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Table of Contents
- many Domani believe that the Dark One is dead.
(II: 130)
- Arad Doman doesn't have a lot of sea-going
ships. (II: 163)
- Domani women are considered "forward" by some
other cultures, including Saldaea? (IV: 890)
- Domani women tutor younger family members in
the womanly arts. (V: 34)
- Domani feel they don't deserve all of
the reputation they have, but do deserve some of it. (V: 34)
- desc of Domani attitudes towards flirtation
and the potential consequences (V: 35)
- Domani women train their daughters from the
cradle. (V: 46)
- Domani women have catalogued flirtations.
There are 1107 types of kisses, and 93 ways to touch a man's face with
your hand. (V: 313)
- Men are better sports than hawks. (V: 41)
- The more women there are about, the softer a
wise man steps. (V: 76)
- Tarabon and Arad Doman have squabbled over the
Almoth Plain for almost three hundred years, but it's never come to open
blows. (II: 53)
- a fine Domani carpet is worth the price of a farm.
(III: 218)
- crystal and silver flasks of scent from Arad Doman.
(IV: 811)
- some Domani merchants sell fur and timber. (V: 34)
- the Domani are tall and willowy, with coppery
skin and dark hair. (II: 54)
- Domani women sometimes apply artificial
beauty marks as an appearance enhancer. (IV: 497)
- Domani lady has copper skin, wears cloths
that reveal nothing but suggest everything, and a bracelet marked
with her House symbols. (II: xvii)
- Domani dresses are made of thin, clingy
cloth. (III: 193)
- Domani dresses are barely opaque folds of
cloth tied cloth with a narrow belt. (V: 196)
- Domani men wear close-trimmed beards and
long leather vests. (VI: 33)
- men wear long, thin moustaches and
earrings, as well as often a choker or bracelet of precious metals.
(VI: 199, 640)
- men might wear their hair below their
shoulders. (VI: 640)
- men wear moustaches. (VI: 571)
- the Domani use red-lacquered chopsticks called
sursa to eat. (IV; 834)
- slivers of meat and vegetables in flavored
sauces served in small white bowls. (IV: 834)
- mushroom, sprouts, red peppers in a pale,
tangy sauce. (IV; 836)
- the Terhana Library in Bandar Eban is
world-renowned. (VI: 580)
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