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Butter fuet, in a dish contains my final utterance.

As with all men, my dying day was just a part of strides that every man must take.

Although I was dead well before the annointed one, through a quintilus I always live on.

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Butter fuet, in a dish contains my final utterance.

As with all men, my dying day was just a part of strides that every man must take.

Although I was dead well before the annointed one, through a quintilus I always live on.

the egyptans?

Edit: Spelling - unless i spelled it wrong!!

Edited by peace*out
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... Neither 'fuet' nor 'quintilus' are words, and I can't figure out what you mean by them. 'Annointed' is spelt with one 'n'.

What I'm getting from this is: When you die, you get cremated. You are not a man until you have died/men die. Albeit you were dead before the one with stuff smeared on them, you will... always remain in memory or something?

Romeo?

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Don't know how I thought it of but

Julies Ceaser?

~Kat <(^-^)>

Congratulations Kat. You got it right.

Here is the solutions FYI:

Clue 1: "Butter Fuet" contains the phrase: "Et tu Brute?" although it is not a perfect anagram. If you have read Julius Ceaser then you may recall these last words.

"my dying day was just a part of strides" - the key is which part? The last four letters of strides is ides. Julius Caesar died on March 15th also known as the ides of March.

I must apologize for the missplelling of quitilius. Quintilius was the Roman name for the 5th month, which later became the 7th Month when named July after Julius Caesar.

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... Neither 'fuet' nor 'quintilus' are words, and I can't figure out what you mean by them. 'Annointed' is spelt with one 'n'.

What I'm getting from this is: When you die, you get cremated. You are not a man until you have died/men die. Albeit you were dead before the one with stuff smeared on them, you will... always remain in memory or something?

Romeo?

I am terribly sorry for the misspelling of quintilius. I hope it did not waste too much of your time.

Fuet is indeed a word, however uncommon.

Yes I did have an extra 'n' in anointed. I'm sorry for the mistake.

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Well I was startled by the quintilus word

:huh:

Romans maybe

You are on the right track. Now be more specific. Also please note the misspelling of quintilius and anointed which was pointed out by another user.

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Congratulations Kat. You got it right.

Here is the solutions FYI:

Clue 1: "Butter Fuet" contains the phrase: "Et tu Brute?" although it is not a perfect anagram. If you have read Julius Ceaser then you may recall these last words.

"my dying day was just a part of strides" - the key is which part? The last four letters of strides is ides. Julius Caesar died on March 15th also known as the ides of March.

I must apologize for the missplelling of quitilius. Quintilius was the Roman name for the 5th month, which later became the 7th Month when named July after Julius Caesar.

This is a quite thought out riddle, well done!!

BTW you misspelled "missplelling" ;) I do something worse I write "bred" instead of "bread", "except" instead of "accept", correct spelling wrong word! :blush:

And about the first clue - I was wondering what cured dry sausage of pork meat in a pork gut has to do with anything (I looked up fuet) :lol:

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This is a quite thought out riddle, well done!!

BTW you misspelled "missplelling" ;) I do something worse I write "bred" instead of "bread", "except" instead of "accept", correct spelling wrong word! :blush:

And about the first clue - I was wondering what cured dry sausage of pork meat in a pork gut has to do with anything (I looked up fuet) :lol:

I'll stop now before misspelling anything else. Thanks for the kind words. It was my first try at making one, so hopefully I can get better in the future.

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