Book 13. (1 results) Explorers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
11
The brand was the common Kajira mark of Gor, the first letter, about an inch and a half in height and a half inch in width, in cursive script, of the expression 'Kajira', which is the most common expression in Gorean for a female slave.
The brand was the common Kajira mark of Gor, the first letter, about an inch and a half in height and a half inch in width, in cursive script, of the expression 'Kajira', which is the most common expression in Gorean for a female slave.
- (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #11)
Book 13. (7 results) Explorers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
8
We had been served our supper by the collared slave, who knelt near us.
1
9
I glanced at her.
1
10
She wore a one-piece tunic of rep-cloth, cut high at the thighs, to better reveal them, her steel collar, which was a lock collar, and her brand.
1
11
The brand was the common Kajira mark of Gor, the first letter, about an inch and a half in height and a half inch in width, in cursive script, of the expression 'Kajira', which is the most common expression in Gorean for a female slave.
1
12
It is a simple mark, and rather floral, a staff, with two, upturned, frondlike curls, joined where they touch the staff on its right.
1
13
It bears a distant resemblance to the printed letter 'K' in several of the Western alphabets of Earth, and I suspect, in spite of several differences, it may owe its origin to that letter.
1
14
The Gorean alphabet has twenty-eight characters, all of which, I suspect, owe their origin to one or another of the alphabets of Earth.
We had been served our supper by the collared slave, who knelt near us.
I glanced at her.
She wore a one-piece tunic of rep-cloth, cut high at the thighs, to better reveal them, her steel collar, which was a lock collar, and her brand.
The brand was the common Kajira mark of Gor, the first letter, about an inch and a half in height and a half inch in width, in cursive script, of the expression 'Kajira', which is the most common expression in Gorean for a female slave.
It is a simple mark, and rather floral, a staff, with two, upturned, frondlike curls, joined where they touch the staff on its right.
It bears a distant resemblance to the printed letter 'K' in several of the Western alphabets of Earth, and I suspect, in spite of several differences, it may owe its origin to that letter.
The Gorean alphabet has twenty-eight characters, all of which, I suspect, owe their origin to one or another of the alphabets of Earth.
- (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 1)