Loreedit

From The Anglish Moot

Witship (in English, science) is the toughtly beholding and fanding of the world about us, and witting gathered from it, for the end of making groundlaws for the workings of the world that also have handy worth. Belief gainstands lore, in which nothing is taken to be true until it can be shown to be so.

The first to have lore as we understand it were the olden Greeks, who asked themselves how the world and everything in it worked. They sought true answers to their askings, and did not believe answers they could not understand. Many men were thought of as 'men of lore' at the time, though their understanding fell far short of today's benchmark. Aristotle was the first true loreman, and his writings are seen as the beginnings of many fields of lore which are ongoing to this day.

The Lorish Way of Making is the most widespread way of making lore.

Some main fields are heavenlore, wortlore, wightlore and stonelore.

See List of Lores for the overbringing of many English lore words in Anglish.