is there a word for an alignment between evil and neutral? [closed]
Is there a word for alignments that lies between evil and neutral and neutral and good without being definitively labelled either?
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closed as unclear what you're asking by tchrist♦ Mar 21 at 4:09
Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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Is there a word for alignments that lies between evil and neutral and neutral and good without being definitively labelled either?
single-word-requests
New contributor
closed as unclear what you're asking by tchrist♦ Mar 21 at 4:09
Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
This might be appropriate on the Role-playing Games stack as well. For instance, check out this question which mentions lawful evil.
– mkennedy
Mar 20 at 23:30
In Dungeons and Dragons, Lawful through Chaotic alignment is a spectrum that correlates with rule following on the Lawful end and renegade or flippant behavior on the Chaotic end. Meanwhile, Good and Evil are based on morality. As the saying goes, a thing isn't right simply because it's legal. Lawful Evil therefore is not any placement between Neutral and Evil. It instead describes a rule follower who is determinedly evil. The evil quality may not show in the characters actions due to the rule-following, but the detail is relevant to role playing.
– R Mac
Mar 21 at 0:44
Are you talking about real life or a role-playing game? If you're talking about real life, then something between evil and neutral would be naughty, and something between good and neutral would be decent.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 21 at 4:56
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Is there a word for alignments that lies between evil and neutral and neutral and good without being definitively labelled either?
single-word-requests
New contributor
Is there a word for alignments that lies between evil and neutral and neutral and good without being definitively labelled either?
single-word-requests
single-word-requests
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asked Mar 20 at 23:06
youngstonerluyoungstonerlu
1
1
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closed as unclear what you're asking by tchrist♦ Mar 21 at 4:09
Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as unclear what you're asking by tchrist♦ Mar 21 at 4:09
Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
This might be appropriate on the Role-playing Games stack as well. For instance, check out this question which mentions lawful evil.
– mkennedy
Mar 20 at 23:30
In Dungeons and Dragons, Lawful through Chaotic alignment is a spectrum that correlates with rule following on the Lawful end and renegade or flippant behavior on the Chaotic end. Meanwhile, Good and Evil are based on morality. As the saying goes, a thing isn't right simply because it's legal. Lawful Evil therefore is not any placement between Neutral and Evil. It instead describes a rule follower who is determinedly evil. The evil quality may not show in the characters actions due to the rule-following, but the detail is relevant to role playing.
– R Mac
Mar 21 at 0:44
Are you talking about real life or a role-playing game? If you're talking about real life, then something between evil and neutral would be naughty, and something between good and neutral would be decent.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 21 at 4:56
add a comment |
This might be appropriate on the Role-playing Games stack as well. For instance, check out this question which mentions lawful evil.
– mkennedy
Mar 20 at 23:30
In Dungeons and Dragons, Lawful through Chaotic alignment is a spectrum that correlates with rule following on the Lawful end and renegade or flippant behavior on the Chaotic end. Meanwhile, Good and Evil are based on morality. As the saying goes, a thing isn't right simply because it's legal. Lawful Evil therefore is not any placement between Neutral and Evil. It instead describes a rule follower who is determinedly evil. The evil quality may not show in the characters actions due to the rule-following, but the detail is relevant to role playing.
– R Mac
Mar 21 at 0:44
Are you talking about real life or a role-playing game? If you're talking about real life, then something between evil and neutral would be naughty, and something between good and neutral would be decent.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 21 at 4:56
This might be appropriate on the Role-playing Games stack as well. For instance, check out this question which mentions lawful evil.
– mkennedy
Mar 20 at 23:30
This might be appropriate on the Role-playing Games stack as well. For instance, check out this question which mentions lawful evil.
– mkennedy
Mar 20 at 23:30
In Dungeons and Dragons, Lawful through Chaotic alignment is a spectrum that correlates with rule following on the Lawful end and renegade or flippant behavior on the Chaotic end. Meanwhile, Good and Evil are based on morality. As the saying goes, a thing isn't right simply because it's legal. Lawful Evil therefore is not any placement between Neutral and Evil. It instead describes a rule follower who is determinedly evil. The evil quality may not show in the characters actions due to the rule-following, but the detail is relevant to role playing.
– R Mac
Mar 21 at 0:44
In Dungeons and Dragons, Lawful through Chaotic alignment is a spectrum that correlates with rule following on the Lawful end and renegade or flippant behavior on the Chaotic end. Meanwhile, Good and Evil are based on morality. As the saying goes, a thing isn't right simply because it's legal. Lawful Evil therefore is not any placement between Neutral and Evil. It instead describes a rule follower who is determinedly evil. The evil quality may not show in the characters actions due to the rule-following, but the detail is relevant to role playing.
– R Mac
Mar 21 at 0:44
Are you talking about real life or a role-playing game? If you're talking about real life, then something between evil and neutral would be naughty, and something between good and neutral would be decent.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 21 at 4:56
Are you talking about real life or a role-playing game? If you're talking about real life, then something between evil and neutral would be naughty, and something between good and neutral would be decent.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 21 at 4:56
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1 Answer
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Roguish might work for between neutral and evil.
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Roguish might work for between neutral and evil.
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Roguish might work for between neutral and evil.
New contributor
add a comment |
Roguish might work for between neutral and evil.
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Roguish might work for between neutral and evil.
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New contributor
answered Mar 21 at 1:04
SciFiGuySciFiGuy
1191
1191
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New contributor
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add a comment |
This might be appropriate on the Role-playing Games stack as well. For instance, check out this question which mentions lawful evil.
– mkennedy
Mar 20 at 23:30
In Dungeons and Dragons, Lawful through Chaotic alignment is a spectrum that correlates with rule following on the Lawful end and renegade or flippant behavior on the Chaotic end. Meanwhile, Good and Evil are based on morality. As the saying goes, a thing isn't right simply because it's legal. Lawful Evil therefore is not any placement between Neutral and Evil. It instead describes a rule follower who is determinedly evil. The evil quality may not show in the characters actions due to the rule-following, but the detail is relevant to role playing.
– R Mac
Mar 21 at 0:44
Are you talking about real life or a role-playing game? If you're talking about real life, then something between evil and neutral would be naughty, and something between good and neutral would be decent.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 21 at 4:56