[tlhIngan Hol] Body parts list
De'vID
de.vid.jonpin at gmail.com
Mon Jun 22 00:18:13 PDT 2020
On Sun, 21 Jun 2020 at 22:02, Jeremy Silver <jp.silver at tiscali.co.uk> wrote:
> +----
> | loDmach n male genitalia, penis (body-part)
> +----
>
Was this approved by Okrand? A quick search turns up that it appeared in
the novel "Star Trek Vanguard: Harbinger" on p. 202.
I see that there's also a word *{tuQloS} from p. 200 referring to a kind of
vitamin pill taken by a Klingon spy disguised as a Human, to overcome the
deficiencies of non-Klingon food. Was Okrand involved in producing the
words for this book?
+----
> | melchoQ n marrow (bone), bone marrow (body-part)
> +----
>
I wonder if this is a mass noun or if it ever takes the plural suffix.
> +----
> | mInyoD n eyelid (body-part) [lit. "eye shield" (used in Klingon
> Hamlet)]
> +----
>
Used in Hamlet, but (retroactively) made canon by Okrand.
> +----
> | ngIb n ankle, knee. [also slang term of deprecation] (body-part)
> +----
>
Somewhat tangential question: would the plural suffix {-Du'} be used for
{ngIb} and {yeb} even when referring disparagingly to beings capable of
language?
> +----
> | pIp n spine, backbone (body-part)
> +----
>
The "backbone" part is non-canon?
> +----
> | porgh n body (body-part)
> +----
>
This is kind of a philosophical question, but is a body a body part? A
mathematician or philosopher might answer, yes, it is a body part, namely
the part corresponding to the whole. But the relevant question here is how
would one pluralise "two bodies", {cha' porghDu'} or {cha' porghmey}? Or is
it context-dependent?
> +----
> | tel n wing (body-part)
> +----
>
I wonder if a {toQDuj} has {telmey} or {telDu'}?
> +----
> | 'aDtay' n circulatory system (body-part)
> +----
>
Source?
--
De'vID
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