
For Talk Like A Pirate Day we’ve been covering a lot of pirate related products. One of them, the Pirattitude Book, taught you how to be a pirate, but today we don’t need to BE a pirate or even ACT like a pirate—we only need to TALK like a pirate. For this you need to buy The Pirate Primer: Mastering the Language of Swashbucklers and Rogues.
Getting a bit tipsy on grog where you start slurring your words helps, but arrrr…it isn’t as simple as that you landlubber. Avast ye mateys, this book actually has 480 pages of swashbuckling content. The reviews are excellent as well, earning an incredible average rating 4.8 out of 5.0 stars and comments like “Really informative and, most importantly, fun to read.”
Pirate Primer: Mastering the Language of Swashbucklers and Rogues
“The Pirate Primer” is the first and only book on the pirate language. It explores in a definitive way the unique vernacular of English-speaking pirates covering vocabulary, pronunciation, grammar and syntax. It is an authoritative work on the subject, containing and explicating every distinctive term, phrase, usage, and speech structure uttered by or attributed to pirates in film, television, literature, and historical accounts over the last three centuries. Every entry in the Primer is accompanied by an illustrative historical example of pirate speech or dialogue. Thus, the user sees the content of the Primer deployed in actual context by actual pirates.
The Pirate Primer is available from $5.40 from Amazon.com. It is also available from Alibris, Buy.com, and Powells.com.
1 Comment
Ahoy! Das Pirate Primer scheint die perfekte Möglichkeit zu sein, in den Swashbuckler-Modus zu kommen, ohne das Wohnzimmer zu verlassen. Ich finde es klasse, dass es 480 Seiten voller Tipps, Tricks und echter Piratensprache enthält – ideal für den Talk Like a Pirate Day. Während ich mir vorstellte, bei der nächsten Besprechung „Arrr!“ zu rufen, machte ich eine kurze Online-Pause und stieß auf baxterbet, eine Plattform für Spieler in der Schweiz. Ein paar entspannte Spins waren eine nette Ablenkung, bevor ich wieder meinen besten Piratenakzent übte.