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==Family== | ==Family== | ||
* '''Pod''': 3 other males in the cetacean tank onboard the [[Eagle]]. One is named Crtaka | * '''Pod''': 3 other males in the cetacean tank onboard the [[Eagle]]. One is named Crtaka and is good with computers. | ||
==Backstory== | ==Backstory== | ||
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==Senses== | ==Senses== | ||
Sight: Like other dolphins, he has 20/20 vision both in and out of the water, but less refined colour vision than humans. He sees better in dim light than a human, and can adjust very quickly to changes of light level. | * Sight: Like other dolphins, he has 20/20 vision both in and out of the water, but less refined colour vision than humans. He sees better in dim light than a human, and can adjust very quickly to changes of light level. | ||
Smell: Ekkridai has no sense of smell whatever. | * Smell: Ekkridai has no sense of smell whatever. | ||
Taste: He can distinguish tastes, but his pallate is far less complex than a human's. | * Taste: He can distinguish tastes, but his pallate is far less complex than a human's. | ||
Tactile: Equivalent to most humans. | * Tactile: Equivalent to most humans. | ||
Sound: Imagine perfect vision in 360 degrees, plus x-ray imaging, plus hearing even the tiniest noises, plus hearing in a range far beyond what you know, plus knowing the details of every structure around you for a hundred yards, and you'll begin to have a glimpse of what a dolphin's hearing is like. A few details: Their ears are not attatched to their skull, which allows for far greater sound location. Their normal hearing range is from 1 to 160 kHz (a human's is .02 to 20), and they can hear sounds below 1 kHz if they are loud. They can recognise even tiny objects at a range of 120 yards. In short, their sense of sound is so much more advanced than a humanoid race's as to be a different sense altogether. | * Sound: Imagine perfect vision in 360 degrees, plus x-ray imaging, plus hearing even the tiniest noises, plus hearing in a range far beyond what you know, plus knowing the details of every structure around you for a hundred yards, and you'll begin to have a glimpse of what a dolphin's hearing is like. A few details: Their ears are not attatched to their skull, which allows for far greater sound location. Their normal hearing range is from 1 to 160 kHz (a human's is .02 to 20), and they can hear sounds below 1 kHz if they are loud. They can recognise even tiny objects at a range of 120 yards. In short, their sense of sound is so much more advanced than a humanoid race's as to be a different sense altogether. | ||
==Linguistics== | ==Linguistics== | ||
Ekkridai speaks Delphin, which overlaps somewhat with most other cetacean languages. Cetacean languages are incomprehensible to humans (and indeed any lifeform that isn't naturally aquatic, sonar-focused, or more realistically, both). Even if a humanoid could hear or reproduce the necessary range of sounds, the conceptual basis and perspective are more foreign than any humanoid language--including Tamarian. | <p>Ekkridai speaks Delphin, which overlaps somewhat with most other cetacean languages. Cetacean languages are incomprehensible to humans (and indeed any lifeform that isn't naturally aquatic, sonar-focused, or more realistically, both). Even if a humanoid could hear or reproduce the necessary range of sounds, the conceptual basis and perspective are far more foreign than any humanoid language--including Tamarian.</p> | ||
He also speaks Finglish and its offshoot Finfon, which are essentially a (word and phonic based, respectively) mapping of specific cetacean sounds into English. Using Finglisn and Finfon a dolphin may whistle inaudibly at a specially designed translator and in so doing 'speak' English. | <p>He also speaks Finglish and its offshoot Finfon, which are essentially a (word and phonic based, respectively) mapping of specific cetacean sounds into English. Using Finglisn and Finfon a dolphin may whistle inaudibly at a specially designed translator and in so doing 'speak' English.</p> | ||
He can understand English reasonably well (exceptionally well, for a cetacean--cetaceans are able to understand humanoid concepts, but often have trouble with the perspectives), but lacks the ability to speak it directly. | <p>He can understand English reasonably well (exceptionally well, for a cetacean--cetaceans are able to understand humanoid concepts, but often have trouble with the perspectives), but lacks the ability to speak it directly.</p> | ||
==Important notes== | ==Important notes== |
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