Difference between revisions of "I-nah"

From The Coppermind
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
m
Line 5: Line 5:
 
|books=[[The Stormlight Archive]]
 
|books=[[The Stormlight Archive]]
 
}}{{spoilers|book=sa2}}
 
}}{{spoilers|book=sa2}}
'''I-nah''' were a type of tree native to the [[Reshi Sea]] on [[Roshar]].{{ref|b|sa2|i|3}}
+
'''I-nah''' were a type of tree native to the [[Reshi Sea]] on [[Roshar]].{{book ref|sa2|i|3}}
   
 
The i-nah grew along the bottom of the Reshi Sea. They were dozens of feet tall, with bark that was primarily stone. The branches of the i-nah occasionally broke the surface of the sea, but many were submerged beneath the surface of the sea.
 
The i-nah grew along the bottom of the Reshi Sea. They were dozens of feet tall, with bark that was primarily stone. The branches of the i-nah occasionally broke the surface of the sea, but many were submerged beneath the surface of the sea.
Line 12: Line 12:
   
 
== Trivia ==
 
== Trivia ==
*I-nah means bad in the language of the Reshi.{{ref|b|sa2|i|3}}
+
*I-nah means bad in the language of the Reshi.{{book ref|sa2|i|3}}
   
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==

Revision as of 14:04, 26 August 2014

Template:Flora & Fauna

This page or section contains spoilers for Words of Radiance!
This information has the ability to potentially ruin elements of the plot for the reader. Proceed with caution if you have not read this book.

I-nah were a type of tree native to the Reshi Sea on Roshar.[1]

The i-nah grew along the bottom of the Reshi Sea. They were dozens of feet tall, with bark that was primarily stone. The branches of the i-nah occasionally broke the surface of the sea, but many were submerged beneath the surface of the sea.

As the branches were of stone, they could easily slice through the hulls of the longboats common in the Reshi Sea. Guides were used to navigate around them, and even knew how to steer clear of the underwater branches.

Trivia

  • I-nah means bad in the language of the Reshi.[1]

Notes

This page is probably complete!
This page contains most of the knowledge we have on the subject at this time.
It has yet to be reviewed.