It's the only word we've heard that refers to the condition, and we've never heard it applied to anything else, so I actually think it is quite literally an Old Tongue word that means "the black dots that float in front of the eyes of someone addicted to the True Power".
It would be somewhat like asking what saidin and saidar are. We know that 'saidar' in the real world is a Scandinavian word meaning magic, but in RJ's world it appears those are the Old Tongue words referring to the two halves of the One Power with no deviation or alternative.
It would be somewhat like asking what saidin and saidar are. We know that 'saidar' in the real world is a Scandinavian word meaning magic, but in RJ's world it appears those are the Old Tongue words referring to the two halves of the One Power with no deviation or alternative.
"Those who think they have no time for bodily exercise will sooner or later have to find time for illness."
what does "saa" mean?
07/01/2010 04:45:40 AM
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Re: what does "saa" mean?
07/01/2010 04:58:43 AM
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It means "yo mamma".
07/01/2010 05:29:31 AM
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like the saa in saa'ngreal
07/01/2010 07:38:56 AM
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That was 'sa'angreal' not 'saa'angreal'
07/01/2010 03:35:34 PM
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Hmm
07/01/2010 11:52:05 AM
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It would be called powerful (or something on that track... the other guy figured this out)
07/01/2010 02:20:59 PM
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Re: It would be called powerful (or something on that track... the other guy figured this out)
07/01/2010 03:28:02 PM
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Maybe "floaters"? *NM*
07/01/2010 12:49:12 PM
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struggling to flush your saa, Etzel? *NM*
07/01/2010 01:39:34 PM
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Re: what does "saa" mean?
07/01/2010 03:33:16 PM
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"hour" in Arabic.
*NM*
08/01/2010 04:43:12 AM
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Thank you for producing the only answer that has any value in the real world.
08/01/2010 05:31:35 AM
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But there are between 100,000 and 2,000,000 users of Esperanto around the world.
09/01/2010 05:16:57 AM
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