Medlin

Earned his name from an epic prank whereby he dumped a “storm” of frogs on the people of Slate’s hometown. Could be that they knew each other before Slate left. Medlin showed up, dwarves don’t like sprites that much to begin with -the only person to give him the time of day was Slate and Medlin didn’t like the way that they treated Slate so that gave him the idea of the frogstorm. He wasn’t quiet about the fact that he had done it, so both he and Slate got run out of town.
Medlin loves pranks. He loves plotting them out and he loves seeing the looks on ppl’s faces when he pulls them off. He has to be there when they happen because that is the part that is the payoff for him.

Etymology

Involve oneself in a matter without right or invitation, interfere officiously and unwantedly, intrude, interfere, handle something idly or ignorantly, tamper. [Origin: 1250–1300; ME medlen < OF me(s)dler, var. of mesler (F mêler) < VL *miscula-re, freq. of L miscére to mix] [Middle English medlen, from Anglo-Norman medler, variant of Old French mesler, from Vulgar Latin *miscula-re, to mix thoroughly, from Latin misce-re, to mix; see meik- in Indo-European roots.] c.1290, "to mingle," from O.N.Fr. medler (O.Fr. mesler) "to mix, mingle, to meddle," from V.L. *misculare, from L. miscere "to mix" (see mix). Meaning "to concern oneself" (usually disparaging) is attested from 1415. From c.1340 to 1700, it also was a euphemism for "have sexual intercourse." Meddlesome is attested from 1615.

Medlin

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