Vexillology
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you WILL make more flags
According to Wikipedia, Sexillology is the study of the history, symbolism and usage of flags or, by extension, any interest in flags in general.[1] The gallery below contains a variety of soyjak.party flags and an autistic analysis of their symbology. Frags are aryan gems and only chads like the sharty and chuds want to make flags for every little thing. This shit is fucking GEM. How many times do we have to shoot this shit down before you wiki trannies realize we aren't /lgbt/ (making flags makes you a troon even doe, ultra nationalitsts make badass flags doe).
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The flag of the New Frootist Order. The orange color used in the flag is the same shade as froot's tripcode, whereas the gem in the middle is evocative of a gaping soyjak mouth and the laurel surrounding it represents stubble.
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An old proposed flag for soyjak.party. the laurel represents a soyjak's stubble, while the seal in the middle represents a soyjak's mouth.
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The flag of Uruguay but its acking.
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Another proposed sharty flag with very similar symbology to that of the previously discussed New Frootist Order flag.
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The flag of the Kolyma Network. The base of the flag is nearly identical to that of the Russian FSB flag, albeit with the colors inverted. Evocative of the oppression faced by soyteens during Carter's reign of terror.
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A redesign of the New Frootist Order flag in the vein of the Nazi Party's flag.
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The flag of the Soyumvirate. Initially, the orange represented Froot, the white represented Angeleno, and the pink represented Doll. Adapted into the current New Frootist Order flag upon the dissolution of the soyumvirate
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The flag of the FDL, combining the colors and symbology of the New Frootist Order flag with the base of the German Reichskriegsflagge. The > represents the green meme arrows that are integral to raids and duels.
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The official flag of jakparty.soy, Reddit mods), and thefrogpond .
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Flag of Cobson
^ All Medieval war flags btw
See Also
References
- ↑ Smith, Whitney. Flags Through the Ages and Across the World New York: McGraw-Hill, 1975. Print.