Talk:Nameless Book of Spells/@comment-179.7.110.53-20151231013818/@comment-27168967-20160102011636

'@Mkprovince You talking about King Arthur sword confused me a bit. Also isnt 'rightful' refered to 'Just' too? as in 'a just man'. I guess someone just wrote it thinking about that. '

"Just" means to take things moderately, prefering not to side with either one of the groups. Simply put, being fair. Then there's the meanings of being exact and recently. I don't remember anything that could be thought up as justice. A just man is simply a fair man. Unless you're referring to something like "his cause is just" of which the meaning comes like the one below.

The rightful term when I address King Arthur means that he's the legitimate person to rule the country, by law and by birthright. So, being genuine is the main idea here. Justice? Unless somebody just take "by law" and run with it, I sure don't have an inkling of how "Justice" really even manage to appear in one's explanation. Even so, it's like leagues apart in the end. Justice? Really? Is there a new meaning that's added to "rightful" that means "justice"? It's been some time since I grabbed a new version of a dictionary so can anyone check and post the meaning here?

The most outrageous possibility is that someone mistyped his sentence. Something that may have silly changes like "his cause is just" to becoming "his cause is justice" and others start to preach on the justice part from here on out.