Kaladont

Kaladont or kalodont is a South Slavic word game, popular in Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Republic of Macedonia, in which players in turn say words, each beginning with the last two letters of the previous word.[1] The name originates in the Kalodont toothpaste brand, which is a winning word, since there are no words in South Slavic languages that begin with nt.

Rules

One of the players starts by saying a word. Then, each following player in sequence (usually clockwise or counterclockwise) must come up with a word beginning with the last two letters of the previous word. The word must have at least four letters, must be in its standard form (i.e. infinitive for verbs, nominative for nouns, etc.) may not be made-up or a proper name, and no previous word may be repeated. When one of the players cannot come up with an acceptable word, he loses the game.[1][2] The winner is the player who posed the word with the difficult ending; he gets to start the next round.[3] If a player says a word ending with -ka, the first player to say kaladont is the winner.[1]

gollark: > multiprocessing.pool objects have internal resources that need to be properly managed (like any other resource) by using the pool as a context manager or by calling close() and terminate() manually. Failure to do this can lead to the process hanging on finalization.> Note that is not correct to rely on the garbage colletor to destroy the pool as CPython does not assure that the finalizer of the pool will be called (see object.__del__() for more information).Great abstraction there, Python. Really great.
gollark: No, I mean I was reading from underneath the line it highlighted, which was the POST documentation.
gollark: Oh, never mind, the link was just being confusing.
gollark: Why is there a body argument for *GET* requests?
gollark: Never mind, I figured it out by looking at one of my other programs.

See also

References

  1. Josipović, Ivana (10 July 2015). "Gdje su nestale igre našeg djetinjstva?". Narod.hr (in Croatian). Zagreb. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  2. "Ne zaboravimo stare igre za djecu!". RTL.hr (in Croatian). 14 May 2015. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  3. "Igre iz detinjstva". Odmor sa decom (in Serbian). 4 September 2015. Retrieved 25 May 2017.


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