A non-fan. adj. Not pertaining to fandom or sf.
Term used to describe some who does not play Amtgard or something that is 'outside' the scope of the game (the real world). When shouted during a game, 'Mundane' announces the presence of someone who should be allowed to pass through the game unhindered.
Not magical, not Pagan; mainstream. Some people use this simply to distinguish between different aspects of their lives, as in, "My craft name is Shadow; my mundane name is Sarah Smith." This can make a handy warning: "Please don't freak out my mundane relatives by talking about Samhain." Other people use the word to imply narrow-minded, dull, or hostile to matters magical: "Rhiannon had to move because her landlord was a mundane; he kept complaining about the coven meeting at her place." In this form, it is synonymous with the term "Muggle" popularized by author J.K. Rowling.
Something outside the SCA. Eg., day-to-day life or job. People not in the SCA. This term usage has fallen into disfavor in recent times, as many felt it set us apart for people who did not participate in our activities.
a person devoid of imagination and creativity; someone who exists solely in the "Real World" and denies all possibilities of alternate worlds and realities; a non- otaku.
found in the ordinary course of events; "a placid everyday scene"; "it was a routine day"; "there's nothing quite like a real...train conductor to add color to a quotidian commute"- Anita Diamant
concerned with the world or worldly matters; "mundane affairs"; "he developed an immense terrestrial practicality"
belonging to this earth or world; not ideal or heavenly; "not a fairy palace; yet a mundane wonder of unimagined kind"; "so terrene a being as himself"
1. (n.) One who is not a part of or familiar with the internal culture of a fandom or lifestyle. i.e. A mundane is to the furry fandom one who does not know of it or understand it. Possibly originated from the SCA (a medieval fandom/society) where this term has been commonly used for a long time. 2. (adj.) Something that is not part of or related to a specific culture or fandom.
Used as an adjective referring to everything and a noun referring to everyone still part of the 20th Century world
As a noun, a person who isn’t a freak of any kind; a mainstreamer. Often has negative connotations, and an overtone of boring conformity. (The term “muggleâ€, from the Harry Potter books, is gaining some currency in Neopagan circles.) Can also be applied as an adjective: “In my mundane job, I’m a car salesman.†The term “Mundania†is also used, as if it were a country that mundanes inhabit.
a term used to describe one's "real-world" identity or non-gaming activities, or a person who is not a gamer. See also freaking the mundanes.
Person or things belonging to the everyday, 20th century, non-SCA world.
A term used instead of the word modern. It is sometimes seen as having a bad connotation by modern people, but is not meant in this manner.
A somewhat rude term (to some :) for persons who are not psychically aware, magically aware, pagan, SCA, Furry, etc, etc - usually used by people in a fringe group to denote those who fall into the average area of the bell curve of "normal." Literally, common, everyday, and boring.
A non-vampyre. Normal, everyday activities
Concerned with or related to the ordinary, commonplace or typical.
Modern, not-in-the-SCA. Not meant to be insulting.
(1) Pertaining to the real world outside the SCA or SGU, for instance "mundane law" means real-world laws, rather than SCA/SGU rules. (2) Real-world clothing, as in "Time to put on my mundanes and go home, darn it." (3) A person who isn't a member of the SCA or SGU; wearing medieval costumes in real life, in order to get a reaction from non-members, is known as "freaking the mundanes."
A human mortal with no magic/special abilities. Every game world is filled with them.
SCA. Non-members who lead boring, mundane lives with 9-5 jobs and 1.7 children -as opposed to spending weekends believing you are the incarnation of your D&D character. It's not always pejorative, although its use in the phrase "putrid scum-sucking mundanes" comes close.
Term used to explain the real world. Opposite of Period. orthshield, Kingdom of: ( kingdom) Kingdom making up North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario. utlands, Kingdom of the: ( kingdom) Kingdom making up New Mexico, most of Colorado, parts of Wyoming and Nebraska, and El Paso and Hudspeth counties of Texas.