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Sune (Forgotten Realms)

Sune is the deity of love and beauty in the fictional world of the Forgotten Realms. Her dogma is primarily concerned with love based on outward beauty, with primary importance placed upon loving people who respond to the Sunite's appearance.

Sune (name)

Sune can be an Afrikaans female name, or an old Nordic male name, derived from an ancient Nordic word for "son".

Sune (book series)

The Sune series is a series of books for children and young adults, published since 1984, by Swedish writers Anders Jacobsson and Sören Olsson. The stories were originally 90 episodes made for the Swedish Radio and broadcast in 1983–93. The stories are set in the fictional town of Glimmerdagg ("Dew glimmer") in central Sweden, situated "somewhere between Karlskoga and Örebro", with the Söderskolan ("South School") for children age 7-13. The books are written in a present tense, third-person narrative and using imperfect for flashback scenes.

Sune

Sune may refer to:

  • Lalah Sune, a fictional character in Mobile Suit Gundam
  • Sune (book series), a Swedish children's book series
  • Sune (Forgotten Realms), a fictional deity in Forgotten Realms
  • Sune (name), a given name

Usage examples of "sune".

Mieltrude showed little interest in the event and laughed when Sune reproached her.

Two guards in black and purple uniforms saluted Mieltrude and Sune, but stepping forward crossed ceremonial maces to bar Jubal.

Mieltrude and Sune hurried along a passage, with Jubal trotting behind in what he felt must be a ridiculous fashion.

Mieltrude looked at her with a careful absence of expression and Sune stopped laughing.

Mieltrude and Sune stared raptly at Ramus Ymph, though with different expressions.

He touched fingertips with Mieltrude and Sune and glanced speculatively toward Jubal.

Mieltrude raked Jubal with a sparkling gaze, then turned a glance toward Sune, who stifled her mirth.

Mieltrude and Sune sat staring fixedly ahead, ignoring Jubal as if he were a noxious odor.

Jubal and Sune Mircea took lunch in the shady back garden of a country inn, twenty miles east of Wysrod.

To an amazing degree she resembled that version of Eisel womanhood which Sune Mircea had defined: a tall, large-bosomed creature with great masses of brassy curls pinned with ornaments of carved bloodstone.

She was younger than he had supposed, thought Jubal, and certainly younger than Sune Mircea, whose charms, in retrospect, seemed somewhat obvious.

To rollick Sune around a bed no doubt would be a rewarding experience for nerve, gland and body.

I am supposed to prattle secrets indiscreetly, and Sune takes them to Ramus Ymph.

Jubal thought of Sune: treacherous, deceitful Sune, beguiling him in order to aid her lover.

Never to be outshone, Sune, Goddess of Beauty and Love, appeared in a flash of flame as red as her hair.