We all know the Thaumaturgy for clerics. Fun bit of history about the word. It enters English by Queen Elizabeth's friend John Dee who uses it as a term for mathematics/maths. That's right, performing maths is witchcraft. You're welcome you wonderfully magical people.
Okay, so technically, Maths included some basic engineering, but still. Maths.
We all know the Thaumaturgy for clerics. Fun bit of history about the word. It enters English by Queen Elizabeth's friend John Dee who uses it as a term for mathematics/maths. That's right, performing maths is witchcraft. You're welcome you wonderfully magical people.
Okay, so technically, Maths included some basic engineering, but still. Maths.
So my tiefling can use it to perform trig?
Find your own truth, choose your enemies carefully, and never deal with a dragon.
"Canon" is what's factual to D&D lore. "Cannon" is what you're going to be shot with if you keep getting the word wrong.
I so totally need that cantrip now. I'm terrible at Math.
<Insert clever signature here>
“Dear Pelor,
How do I solve this quadratic equation?
Thanks,
Fierma, Destroyer of the Undead Horde
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My homebrew stuff:
Spells, Monsters, Magic Items, Feats, Subclasses.
I am an Archfey, but nobody seems to notice.
Extended Signature
Actually, probably. Trig was invented in the 1200's somewhere, and John Dee was born like 300 (1527) years later and coined the term.