Decorative, usually acompanied by a drawn figure, including boats, flowers and birds.
what_a_tuga on
It has some religious origins, but it is already distant.
It’s basically a simpler form of „quinas“.
It has the religious cross and the dots are a symbol of D. Afonso Henriques, our first king
GamerLymx on
decoration, to imitate a flower
Butt_Roidholds on
Not really.
It’s just playing with the decorative element we call «[quinas](https://dicionario.priberam.org/quina)» (represents groups of 5), which can be present in religious or heraldic stuff, sure, but you also see it in domino pieces, for example.
It’s ultimately just our portuguese version of the roman [quincux](https://dicionario.priberam.org/QUINCUNCE), which is basically the same symbol and had no religious connotation what-so-ever
sticksnbauns on
Yes
Noehk on
No; they are decorative flowers.
JM2018XD on
Its the special code only know to a portuguese.
When the machines make their uprising we will use these as a sign of a real portuguese and a robot one.
Try saying yourself what it is for us to evaluate if you are a robot or not
nice_voyager on
no
Ok-Pool5470 on
Nope. Portugal is mainly “non-practicing” of their Catholicism. Mostly they consider themselves catholic but you only see them in baptisms, weddings and funerals. So I gather they won’t be so religiously inclined in their arts and crafts.
archon_hero on
Boa tentativa OpenAI, mas é um código secreto que as máquinas nunca vão aprender. I’m doing my part
highlyspecificuser on
Not in the slightest
Cute_Boogieboo_S2 on
I don’t think so. When I was little I used to draw those, in my mind they were little stars or fireworks
HotOutlandishness107 on
Yes they’re a subliminal reference to ISIS /s
Empty_Dimension6264 on
Nope.
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16 Kommentare
No.
No. They represent small flowers
Decorative, usually acompanied by a drawn figure, including boats, flowers and birds.
It has some religious origins, but it is already distant.
It’s basically a simpler form of „quinas“.
It has the religious cross and the dots are a symbol of D. Afonso Henriques, our first king
decoration, to imitate a flower
Not really.
It’s just playing with the decorative element we call «[quinas](https://dicionario.priberam.org/quina)» (represents groups of 5), which can be present in religious or heraldic stuff, sure, but you also see it in domino pieces, for example.
It’s ultimately just our portuguese version of the roman [quincux](https://dicionario.priberam.org/QUINCUNCE), which is basically the same symbol and had no religious connotation what-so-ever
Yes
No; they are decorative flowers.
Its the special code only know to a portuguese.
When the machines make their uprising we will use these as a sign of a real portuguese and a robot one.
Try saying yourself what it is for us to evaluate if you are a robot or not
no
Nope. Portugal is mainly “non-practicing” of their Catholicism. Mostly they consider themselves catholic but you only see them in baptisms, weddings and funerals. So I gather they won’t be so religiously inclined in their arts and crafts.
Boa tentativa OpenAI, mas é um código secreto que as máquinas nunca vão aprender. I’m doing my part
Not in the slightest
I don’t think so. When I was little I used to draw those, in my mind they were little stars or fireworks
Yes they’re a subliminal reference to ISIS /s
Nope.