What is Vorpal?
1.
An adjective originating in Lewis Carroll's "Jabberwocky" poem in <i>Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Saw There</i>. Due to his description of it, most generally would agree that it deals with slashing damage severing a limb or head; however, it can be stretched to mean any form of weapon that can possibly kill in one blow, considering the word itself is a "nonsense word" created by Carroll. Despite its popularity and history, it still eludes a normal dictionary.
I don't allow my characters to have vorpal weapons; they are simply too powerful.
See
2.
1. An adj. meaning extremely sharp, usually so sharp as to cut through anything without any resistance whatsoever.
2. A specific enchantment upon a magical sword that, on a
1. I swear to God, dad's turkey knife is vorpal or something.
2. My vorpal longsword +2 made quick work of those Amnizu enforcers.
3.
(VOR-pl) or, seldomly, (VOR-puhl)
-adjective
1) Infinitely sharp; possessing an edge (or tip) of zero thickness.
-adjective (slang)
2) Tending, or possessing a tendency, to decapitate. (slang)
----------------
-= Usage and Etymology =-
In RPGs (role-playing games, such as
There are no degrees of vorpality; it is an absolute. A blade is either vorpal, or it is not. Additionally, and perhaps counterintuitively, a blade can be vorpal regardless of its angle. The numerical degree value of the angle of a vorpal blade can be (and, for the greatest effectiveness in battle, almost always is) very small, but it is entirely possible for the angle to be very large, including, technically, even angles in excess of 180° (although such constructs are never seen due to the lack of practical application for something with such an
There are, in addition to blades (and the odd stiletto or arrow or chakram), other possible forms for vorpal objects. While there is seldom compelling reason in an
----------------
-= Origin =-
1871,
----------------
-= Related Forms =-
vorpality: (vor-PAL-uh-dee) - (noun): the state of being vorpal
vorpalize: (VOR-puh-lize) - (verb): to make vorpal; to imbue with vorpality
vorpalization: (VOR-puh-luh-ZAY'-shin) - (noun): the process of making vorpal
devorpalize: (de-VOR-puh-lize) - (verb): to remove or reverse a vorpal enchantment
nonvorpal: (NON-vor-pl) - (adjective): possessing finite sharpness; not vorpal
Occurrences of "vorpal" are most often found in the weapon descriptions in RPGs, some of them played in person with a board, such as Dungeons & Dragons, and others requiring a video interface, both single-player and multi-player,
online and offline.
To give a lengthy example, including all of the details pertaining to the setting in which something vorpal is introduced to players, the following description is how the word would be used in the
context of an in-person, board-and-dice role-playing game like Dungeons & Dragons:
"As the
phylactery disintegrates, a sudden, horrible scream fills the room around you, and then, much more slowly than it appeared, fades off into the distance until the hallway is overwhelmed bysilence . The chest you have traveled so far for now lays at your feet, unguarded andvulnerable for the first time in its existence, while all that remains of the lich who formerly owned your newfound treasure is a few bone chips and strands of hair, and a tattered and singed royal blue robe, half-draped over the steel box.
After checking the chest for traps, you waste no time in opening it, only but a crack at first. As you lift the lid the tiniest amount, a white light, small but perceptible, spills out from behind the cracks and allows your next quick glances around the room to bring you to realize just how
dark the room had been earlier.
Opening the chest fully, it is not the hoard of
platinum pieces that catches your attention, nor is it the jewels scattered among them. What your eyes are immediately drawn to is the hilt of a sword, buried in the treasure up to the chappe. The pommel and crossguard have been constructed of a bluish-purple material that, in the lighting available, you cannot at first identify. You grab the sword by the grip, an unusually soft leather from the feel, and slowly withdraw it from under the mass of coins. As you do, you notice something mostbizarre .
Not only does the blade have not a single scratch or imperfection on it, or atleast any visible to the naked eye, but along both edges, to various depths and in different locations and directions, the blade is embedded in half a dozen platinum coins, cut through them as if they had been made of butter.
A light reflects off of the hilt, and your gaze is averted there once again. What looked at first to be a dull cobalt, you can now see is a brilliant iridescent. As you turn the hilt this way and that, the blue and purple swim and swirl together with a small cloud of green, and you recognize it instantly. The crossguard and pommel have been fashioned out of the scales of a
rainbow dragon , and an ancient wyrm at that, judging from the intense, luminous radiance of the hue. Your attention turns back to the skewered platinum coins, one of which slides off the blade as you turn it again and falls to the ground, spinning and circling your foot for a second or two before falling flat to the floor. Something in your head clicks as you realize what it is you have found.
There can be no mistake. You have discovered a vorpal sword."
See
4.
adj. Infinitly sharp. So sharp it cannot be measured.
5.
Nobody is sure of the exact meaning, but it applies to an ancient sword so that ought to give you an idea.
"He took his vorpal sword in hand:"
...
"The vorpal blade went snicker-snack!"
(Lewis Carroll, Jabberwocky)
6.
The prefix for a creature in Ultima Online, known as the Vorpal Bunny, that is increadably fast and appears only when a green thorn is planted into dirt. Has colorful eggs and carrots, not much else.
That Vorpal Bunny took forever to kill and its loot sucked ass!
7.
synonym for deadly, but with stronger connotation.
He's not just strong, he's positively vorpal!