Is using the effect of the Comprehend Languages spell too strenuous to be done as part of a short rest?





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The PHB describes a short rest as:




A short rest is a period of downtime, at least 1 hour long, during which a character does nothing more strenuous than eating, drinking, reading, and tending to wounds.




Here's the scenario.



The party holes up and declares the intention to take a short rest. The wizard casts comprehend languages as a ritual, and then spends the hour of the spell reading pages from a written text written in a lost language, one page a minute. While the literal words of the text are easy to decipher, due to the spell, it is challenging to make sense of the text as a whole, and the wizard needs to go back and forth to make sense of it, sometimes having to reread pages in light of the information on other pages.



Is this activity more strenuous than "eating, drinking, reading, and tending to wounds"? I am inclined to rule that it is, but I want to know if there are aspects that I am missing.



I am looking at the hour of the spell's effect as occurring during the short rest, excluding the time required to cast the spell, so the effort required to actually cast the spell is out-of-scope for this question. I'm just asking if the effort described to actually make use of the spell's effect is more than allowable in a short rest.



I'm interested in both RAW and in people's actual experiences with similar situations.



Thanks










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  • $begingroup$
    Related, possible duplicate: Can you maintain concentration through a short rest?
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    Feb 9 at 22:07








  • 3




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    @V2Blast Related, but not a duplicate. This question isn't about concentration (this spell does not require concentration), so the answers to the related question do not apply. This question is about whether the activities involved in this particular spell are too strenuous.
    $endgroup$
    – Bloodcinder
    Feb 9 at 23:48




















16












$begingroup$


The PHB describes a short rest as:




A short rest is a period of downtime, at least 1 hour long, during which a character does nothing more strenuous than eating, drinking, reading, and tending to wounds.




Here's the scenario.



The party holes up and declares the intention to take a short rest. The wizard casts comprehend languages as a ritual, and then spends the hour of the spell reading pages from a written text written in a lost language, one page a minute. While the literal words of the text are easy to decipher, due to the spell, it is challenging to make sense of the text as a whole, and the wizard needs to go back and forth to make sense of it, sometimes having to reread pages in light of the information on other pages.



Is this activity more strenuous than "eating, drinking, reading, and tending to wounds"? I am inclined to rule that it is, but I want to know if there are aspects that I am missing.



I am looking at the hour of the spell's effect as occurring during the short rest, excluding the time required to cast the spell, so the effort required to actually cast the spell is out-of-scope for this question. I'm just asking if the effort described to actually make use of the spell's effect is more than allowable in a short rest.



I'm interested in both RAW and in people's actual experiences with similar situations.



Thanks










share|improve this question











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Related, possible duplicate: Can you maintain concentration through a short rest?
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    Feb 9 at 22:07








  • 3




    $begingroup$
    @V2Blast Related, but not a duplicate. This question isn't about concentration (this spell does not require concentration), so the answers to the related question do not apply. This question is about whether the activities involved in this particular spell are too strenuous.
    $endgroup$
    – Bloodcinder
    Feb 9 at 23:48
















16












16








16


1



$begingroup$


The PHB describes a short rest as:




A short rest is a period of downtime, at least 1 hour long, during which a character does nothing more strenuous than eating, drinking, reading, and tending to wounds.




Here's the scenario.



The party holes up and declares the intention to take a short rest. The wizard casts comprehend languages as a ritual, and then spends the hour of the spell reading pages from a written text written in a lost language, one page a minute. While the literal words of the text are easy to decipher, due to the spell, it is challenging to make sense of the text as a whole, and the wizard needs to go back and forth to make sense of it, sometimes having to reread pages in light of the information on other pages.



Is this activity more strenuous than "eating, drinking, reading, and tending to wounds"? I am inclined to rule that it is, but I want to know if there are aspects that I am missing.



I am looking at the hour of the spell's effect as occurring during the short rest, excluding the time required to cast the spell, so the effort required to actually cast the spell is out-of-scope for this question. I'm just asking if the effort described to actually make use of the spell's effect is more than allowable in a short rest.



I'm interested in both RAW and in people's actual experiences with similar situations.



Thanks










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




The PHB describes a short rest as:




A short rest is a period of downtime, at least 1 hour long, during which a character does nothing more strenuous than eating, drinking, reading, and tending to wounds.




Here's the scenario.



The party holes up and declares the intention to take a short rest. The wizard casts comprehend languages as a ritual, and then spends the hour of the spell reading pages from a written text written in a lost language, one page a minute. While the literal words of the text are easy to decipher, due to the spell, it is challenging to make sense of the text as a whole, and the wizard needs to go back and forth to make sense of it, sometimes having to reread pages in light of the information on other pages.



Is this activity more strenuous than "eating, drinking, reading, and tending to wounds"? I am inclined to rule that it is, but I want to know if there are aspects that I am missing.



I am looking at the hour of the spell's effect as occurring during the short rest, excluding the time required to cast the spell, so the effort required to actually cast the spell is out-of-scope for this question. I'm just asking if the effort described to actually make use of the spell's effect is more than allowable in a short rest.



I'm interested in both RAW and in people's actual experiences with similar situations.



Thanks







dnd-5e spells rests






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edited Feb 10 at 0:24









V2Blast

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asked Feb 9 at 21:47









JackJack

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  • $begingroup$
    Related, possible duplicate: Can you maintain concentration through a short rest?
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    Feb 9 at 22:07








  • 3




    $begingroup$
    @V2Blast Related, but not a duplicate. This question isn't about concentration (this spell does not require concentration), so the answers to the related question do not apply. This question is about whether the activities involved in this particular spell are too strenuous.
    $endgroup$
    – Bloodcinder
    Feb 9 at 23:48




















  • $begingroup$
    Related, possible duplicate: Can you maintain concentration through a short rest?
    $endgroup$
    – V2Blast
    Feb 9 at 22:07








  • 3




    $begingroup$
    @V2Blast Related, but not a duplicate. This question isn't about concentration (this spell does not require concentration), so the answers to the related question do not apply. This question is about whether the activities involved in this particular spell are too strenuous.
    $endgroup$
    – Bloodcinder
    Feb 9 at 23:48


















$begingroup$
Related, possible duplicate: Can you maintain concentration through a short rest?
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
Feb 9 at 22:07






$begingroup$
Related, possible duplicate: Can you maintain concentration through a short rest?
$endgroup$
– V2Blast
Feb 9 at 22:07






3




3




$begingroup$
@V2Blast Related, but not a duplicate. This question isn't about concentration (this spell does not require concentration), so the answers to the related question do not apply. This question is about whether the activities involved in this particular spell are too strenuous.
$endgroup$
– Bloodcinder
Feb 9 at 23:48






$begingroup$
@V2Blast Related, but not a duplicate. This question isn't about concentration (this spell does not require concentration), so the answers to the related question do not apply. This question is about whether the activities involved in this particular spell are too strenuous.
$endgroup$
– Bloodcinder
Feb 9 at 23:48












4 Answers
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Reading with comprehend languages is probably no more strenuous than reading normally



The text of comprehend languages says:




For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken language that you hear. You also understand any written language that you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text.




It doesn't say you need to concentrate, use your action, or do anything at all in order to understand spoken words, and the only requirement for understanding written words is touching the surface they're written on, which is already part of normal reading. It just says that you understand the literal meaning. In fact, understanding spoken language isn't even optional: the caster understands all speech that they can hear whether they want to or not until the spell ends. There is nothing in the spell text to indicate that reading or listening using the spell is any more strenuous than doing so without the spell. (One minute to read a full page of text is pretty consistent with how long it takes me normally to read and fully comprehend (i.e. not just skim) a page of text in real life.) Hence, I see no reason you could not benefit from a short rest while reading using comprehend languages. You probably would not say that hearing and understanding someone's speech using the spell should interrupt your short rest. So why should reading be any different than comprehending speech?



It's entirely possible that certain kinds of reading, such as focused study involving constant cross-referencing between multiple books and keeping track of many trains of thought at once, would be too strenuous to be part of a short rest. But that has nothing to do with comprehend languages.






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  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Thank you for your answer. Your last paragraph is a good point. Focused study might involve reading, but could be more strenuous than reading.
    $endgroup$
    – Jack
    Feb 10 at 0:51






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Indeed, there's a difference between something like "I search the text for any references to Mr'thgul the Mendacious" and "I analyze the text for inconsistencies with the Cyclopedia of Boonto, using Best Practices in Advanced Elvish Hermeneutics".
    $endgroup$
    – Robert Columbia
    Feb 10 at 12:44



















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It is not strenuous enough to stop a short rest




For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken
language that you hear. You also understand any written language that
you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are
written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text. This spell
doesn’t decode secret messages in a text or a glyph, such as an arcane
sigil, that isn’t part of a written language.




And, as you said, a short rest is:




A short rest is a period of downtime, at least 1 hour long, during
which a character does nothing more strenuous than eating, drinking,
reading, and tending to wounds.




Comprehend languages is is not a concentration spell, so it does not take any effort to maintain the spell. It allows you to retain the benefits, without any effort whatsoever. It is essentially allowing you to read completely naturally, like your own language, so long as you are touching the text. Therefore, it is not more strenuous than reading a book of your own language, which is within the parameters of the spell. Even if it was concentration, you could.



So, I would say you could easily action / ritual cast the spell before the short rest, and you would be able to enjoy that book during your short rest.






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    Thank you for your answer! Hmm. I interpret comprehend languages as requiring a bit of effort on the part of the reader than you're implying, because of the part in that spell about a page a minute. Although that is an arbitrary unit of effort since it implies that a page of The Cat in the Hat is as difficult to read as a page of War and Peace.
    $endgroup$
    – Jack
    Feb 10 at 0:13






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    $begingroup$
    @Jack A page of The Cat in the Hat is hardly "a page of text".
    $endgroup$
    – Ryan Thompson
    Feb 10 at 0:24






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    @Jack the short rest ruling implies you can read, and it does not specify what kinds of books you can and can't read. I don't think that you can only read cat in the hat books, it says that you can read.
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    – Justin
    Feb 10 at 0:37



















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I agree that with the other answers that the spell doesn’t make this activity too strenuous for a short rest. But given your description, I think it’s entirely reasonable to rule that working to understand what the text means - not just reading what it literally says - is a strenuous mental exercise, if the text is complex or obscure. This is something you could easily say about a wizard’s notebook, a history written very long ago with many gaps, a text created by a culture very alien to the reader etc - even if it was written in a language the character already knows.



The easiest way to model this is to have the character make an Intelligence check - perhaps using Arcana or History, if appropriate - to represent the cross referencing and note taking and so on required to work it out. You could also rule that the wizard can read the whole thing without making a roll, and give them a summary of what they learned which is subtle or complicated to understand or apply to their situation.



If it were me, I’d give them a choice - making the roll means they figure it all out to some degree, depending on the result (I don’t like flat-out failures on rolls to gain information), but they don’t get the normal benefits of a short rest; or they can just read it and try and figure out what it means afterwards, and they do get normal short rest benefits.






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    No rulings either way, but I'd say no.



    There's nothing in the books or SageAdvice or Jeremy Crawford's semi-official tweets. Me personally, as a GM, I'd probably say no, the wizard is too focused on his books to take the time to rest and benefit from a short rest. His mind is active and he's already focused on an activity, so he wouldn't be meditating on his spellbook to get his Arcane recovery for example.



    You might be able to RP a medicine check from someone in the party to make sure the wizard gets food, water, and medical attention so he can regain hit die. I wouldn't consider tending to the wizard's needs to be too strenuous for a short rest for the helper.






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    • $begingroup$
      Thanks for your answer. You make a very good point about arcane recovery.
      $endgroup$
      – Jack
      Feb 10 at 0:21










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      The rules explicitly say that reading is something you can do during a short rest. Is there anything specific to comprehend languages that would change that?
      $endgroup$
      – Ryan Thompson
      Feb 10 at 0:34










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      @RyanThompson, that's a good question. Maybe the bit of the spell about needing a minute to read a page suggests it's harder than regular reading. Or maybe you can do even really hard, strenuous detailed reading during a short rest.
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      – Jack
      Feb 10 at 0:47










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      I'm not sure you can fairly insert the niche case of Arcane Recovery into this situation as it adds a different take on the entire situation. The feature specifically states that you need to study your spellbook, which isn't applicable in this scenario. Furthermore, there's nothing in your post that seems to be based on your actual experiences, just your gut reaction, which doesn't appear to be based on RAW. Have you had this sort of situation come up at a table you've played at, that was the OP's other criteria.
      $endgroup$
      – Pyrotechnical
      Feb 10 at 2:20










    • $begingroup$
      @Pyrotechnical well the question asks if a wizard can benefit from a short rest while doing difficult translation using a spell. A benefit that a wizard receives during a short rest is Arcane Recovery, and as you say, it wouldn't be possible in this situation. Thus it needs mentioning if someone tries to reference this question to justify being able to arcane recovery and complete hard reading in the same short rest. That's what stack exchange is for.
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      – Miles Bedinger
      Feb 10 at 2:55












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    4 Answers
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    4 Answers
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    14












    $begingroup$

    Reading with comprehend languages is probably no more strenuous than reading normally



    The text of comprehend languages says:




    For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken language that you hear. You also understand any written language that you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text.




    It doesn't say you need to concentrate, use your action, or do anything at all in order to understand spoken words, and the only requirement for understanding written words is touching the surface they're written on, which is already part of normal reading. It just says that you understand the literal meaning. In fact, understanding spoken language isn't even optional: the caster understands all speech that they can hear whether they want to or not until the spell ends. There is nothing in the spell text to indicate that reading or listening using the spell is any more strenuous than doing so without the spell. (One minute to read a full page of text is pretty consistent with how long it takes me normally to read and fully comprehend (i.e. not just skim) a page of text in real life.) Hence, I see no reason you could not benefit from a short rest while reading using comprehend languages. You probably would not say that hearing and understanding someone's speech using the spell should interrupt your short rest. So why should reading be any different than comprehending speech?



    It's entirely possible that certain kinds of reading, such as focused study involving constant cross-referencing between multiple books and keeping track of many trains of thought at once, would be too strenuous to be part of a short rest. But that has nothing to do with comprehend languages.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$









    • 1




      $begingroup$
      Thank you for your answer. Your last paragraph is a good point. Focused study might involve reading, but could be more strenuous than reading.
      $endgroup$
      – Jack
      Feb 10 at 0:51






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      Indeed, there's a difference between something like "I search the text for any references to Mr'thgul the Mendacious" and "I analyze the text for inconsistencies with the Cyclopedia of Boonto, using Best Practices in Advanced Elvish Hermeneutics".
      $endgroup$
      – Robert Columbia
      Feb 10 at 12:44
















    14












    $begingroup$

    Reading with comprehend languages is probably no more strenuous than reading normally



    The text of comprehend languages says:




    For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken language that you hear. You also understand any written language that you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text.




    It doesn't say you need to concentrate, use your action, or do anything at all in order to understand spoken words, and the only requirement for understanding written words is touching the surface they're written on, which is already part of normal reading. It just says that you understand the literal meaning. In fact, understanding spoken language isn't even optional: the caster understands all speech that they can hear whether they want to or not until the spell ends. There is nothing in the spell text to indicate that reading or listening using the spell is any more strenuous than doing so without the spell. (One minute to read a full page of text is pretty consistent with how long it takes me normally to read and fully comprehend (i.e. not just skim) a page of text in real life.) Hence, I see no reason you could not benefit from a short rest while reading using comprehend languages. You probably would not say that hearing and understanding someone's speech using the spell should interrupt your short rest. So why should reading be any different than comprehending speech?



    It's entirely possible that certain kinds of reading, such as focused study involving constant cross-referencing between multiple books and keeping track of many trains of thought at once, would be too strenuous to be part of a short rest. But that has nothing to do with comprehend languages.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$









    • 1




      $begingroup$
      Thank you for your answer. Your last paragraph is a good point. Focused study might involve reading, but could be more strenuous than reading.
      $endgroup$
      – Jack
      Feb 10 at 0:51






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      Indeed, there's a difference between something like "I search the text for any references to Mr'thgul the Mendacious" and "I analyze the text for inconsistencies with the Cyclopedia of Boonto, using Best Practices in Advanced Elvish Hermeneutics".
      $endgroup$
      – Robert Columbia
      Feb 10 at 12:44














    14












    14








    14





    $begingroup$

    Reading with comprehend languages is probably no more strenuous than reading normally



    The text of comprehend languages says:




    For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken language that you hear. You also understand any written language that you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text.




    It doesn't say you need to concentrate, use your action, or do anything at all in order to understand spoken words, and the only requirement for understanding written words is touching the surface they're written on, which is already part of normal reading. It just says that you understand the literal meaning. In fact, understanding spoken language isn't even optional: the caster understands all speech that they can hear whether they want to or not until the spell ends. There is nothing in the spell text to indicate that reading or listening using the spell is any more strenuous than doing so without the spell. (One minute to read a full page of text is pretty consistent with how long it takes me normally to read and fully comprehend (i.e. not just skim) a page of text in real life.) Hence, I see no reason you could not benefit from a short rest while reading using comprehend languages. You probably would not say that hearing and understanding someone's speech using the spell should interrupt your short rest. So why should reading be any different than comprehending speech?



    It's entirely possible that certain kinds of reading, such as focused study involving constant cross-referencing between multiple books and keeping track of many trains of thought at once, would be too strenuous to be part of a short rest. But that has nothing to do with comprehend languages.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$



    Reading with comprehend languages is probably no more strenuous than reading normally



    The text of comprehend languages says:




    For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken language that you hear. You also understand any written language that you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text.




    It doesn't say you need to concentrate, use your action, or do anything at all in order to understand spoken words, and the only requirement for understanding written words is touching the surface they're written on, which is already part of normal reading. It just says that you understand the literal meaning. In fact, understanding spoken language isn't even optional: the caster understands all speech that they can hear whether they want to or not until the spell ends. There is nothing in the spell text to indicate that reading or listening using the spell is any more strenuous than doing so without the spell. (One minute to read a full page of text is pretty consistent with how long it takes me normally to read and fully comprehend (i.e. not just skim) a page of text in real life.) Hence, I see no reason you could not benefit from a short rest while reading using comprehend languages. You probably would not say that hearing and understanding someone's speech using the spell should interrupt your short rest. So why should reading be any different than comprehending speech?



    It's entirely possible that certain kinds of reading, such as focused study involving constant cross-referencing between multiple books and keeping track of many trains of thought at once, would be too strenuous to be part of a short rest. But that has nothing to do with comprehend languages.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Feb 10 at 2:00

























    answered Feb 10 at 0:48









    Ryan ThompsonRyan Thompson

    11.4k23886




    11.4k23886








    • 1




      $begingroup$
      Thank you for your answer. Your last paragraph is a good point. Focused study might involve reading, but could be more strenuous than reading.
      $endgroup$
      – Jack
      Feb 10 at 0:51






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      Indeed, there's a difference between something like "I search the text for any references to Mr'thgul the Mendacious" and "I analyze the text for inconsistencies with the Cyclopedia of Boonto, using Best Practices in Advanced Elvish Hermeneutics".
      $endgroup$
      – Robert Columbia
      Feb 10 at 12:44














    • 1




      $begingroup$
      Thank you for your answer. Your last paragraph is a good point. Focused study might involve reading, but could be more strenuous than reading.
      $endgroup$
      – Jack
      Feb 10 at 0:51






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      Indeed, there's a difference between something like "I search the text for any references to Mr'thgul the Mendacious" and "I analyze the text for inconsistencies with the Cyclopedia of Boonto, using Best Practices in Advanced Elvish Hermeneutics".
      $endgroup$
      – Robert Columbia
      Feb 10 at 12:44








    1




    1




    $begingroup$
    Thank you for your answer. Your last paragraph is a good point. Focused study might involve reading, but could be more strenuous than reading.
    $endgroup$
    – Jack
    Feb 10 at 0:51




    $begingroup$
    Thank you for your answer. Your last paragraph is a good point. Focused study might involve reading, but could be more strenuous than reading.
    $endgroup$
    – Jack
    Feb 10 at 0:51




    1




    1




    $begingroup$
    Indeed, there's a difference between something like "I search the text for any references to Mr'thgul the Mendacious" and "I analyze the text for inconsistencies with the Cyclopedia of Boonto, using Best Practices in Advanced Elvish Hermeneutics".
    $endgroup$
    – Robert Columbia
    Feb 10 at 12:44




    $begingroup$
    Indeed, there's a difference between something like "I search the text for any references to Mr'thgul the Mendacious" and "I analyze the text for inconsistencies with the Cyclopedia of Boonto, using Best Practices in Advanced Elvish Hermeneutics".
    $endgroup$
    – Robert Columbia
    Feb 10 at 12:44













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    It is not strenuous enough to stop a short rest




    For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken
    language that you hear. You also understand any written language that
    you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are
    written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text. This spell
    doesn’t decode secret messages in a text or a glyph, such as an arcane
    sigil, that isn’t part of a written language.




    And, as you said, a short rest is:




    A short rest is a period of downtime, at least 1 hour long, during
    which a character does nothing more strenuous than eating, drinking,
    reading, and tending to wounds.




    Comprehend languages is is not a concentration spell, so it does not take any effort to maintain the spell. It allows you to retain the benefits, without any effort whatsoever. It is essentially allowing you to read completely naturally, like your own language, so long as you are touching the text. Therefore, it is not more strenuous than reading a book of your own language, which is within the parameters of the spell. Even if it was concentration, you could.



    So, I would say you could easily action / ritual cast the spell before the short rest, and you would be able to enjoy that book during your short rest.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$













    • $begingroup$
      Thank you for your answer! Hmm. I interpret comprehend languages as requiring a bit of effort on the part of the reader than you're implying, because of the part in that spell about a page a minute. Although that is an arbitrary unit of effort since it implies that a page of The Cat in the Hat is as difficult to read as a page of War and Peace.
      $endgroup$
      – Jack
      Feb 10 at 0:13






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @Jack A page of The Cat in the Hat is hardly "a page of text".
      $endgroup$
      – Ryan Thompson
      Feb 10 at 0:24






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @Jack the short rest ruling implies you can read, and it does not specify what kinds of books you can and can't read. I don't think that you can only read cat in the hat books, it says that you can read.
      $endgroup$
      – Justin
      Feb 10 at 0:37
















    6












    $begingroup$

    It is not strenuous enough to stop a short rest




    For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken
    language that you hear. You also understand any written language that
    you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are
    written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text. This spell
    doesn’t decode secret messages in a text or a glyph, such as an arcane
    sigil, that isn’t part of a written language.




    And, as you said, a short rest is:




    A short rest is a period of downtime, at least 1 hour long, during
    which a character does nothing more strenuous than eating, drinking,
    reading, and tending to wounds.




    Comprehend languages is is not a concentration spell, so it does not take any effort to maintain the spell. It allows you to retain the benefits, without any effort whatsoever. It is essentially allowing you to read completely naturally, like your own language, so long as you are touching the text. Therefore, it is not more strenuous than reading a book of your own language, which is within the parameters of the spell. Even if it was concentration, you could.



    So, I would say you could easily action / ritual cast the spell before the short rest, and you would be able to enjoy that book during your short rest.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$













    • $begingroup$
      Thank you for your answer! Hmm. I interpret comprehend languages as requiring a bit of effort on the part of the reader than you're implying, because of the part in that spell about a page a minute. Although that is an arbitrary unit of effort since it implies that a page of The Cat in the Hat is as difficult to read as a page of War and Peace.
      $endgroup$
      – Jack
      Feb 10 at 0:13






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @Jack A page of The Cat in the Hat is hardly "a page of text".
      $endgroup$
      – Ryan Thompson
      Feb 10 at 0:24






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @Jack the short rest ruling implies you can read, and it does not specify what kinds of books you can and can't read. I don't think that you can only read cat in the hat books, it says that you can read.
      $endgroup$
      – Justin
      Feb 10 at 0:37














    6












    6








    6





    $begingroup$

    It is not strenuous enough to stop a short rest




    For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken
    language that you hear. You also understand any written language that
    you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are
    written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text. This spell
    doesn’t decode secret messages in a text or a glyph, such as an arcane
    sigil, that isn’t part of a written language.




    And, as you said, a short rest is:




    A short rest is a period of downtime, at least 1 hour long, during
    which a character does nothing more strenuous than eating, drinking,
    reading, and tending to wounds.




    Comprehend languages is is not a concentration spell, so it does not take any effort to maintain the spell. It allows you to retain the benefits, without any effort whatsoever. It is essentially allowing you to read completely naturally, like your own language, so long as you are touching the text. Therefore, it is not more strenuous than reading a book of your own language, which is within the parameters of the spell. Even if it was concentration, you could.



    So, I would say you could easily action / ritual cast the spell before the short rest, and you would be able to enjoy that book during your short rest.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$



    It is not strenuous enough to stop a short rest




    For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken
    language that you hear. You also understand any written language that
    you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are
    written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text. This spell
    doesn’t decode secret messages in a text or a glyph, such as an arcane
    sigil, that isn’t part of a written language.




    And, as you said, a short rest is:




    A short rest is a period of downtime, at least 1 hour long, during
    which a character does nothing more strenuous than eating, drinking,
    reading, and tending to wounds.




    Comprehend languages is is not a concentration spell, so it does not take any effort to maintain the spell. It allows you to retain the benefits, without any effort whatsoever. It is essentially allowing you to read completely naturally, like your own language, so long as you are touching the text. Therefore, it is not more strenuous than reading a book of your own language, which is within the parameters of the spell. Even if it was concentration, you could.



    So, I would say you could easily action / ritual cast the spell before the short rest, and you would be able to enjoy that book during your short rest.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Feb 10 at 0:58









    V2Blast

    26.1k590159




    26.1k590159










    answered Feb 10 at 0:01









    JustinJustin

    2,96211134




    2,96211134












    • $begingroup$
      Thank you for your answer! Hmm. I interpret comprehend languages as requiring a bit of effort on the part of the reader than you're implying, because of the part in that spell about a page a minute. Although that is an arbitrary unit of effort since it implies that a page of The Cat in the Hat is as difficult to read as a page of War and Peace.
      $endgroup$
      – Jack
      Feb 10 at 0:13






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @Jack A page of The Cat in the Hat is hardly "a page of text".
      $endgroup$
      – Ryan Thompson
      Feb 10 at 0:24






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @Jack the short rest ruling implies you can read, and it does not specify what kinds of books you can and can't read. I don't think that you can only read cat in the hat books, it says that you can read.
      $endgroup$
      – Justin
      Feb 10 at 0:37


















    • $begingroup$
      Thank you for your answer! Hmm. I interpret comprehend languages as requiring a bit of effort on the part of the reader than you're implying, because of the part in that spell about a page a minute. Although that is an arbitrary unit of effort since it implies that a page of The Cat in the Hat is as difficult to read as a page of War and Peace.
      $endgroup$
      – Jack
      Feb 10 at 0:13






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @Jack A page of The Cat in the Hat is hardly "a page of text".
      $endgroup$
      – Ryan Thompson
      Feb 10 at 0:24






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @Jack the short rest ruling implies you can read, and it does not specify what kinds of books you can and can't read. I don't think that you can only read cat in the hat books, it says that you can read.
      $endgroup$
      – Justin
      Feb 10 at 0:37
















    $begingroup$
    Thank you for your answer! Hmm. I interpret comprehend languages as requiring a bit of effort on the part of the reader than you're implying, because of the part in that spell about a page a minute. Although that is an arbitrary unit of effort since it implies that a page of The Cat in the Hat is as difficult to read as a page of War and Peace.
    $endgroup$
    – Jack
    Feb 10 at 0:13




    $begingroup$
    Thank you for your answer! Hmm. I interpret comprehend languages as requiring a bit of effort on the part of the reader than you're implying, because of the part in that spell about a page a minute. Although that is an arbitrary unit of effort since it implies that a page of The Cat in the Hat is as difficult to read as a page of War and Peace.
    $endgroup$
    – Jack
    Feb 10 at 0:13




    1




    1




    $begingroup$
    @Jack A page of The Cat in the Hat is hardly "a page of text".
    $endgroup$
    – Ryan Thompson
    Feb 10 at 0:24




    $begingroup$
    @Jack A page of The Cat in the Hat is hardly "a page of text".
    $endgroup$
    – Ryan Thompson
    Feb 10 at 0:24




    1




    1




    $begingroup$
    @Jack the short rest ruling implies you can read, and it does not specify what kinds of books you can and can't read. I don't think that you can only read cat in the hat books, it says that you can read.
    $endgroup$
    – Justin
    Feb 10 at 0:37




    $begingroup$
    @Jack the short rest ruling implies you can read, and it does not specify what kinds of books you can and can't read. I don't think that you can only read cat in the hat books, it says that you can read.
    $endgroup$
    – Justin
    Feb 10 at 0:37











    3












    $begingroup$

    I agree that with the other answers that the spell doesn’t make this activity too strenuous for a short rest. But given your description, I think it’s entirely reasonable to rule that working to understand what the text means - not just reading what it literally says - is a strenuous mental exercise, if the text is complex or obscure. This is something you could easily say about a wizard’s notebook, a history written very long ago with many gaps, a text created by a culture very alien to the reader etc - even if it was written in a language the character already knows.



    The easiest way to model this is to have the character make an Intelligence check - perhaps using Arcana or History, if appropriate - to represent the cross referencing and note taking and so on required to work it out. You could also rule that the wizard can read the whole thing without making a roll, and give them a summary of what they learned which is subtle or complicated to understand or apply to their situation.



    If it were me, I’d give them a choice - making the roll means they figure it all out to some degree, depending on the result (I don’t like flat-out failures on rolls to gain information), but they don’t get the normal benefits of a short rest; or they can just read it and try and figure out what it means afterwards, and they do get normal short rest benefits.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$


















      3












      $begingroup$

      I agree that with the other answers that the spell doesn’t make this activity too strenuous for a short rest. But given your description, I think it’s entirely reasonable to rule that working to understand what the text means - not just reading what it literally says - is a strenuous mental exercise, if the text is complex or obscure. This is something you could easily say about a wizard’s notebook, a history written very long ago with many gaps, a text created by a culture very alien to the reader etc - even if it was written in a language the character already knows.



      The easiest way to model this is to have the character make an Intelligence check - perhaps using Arcana or History, if appropriate - to represent the cross referencing and note taking and so on required to work it out. You could also rule that the wizard can read the whole thing without making a roll, and give them a summary of what they learned which is subtle or complicated to understand or apply to their situation.



      If it were me, I’d give them a choice - making the roll means they figure it all out to some degree, depending on the result (I don’t like flat-out failures on rolls to gain information), but they don’t get the normal benefits of a short rest; or they can just read it and try and figure out what it means afterwards, and they do get normal short rest benefits.






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$
















        3












        3








        3





        $begingroup$

        I agree that with the other answers that the spell doesn’t make this activity too strenuous for a short rest. But given your description, I think it’s entirely reasonable to rule that working to understand what the text means - not just reading what it literally says - is a strenuous mental exercise, if the text is complex or obscure. This is something you could easily say about a wizard’s notebook, a history written very long ago with many gaps, a text created by a culture very alien to the reader etc - even if it was written in a language the character already knows.



        The easiest way to model this is to have the character make an Intelligence check - perhaps using Arcana or History, if appropriate - to represent the cross referencing and note taking and so on required to work it out. You could also rule that the wizard can read the whole thing without making a roll, and give them a summary of what they learned which is subtle or complicated to understand or apply to their situation.



        If it were me, I’d give them a choice - making the roll means they figure it all out to some degree, depending on the result (I don’t like flat-out failures on rolls to gain information), but they don’t get the normal benefits of a short rest; or they can just read it and try and figure out what it means afterwards, and they do get normal short rest benefits.






        share|improve this answer











        $endgroup$



        I agree that with the other answers that the spell doesn’t make this activity too strenuous for a short rest. But given your description, I think it’s entirely reasonable to rule that working to understand what the text means - not just reading what it literally says - is a strenuous mental exercise, if the text is complex or obscure. This is something you could easily say about a wizard’s notebook, a history written very long ago with many gaps, a text created by a culture very alien to the reader etc - even if it was written in a language the character already knows.



        The easiest way to model this is to have the character make an Intelligence check - perhaps using Arcana or History, if appropriate - to represent the cross referencing and note taking and so on required to work it out. You could also rule that the wizard can read the whole thing without making a roll, and give them a summary of what they learned which is subtle or complicated to understand or apply to their situation.



        If it were me, I’d give them a choice - making the roll means they figure it all out to some degree, depending on the result (I don’t like flat-out failures on rolls to gain information), but they don’t get the normal benefits of a short rest; or they can just read it and try and figure out what it means afterwards, and they do get normal short rest benefits.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Feb 10 at 2:56

























        answered Feb 10 at 2:45









        Guybrush McKenzieGuybrush McKenzie

        1,463316




        1,463316























            1












            $begingroup$

            No rulings either way, but I'd say no.



            There's nothing in the books or SageAdvice or Jeremy Crawford's semi-official tweets. Me personally, as a GM, I'd probably say no, the wizard is too focused on his books to take the time to rest and benefit from a short rest. His mind is active and he's already focused on an activity, so he wouldn't be meditating on his spellbook to get his Arcane recovery for example.



            You might be able to RP a medicine check from someone in the party to make sure the wizard gets food, water, and medical attention so he can regain hit die. I wouldn't consider tending to the wizard's needs to be too strenuous for a short rest for the helper.






            share|improve this answer









            $endgroup$













            • $begingroup$
              Thanks for your answer. You make a very good point about arcane recovery.
              $endgroup$
              – Jack
              Feb 10 at 0:21










            • $begingroup$
              The rules explicitly say that reading is something you can do during a short rest. Is there anything specific to comprehend languages that would change that?
              $endgroup$
              – Ryan Thompson
              Feb 10 at 0:34










            • $begingroup$
              @RyanThompson, that's a good question. Maybe the bit of the spell about needing a minute to read a page suggests it's harder than regular reading. Or maybe you can do even really hard, strenuous detailed reading during a short rest.
              $endgroup$
              – Jack
              Feb 10 at 0:47










            • $begingroup$
              I'm not sure you can fairly insert the niche case of Arcane Recovery into this situation as it adds a different take on the entire situation. The feature specifically states that you need to study your spellbook, which isn't applicable in this scenario. Furthermore, there's nothing in your post that seems to be based on your actual experiences, just your gut reaction, which doesn't appear to be based on RAW. Have you had this sort of situation come up at a table you've played at, that was the OP's other criteria.
              $endgroup$
              – Pyrotechnical
              Feb 10 at 2:20










            • $begingroup$
              @Pyrotechnical well the question asks if a wizard can benefit from a short rest while doing difficult translation using a spell. A benefit that a wizard receives during a short rest is Arcane Recovery, and as you say, it wouldn't be possible in this situation. Thus it needs mentioning if someone tries to reference this question to justify being able to arcane recovery and complete hard reading in the same short rest. That's what stack exchange is for.
              $endgroup$
              – Miles Bedinger
              Feb 10 at 2:55
















            1












            $begingroup$

            No rulings either way, but I'd say no.



            There's nothing in the books or SageAdvice or Jeremy Crawford's semi-official tweets. Me personally, as a GM, I'd probably say no, the wizard is too focused on his books to take the time to rest and benefit from a short rest. His mind is active and he's already focused on an activity, so he wouldn't be meditating on his spellbook to get his Arcane recovery for example.



            You might be able to RP a medicine check from someone in the party to make sure the wizard gets food, water, and medical attention so he can regain hit die. I wouldn't consider tending to the wizard's needs to be too strenuous for a short rest for the helper.






            share|improve this answer









            $endgroup$













            • $begingroup$
              Thanks for your answer. You make a very good point about arcane recovery.
              $endgroup$
              – Jack
              Feb 10 at 0:21










            • $begingroup$
              The rules explicitly say that reading is something you can do during a short rest. Is there anything specific to comprehend languages that would change that?
              $endgroup$
              – Ryan Thompson
              Feb 10 at 0:34










            • $begingroup$
              @RyanThompson, that's a good question. Maybe the bit of the spell about needing a minute to read a page suggests it's harder than regular reading. Or maybe you can do even really hard, strenuous detailed reading during a short rest.
              $endgroup$
              – Jack
              Feb 10 at 0:47










            • $begingroup$
              I'm not sure you can fairly insert the niche case of Arcane Recovery into this situation as it adds a different take on the entire situation. The feature specifically states that you need to study your spellbook, which isn't applicable in this scenario. Furthermore, there's nothing in your post that seems to be based on your actual experiences, just your gut reaction, which doesn't appear to be based on RAW. Have you had this sort of situation come up at a table you've played at, that was the OP's other criteria.
              $endgroup$
              – Pyrotechnical
              Feb 10 at 2:20










            • $begingroup$
              @Pyrotechnical well the question asks if a wizard can benefit from a short rest while doing difficult translation using a spell. A benefit that a wizard receives during a short rest is Arcane Recovery, and as you say, it wouldn't be possible in this situation. Thus it needs mentioning if someone tries to reference this question to justify being able to arcane recovery and complete hard reading in the same short rest. That's what stack exchange is for.
              $endgroup$
              – Miles Bedinger
              Feb 10 at 2:55














            1












            1








            1





            $begingroup$

            No rulings either way, but I'd say no.



            There's nothing in the books or SageAdvice or Jeremy Crawford's semi-official tweets. Me personally, as a GM, I'd probably say no, the wizard is too focused on his books to take the time to rest and benefit from a short rest. His mind is active and he's already focused on an activity, so he wouldn't be meditating on his spellbook to get his Arcane recovery for example.



            You might be able to RP a medicine check from someone in the party to make sure the wizard gets food, water, and medical attention so he can regain hit die. I wouldn't consider tending to the wizard's needs to be too strenuous for a short rest for the helper.






            share|improve this answer









            $endgroup$



            No rulings either way, but I'd say no.



            There's nothing in the books or SageAdvice or Jeremy Crawford's semi-official tweets. Me personally, as a GM, I'd probably say no, the wizard is too focused on his books to take the time to rest and benefit from a short rest. His mind is active and he's already focused on an activity, so he wouldn't be meditating on his spellbook to get his Arcane recovery for example.



            You might be able to RP a medicine check from someone in the party to make sure the wizard gets food, water, and medical attention so he can regain hit die. I wouldn't consider tending to the wizard's needs to be too strenuous for a short rest for the helper.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Feb 9 at 23:59









            Miles BedingerMiles Bedinger

            3,981640




            3,981640












            • $begingroup$
              Thanks for your answer. You make a very good point about arcane recovery.
              $endgroup$
              – Jack
              Feb 10 at 0:21










            • $begingroup$
              The rules explicitly say that reading is something you can do during a short rest. Is there anything specific to comprehend languages that would change that?
              $endgroup$
              – Ryan Thompson
              Feb 10 at 0:34










            • $begingroup$
              @RyanThompson, that's a good question. Maybe the bit of the spell about needing a minute to read a page suggests it's harder than regular reading. Or maybe you can do even really hard, strenuous detailed reading during a short rest.
              $endgroup$
              – Jack
              Feb 10 at 0:47










            • $begingroup$
              I'm not sure you can fairly insert the niche case of Arcane Recovery into this situation as it adds a different take on the entire situation. The feature specifically states that you need to study your spellbook, which isn't applicable in this scenario. Furthermore, there's nothing in your post that seems to be based on your actual experiences, just your gut reaction, which doesn't appear to be based on RAW. Have you had this sort of situation come up at a table you've played at, that was the OP's other criteria.
              $endgroup$
              – Pyrotechnical
              Feb 10 at 2:20










            • $begingroup$
              @Pyrotechnical well the question asks if a wizard can benefit from a short rest while doing difficult translation using a spell. A benefit that a wizard receives during a short rest is Arcane Recovery, and as you say, it wouldn't be possible in this situation. Thus it needs mentioning if someone tries to reference this question to justify being able to arcane recovery and complete hard reading in the same short rest. That's what stack exchange is for.
              $endgroup$
              – Miles Bedinger
              Feb 10 at 2:55


















            • $begingroup$
              Thanks for your answer. You make a very good point about arcane recovery.
              $endgroup$
              – Jack
              Feb 10 at 0:21










            • $begingroup$
              The rules explicitly say that reading is something you can do during a short rest. Is there anything specific to comprehend languages that would change that?
              $endgroup$
              – Ryan Thompson
              Feb 10 at 0:34










            • $begingroup$
              @RyanThompson, that's a good question. Maybe the bit of the spell about needing a minute to read a page suggests it's harder than regular reading. Or maybe you can do even really hard, strenuous detailed reading during a short rest.
              $endgroup$
              – Jack
              Feb 10 at 0:47










            • $begingroup$
              I'm not sure you can fairly insert the niche case of Arcane Recovery into this situation as it adds a different take on the entire situation. The feature specifically states that you need to study your spellbook, which isn't applicable in this scenario. Furthermore, there's nothing in your post that seems to be based on your actual experiences, just your gut reaction, which doesn't appear to be based on RAW. Have you had this sort of situation come up at a table you've played at, that was the OP's other criteria.
              $endgroup$
              – Pyrotechnical
              Feb 10 at 2:20










            • $begingroup$
              @Pyrotechnical well the question asks if a wizard can benefit from a short rest while doing difficult translation using a spell. A benefit that a wizard receives during a short rest is Arcane Recovery, and as you say, it wouldn't be possible in this situation. Thus it needs mentioning if someone tries to reference this question to justify being able to arcane recovery and complete hard reading in the same short rest. That's what stack exchange is for.
              $endgroup$
              – Miles Bedinger
              Feb 10 at 2:55
















            $begingroup$
            Thanks for your answer. You make a very good point about arcane recovery.
            $endgroup$
            – Jack
            Feb 10 at 0:21




            $begingroup$
            Thanks for your answer. You make a very good point about arcane recovery.
            $endgroup$
            – Jack
            Feb 10 at 0:21












            $begingroup$
            The rules explicitly say that reading is something you can do during a short rest. Is there anything specific to comprehend languages that would change that?
            $endgroup$
            – Ryan Thompson
            Feb 10 at 0:34




            $begingroup$
            The rules explicitly say that reading is something you can do during a short rest. Is there anything specific to comprehend languages that would change that?
            $endgroup$
            – Ryan Thompson
            Feb 10 at 0:34












            $begingroup$
            @RyanThompson, that's a good question. Maybe the bit of the spell about needing a minute to read a page suggests it's harder than regular reading. Or maybe you can do even really hard, strenuous detailed reading during a short rest.
            $endgroup$
            – Jack
            Feb 10 at 0:47




            $begingroup$
            @RyanThompson, that's a good question. Maybe the bit of the spell about needing a minute to read a page suggests it's harder than regular reading. Or maybe you can do even really hard, strenuous detailed reading during a short rest.
            $endgroup$
            – Jack
            Feb 10 at 0:47












            $begingroup$
            I'm not sure you can fairly insert the niche case of Arcane Recovery into this situation as it adds a different take on the entire situation. The feature specifically states that you need to study your spellbook, which isn't applicable in this scenario. Furthermore, there's nothing in your post that seems to be based on your actual experiences, just your gut reaction, which doesn't appear to be based on RAW. Have you had this sort of situation come up at a table you've played at, that was the OP's other criteria.
            $endgroup$
            – Pyrotechnical
            Feb 10 at 2:20




            $begingroup$
            I'm not sure you can fairly insert the niche case of Arcane Recovery into this situation as it adds a different take on the entire situation. The feature specifically states that you need to study your spellbook, which isn't applicable in this scenario. Furthermore, there's nothing in your post that seems to be based on your actual experiences, just your gut reaction, which doesn't appear to be based on RAW. Have you had this sort of situation come up at a table you've played at, that was the OP's other criteria.
            $endgroup$
            – Pyrotechnical
            Feb 10 at 2:20












            $begingroup$
            @Pyrotechnical well the question asks if a wizard can benefit from a short rest while doing difficult translation using a spell. A benefit that a wizard receives during a short rest is Arcane Recovery, and as you say, it wouldn't be possible in this situation. Thus it needs mentioning if someone tries to reference this question to justify being able to arcane recovery and complete hard reading in the same short rest. That's what stack exchange is for.
            $endgroup$
            – Miles Bedinger
            Feb 10 at 2:55




            $begingroup$
            @Pyrotechnical well the question asks if a wizard can benefit from a short rest while doing difficult translation using a spell. A benefit that a wizard receives during a short rest is Arcane Recovery, and as you say, it wouldn't be possible in this situation. Thus it needs mentioning if someone tries to reference this question to justify being able to arcane recovery and complete hard reading in the same short rest. That's what stack exchange is for.
            $endgroup$
            – Miles Bedinger
            Feb 10 at 2:55


















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