape or level of sanity, stay out of these places.
Low-level background magic simply refers to the standing magical field that allows the Discworld to exist at all. Medium levels cause odd effects, such as coins landing on their edges, and high levels can lead to reality weakening, allowing the Things from the Dungeon Dimensions to enter.
This concept of the ramifications of magic is not unique to the Discworld. In Final Fantasy VII, drawing on Materia and Mako Energy from the planet's Lifestream begins to harm the planet. In the roleplaying game Rifts, the large release of potential psychic energy into the ley lines opens Rifts in reality. In Nightbane, areas where magic is commonly used may have residual energies creating a being out of magic, or attract ghosts or spirits.
In contempory occult theory the idea that repeated magical or spiritual acts may have such an effect are common.
Later engagements have led to a total of sixteen battles of Koom Valley (seventeen counting a "fracas" in Vilinus Pass), only three of which took place in the valley itself. This is in part due to the battle being a convenient patch for rips in time often used by the History Monks, although the History of Thud suggests that something about the valley itself encourages violence (this might be related to the Summoning Dark).
Koom Valley's story is eventually revealed in the novel Thud!: The intention was to sign a treaty, but some took the sudden sighting of their mortal enemies for an ambush and tried to attack. Both sides fell on their own to keep this from happening, and fought until a flash flood destroyed them. The only word to come from the valley was exactly the wrong one.
This led to the continuation of the enmity until the efforts of Commander Vimes of the Ankh Morpork City Watch revealed the truth thousands of years later, in the process uncovering the last resting place of B'hrian Bloodaxe, the first Low King. He was playing an early form of Thud with Diamond, king of Trolls.
The name "Koom" is a reference to the Welsh word cwm, which is pronounced "koom" and means "valley". Thus "Koom Valley" means "Valley Valley." Pratchett has an admitted fondness for tautalogical place-names, such as "Cheetwood", which literally means "Woodwood," and Torpenhow Hill, which means "Hillhillhill Hill."
Recently Commander Sir Samuel Vimes has given the name to the plain clothes division of the restructured Watch, presumably as a dark reminder of why it shouldn't be given too much power.
The name 'Cable Street Particulars' seems to have been inspired by the Baker Street Irregulars from the stories of Sherlock Holmes.
They are also known as The Unmentionables (a colloquial British term for underwear), possibly a parody of The Invincibles an Irish extremist nationalist group, or of The Untouchables a prohibition-era law-enforcement group. Also note "the Particulars" as a euphemism for the male genitals - e.g. "he got kicked in the particulars!". This might be implying that the Particulars, as a group, are merely a load of bollocks.
In Deja fu, the practitioner travels in time as well as space. He can go back in time and hit his opponent with a series of punches. From the opponent's point of view, the practitioner is standing motionless in front of him, but he feels the effects from the past attacks. Also, the practitioner can put parts of his opponent's body out of time with respect to the rest of the opponent, making attacks ineffective, preventing the opponent from moving or causing the opponent to trip.
Currently, the only practitioner of Deja fu is Lu-Tze, a sweeper at the Monastery of Oi-Dong.
It bears a strong resemblance to the temporal fugue technique from Roger Zelazny's novel Creatures of Light and Darkness.
Other forms of martial arts on the Disc (and Lu-Tze's opinions on them) include:
Devices are apparently indestructible, but apparently it is possible to cause them to deactivate permanently. The types described are Cubes and Axles, though an 'Average bar' is mentioned in passing. Most cubes so far discovered are owned by dwarves, but all were created long before dwarf civilisation.
Cubes are activated and deactivated by set sensual stimuli, which is most commonly a spoken word, but can be "a breath, a sound, a temperature, a point in the world, the smell of rain." Many cubes have never been prompted to work.
It was a Cube, perpetually replaying sounds from the Battle of Koom Valley, that drove the painter Methodia Rascal insane during the painting of his life's work: The Battle of Koom Valley.
The Cubes mentioned thus far bear a striking resemblance to the Thing in The Bromeliad (A trilogy, also by Terry Pratchett, which includes the books Truckers, Diggers and Wings), although the Thing possessed its own intelligence rather than being a recording device.
The Patrician Lord Vetinari was gifted an Axle by the dwarven Low King under Überwald Rhys Rhysson for Ankh-Morpork's part in the resolution of the Koom Valley dispute. Its uses in the city are still being researched by the Artificers' Guildmaster Mr. Pony, but in theory it could revolutionize the heavy industrial and municipal workings of Ankh-Morpork. According to Captain Carrot, only three other Axles are known to exist.
The name is a pun on "hogwash", Hogmanay and Watch Night.
In the Omnian religion, Hogswatchnight is called the Fast of St Ossory. Omnians "celebrate" with fasting, prayer meetings, and the exchange of religious pamphlets.
The imps in these devices seem not to mind their jobs, although they get sarcastic if overworked or asked to do things outside their purview.
The basic Mark I is an imp, in a box, that (theoretically) remembers your diary and memos. It can also recognise handwriting (but can't understand it) and tell you what the time is in Klatch. It can use precognition to find out what your appointments are before you do, but this may lead to it following a different timeline, which can be disturbing (...beep... Things To Do Today Today Today: Die...).
The Mark II is similar, but also has the ability to change colour, knows several different alarm calls, and can memorise an entire conversation (running its memory backwards to recall it).
The Mark V (also known as "The Gooseberry" play on the BlackBerry
The name Dis-Organiser is both an obvious pun, and a play on "Dis", the name given to the city in the center of Hell in Dante's Divine Comedy.
In The Art of Discworld the Mark I and Mark II are drawn to resemble the Series 1 and Series 3 Psion organisers.
Klatchian coffee is (presumably) intended as an exaggerated version of Turkish coffee.
Klatch's Coffee was a name of a store in King of the Hill. (To be fair, the reference is more likely to the term "Coffee Klatsch" than the Discworld books.)
Also, Samuel Vimes, one of the Discworld's most notable characters, is sometimes referred to as being constantly knurd and two drinks short of actual sobriety, which at least partially accounts for his depressive nature and tendency towards alcoholism—he started out looking for a cure to knurdness.
Pratchett describes it as "very bad doggy Latin." It is most often seen in the mottoes of the noble families, civic organisations and Guilds of Ankh-Morpork.
The classic example is the motto of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch; "Fabricati Diem, Pvnc". This is complete nonsense in Latin, but looks like it means "Make my Day, Punk" (see Dirty Harry), although Sergeant Colon insists it means "To Protect and Serve".
Latatian is also sometimes used by wizards when casting spells. It is also used by wizards and (as in the real world) doctors and lawyers to prevent laymen from knowing what they're saying, as in Albert's response to mysterious writing, "Sodomy non sapiens" ("I'm buggered if I know"), Rincewind's Stercus stercus stercus Moriturus Sum (Oh shit, oh shit, oh shit, I'm going to die) and the Morporkian legal principle "Acquiris Quodcumque Rapis" ("You Get What You Grab").
Since the "Necronomicon" is sometimes referred to as "The Book of Dead Names" or "The Book of The Dead", "Necrotelecomnicon" could be translated as "The Book of Dead Telephone Numbers" or simply "Phonebook of the Dead". The book is also known as the Liber Paginarum Fulvarum, Latin for "The Book of Yellow Pages".
Written by Achmed the Mad (who apparently preferred to be called Achmed the I Just Get These Headaches) after drinking Klatchian Coffee, this book lists all the old, dark gods of the Discworld (i.e. the Things from the Dungeon Dimensions). The First Edition, kept in the basement of the Library of Unseen University, has been known to eat readers. It is said that any man who reads more than a few pages will die insane, which works out fine for the Librarian, who is, in fact, an orangutan.
A neuralger is a female demon which comes to men in their dreams and has a headache. They are usually summoned by mistake, by demonologists who were expecting a succubus. The Neuralger is mentioned in Eric, although a similar concept appears in Pratchett's (non-Discworld) drabble Incubust.
The normal human visual system works by the presence of cones and rods in the eye. The ability of wizards to see octarine is explained by the additional presence of octagons.
A common conception of the colour is the colour of an incandescent filament when viewed through blacklight film, a fluorescent white or ultrablue.
The Uncertainty Principle seems to be simply a "scientific" or "professional" way of saying "I don't know"; Death uses it in The Fifth Elephant as an excuse to appear when people are possibly going to die, apparently in addition to their actual deaths, even though he himself isn't clear what it is. All attempts to explain it outright, such as in The Last Hero, appear to be misunderstood versions of Schrödinger's cat. A slightly more accurate version has been used to explain the peculiar habits of the puzuma, and the unreliability of teleportation magic without assistance from Hex. A related concept is the Theory of Thaumic Imponderability, which says it is impossible to tell exactly what a given spell will do, until it's too late.
Quantum, on the other hand, isn't explained at all; in fact, it serves much the same function as "magic" does on Earth, as described in The Discworld Companion, "a sort of get-out-of-half-understood-explanation-free card" (see "A wizard did it") — essentially, an explanation that does not, in fact, explain anything. It should be noted that just "magic" by itself would not be appropriate as such a non-explanation on the Discworld, since magic is a more or less fully-understood phenomenon. Another explanation of Quantum is given in Pyramids as "add another nought" (in regards to accounting).
It is implied in the books that Ponder Stibbons may have a better understanding of both concepts, but has given up trying to explain them to anyone.
When re-annual plant products undergo fermentation, the product is time-reversed alcohol, a rare substance much sought by fortune-tellers and the like, as ingesting it allows some ability to foretell the future, which from the point of view of the plant is the past. Time-reversed alcohol produces inebriation in the normal way, but the hangover is thrust backwards in time to several hours before the actual ingestion of the alcohol. This is known as a hangunder, and is usually very strong since one feels so dreadful one imbibes large amounts of alcohol to get over it.
The only revealed re-annual plant is the vul nut vine, which is remarkable in that it can begin to flower as much as eight years before being sown.
Roundworld is the focus of all three Science of Discworld novels.
It was first introduced in Mort which tells us:
"A lot of stories are told about scumble, and how it is made out on the damp marshes, according to ancient recipes passed down rather unsteadily from father to son. It's not true about the rats, or the snakes' heads, or the lead shot. The one about the dead sheep is a complete fabrication. We can lay to rest all the variants of the one about the trouser button. But the one about not letting it come into contact with metal is absolutely true..."
It is a parody of scrumpy and is made with apples. Well, mainly apples. Good scumble apples include the Lancre Blackheart, the Golden Disagreeable and the Green Billet. In Mort it was drunk on the Sto Plains, but in later books it is associated with Lancre, where it is distilled by Nanny Ogg (whose particular variant is known as "Suicider").
When scumble is mixed with dwarven beer, it creates a highly intoxicating cocktail known as "Fluff".
Its name may be based on the poisonous wahoo fruit, although the description is similar to the durian.
Ankh-Morpork is known as the Big Wahoonie, although the fruit does not smell that bad.
Also known as Tabernae Vagrantes. These are the mysterious shops from which people buy magical items, only to return when there turns out to be a problem (as there always does), and find the shop is vanished (as seen in H.G. Wells' "The Magic Shop", and various other fantasy stories).
One of these shops appears in The Light Fantastic, under the name "Wang, Yrxle!yt, Bunglestiff, Cwmlad and Patel. Estblshd Various. PURVEYORS". The proprieter explains that he operates under a curse, having failed to supply an item requested by a sourcerer, and being irritating about it. Twoflower apparently gained the Luggage from a similar shop.
Another, specialising in enchanted musical instruments, was encountered by some members of the Band With Rocks In during the events described in Soul Music, while they were trying to replace a ruined musical instrument. They were there able to buy the guitar which brought the Band fame (or which caused all the trouble, depending on your point of view). When two members of the Band came back to try to get more information about the guitar they were wholly unsuccessful, but after leaving, the presence of a faded '1' on the guitar caused one Band member to wonder who could have pawned the guitar:
"... but, I mean, number one. Even the conch shell was number fifty-two. Who used to own the guitar?"to which his companion responds:
"Don't know, but I hope they never come back for it."An equally interesting conundrum is - who did they pawn it to?
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"Minor Discworld concepts".
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