I think Dean himself makes fun of his lack of formal education on purpose, but his vocabulary alone is proof of his intelligence. I do think he might use the occasional abbreviation in a text simply out of impatience.
I don't think we've ever seen him stupid drunk, like Sam in Playthings. We've seen him a little tired, and despairing, and drinking, but never falling down wasted.
What does coda mean?
Just watched "Heart.". Sam has had to be so brave from the time he was Wee!Sam. Taking responsibility for killing Madison because she asked him to do it,gutted me. Poor brave good hearted Sam.
I guess the spelling issue is from dropping out of school? But that's not fair.
I need an Archangel refresher. We know Michael is waiting for his Dean suit and seems to be in charge in heaven. Gabriel is hiding out as the Trickster, but have we met Raphael? I thought we had but can't remember what we know about him.
And aren't there supposed to be 4 archangels? Who's the 4th? I thought it was Uriel, but he's never been refered to as an archangel that I recall.
Anyone? Bueller?
I hate both those things in fics, the bad spelling and the messy drunk. Not until I see it onscreen, thanks. GED doesn't mean illiterate or dyslexic. And usually, when it's bad, it's BAD.
Codas are post-ep addons, Theresa. Usually pretty short, wrapping up (or fixing) stuff. Sam taking the amulet out of the trash, stuff like that.
Taking responsibility for killing Madison because she asked him to do it,gutted me
That exchange between the two of them, where Dean wants to take it all upon himself, but Sam recognises the intimacy of the responsibility--
::sigh::
have we met Raphael? I thought we had but can't remember what we know about him.
Yes we have. He was, IIRC, the angel that killed Castiel offscreen in Lucifer Rising. And then we get to see him in Free To Be You and Me. They grill him for info about God, but he's not playing.
Uriel wasn't an archangel. Anna was his boss, and she wasn't one either.
The show's mythology is some odd cut and paste and, "oooh, I think I might have read this on Wikipedia once." I am mostly looking at it as a whole new version of heaven and hell that is using some familiar names.
The show's mythology is some odd cut and paste and, "oooh, I think I might have read this on Wikipedia once." I am mostly looking at it as a whole new version of heaven and hell that is using some familiar names.
I think it's more "Oooh! I might have read this in a comic book once!" but yes, pretty much.
(I look up comic book lore in Wikipedia.) ((That shit is convoluted.))