[tlhIngan Hol] Hochpu'

Steven Boozer sboozer at uchicago.edu
Thu Jun 23 10:41:29 PDT 2016


mayqel qunenoS :
> We know that we can use {latlhpu'} on its own, to say "others'.
> Example :
>
>   Ha'DIbaHvetlh luje'laH latlhpu' je.
>   others are able to feed that animal too.
>
> Can we use the {Hoch} "on its own", in a similar way ?
> Would you accept the following ?
> 
>   Ha'DIbaHvetlh luje'laH Hochpu'
>   all people are able to feed that animal
> 
>   Ha'DIbaHvetlh luje'laH HochHompu'
>   almost all the people are able to feed that animal
> 
> and an additional question just came to mind :
> Hochpu' can only mean "all people", or it can mean "everyone" as well
> (with the distinction between the two being made by the verb prefix of
> the preceding verb {je'})?

What is the difference between "everyone" vs. "all people"?  {Hoch} "everyone, all (of)" is already intrinsically plural (but grammatically singular).  E.g.:

  may' ngeb tIv Hoch 
  Everyone enjoys a mock battle. CK

  QI'tomerDaq Heghpu' Hoch 
  No one survived Khitomer
  ("Everyone died at Khitomer"). TKW

  rut yIHmey ghom Hoch 
  Everyone encounters tribbles occasionally. TKW

  tera' vatlh DIS poH cha'maH loS bIyIn jeSlaHpa' Hoch 
  Be the first to journey to the 24th century. STX

There are a few such intrinsically plural words in Klingon:  

  {negh}		soldiers (sg. {mang})
  {cha} 		torpedoes (sg. {peng})
  {chuyDaH} 	thrusters (sg. {vIj}
  {'eDSeHcha} 	take-off/landing thrusters (sg. unknown)
  {lolSeHcha} 	attitude-control thrusters (sg. unknown)

On the other hand, {latlh} "additional one, other one, another one" is a normal noun, and can be pluralized:

  Heghpu'bogh latlhpu' ghuHmoH bey. ghoS tlhIngan SuvwI' maq. 
  This yell ... serves to warn the other dead that a Klingon
   warrior is coming. S31

  DaSwIj bIngDaq latlhpu' vItap. 
  The rest I will grind beneath my boot. (STConst p.232)

  latlhpu' law' pIlmoHpu' lutvam  
  [translation unavailable] PB

In some ways {Hoch} could be considered a plural version of {vay'} "someone/anyone, something/anything" or {pagh} "no one, nothing".  And like *{Hochpu'}, the forms *{vay'pu'} and *{paghpu'} have never been observed AFAIK.


--
Voragh
tlhIngan ghantoH pIn'a'
Ca'Non Master of the Klingons






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