[tlhIngan Hol] Klingon Word of the Day: ronmoH
Steven Boozer
sboozer at uchicago.edu
Fri Feb 4 13:29:54 PST 2022
Klingon Word of the Day for Thursday, February 03, 2022
Klingon word: ronmoH
Part of speech: verb
Definition: roll, throw
Source: Klingon Monopoly, published 1 November 2011
_______________________________________________
Duj ronmoH 'orwI'
the pilot banks the vessel (HQ 11.2)
HoSHal ghajchugh vay', mI' naghmey tIronmoH. wa'maHlogh
boq'egh mI' naghmey; chen qav'ap. ghajwI'vaD qav'ap yIDIl.
If [energy source is] owned, throw dice and pay owner a total
ten times amount shown. (MKE)
SEE:
ron roll, bank (e.g. aircraft), be rolling (v)
(HQ 11.2): When the plane banks or rolls to one side or the other so that, say, the left wing is pointed somewhat (or even a lot) upwards while the right wing is pointed somewhat (or a lot) downwards, or vice versa, it is said to {ron} "roll". … The attitude of an aircraft is often talked about in terms of angles. The word for angle is {tajvaj}. Klingon {taH} means "be at a negative angle".
De’vID chatted with Marc Okrand on March 1, 2019 :
DE’VID: ... generalises {ron} "roll" (aircraft wings tilt, one up, one down); we already knew this applied to more than aircraft because it was used for dice in Klingon Monopoly
[….]
DE'VID: Can any of these verbs take an object, such as an angle or a distance (as appropriate to the verb)?
OKRAND: No. To indicate how far the motion was (how far the person/object moved), make use of the verb {Lid}, meaning something like "travel or move a specified or measurable distance or trajectory." The object of {lID} is the distance moved or range of motion. So you could say {ron SuvwI'; chorgh 'uj(mey) lID} "the warrior rolled (haphazardly) for eight *ujes*" (literally, "the warrior rolled; he/she traveled/moved/traversed eight *ujes*"). It could also be the other way around: {chorgh 'uj(mey) lID SuvwI'; ron} "the warrior rolled (haphazardly) for eight *ujes*" (literally, "the warrior traveled/moved/traversed eight *ujes*; he/she rolled"). Or {ron muD Duj; javmaH lawrI'(mey) lID} "the airplane rolled 60º [degrees]". (The semicolons here don't matter. You could also use a period, since, really, they're pairs of sentences.
[….]
DE'VID: Can {ron} be used for people, such as in martial arts or gymnastics?
OKRAND: Yes... IF it means that the person is rolling haphazardly. If the person is doing a somersault (rolling forwards or backwards in a reasonably controlled manner), the verb is {Hay}. If the person is rolling down a hill as if he/she were a log, the verb is {tetlh} (related to the noun meaning "scroll," though it's not used for scrolls... unless a scroll is rolling down a hill).
--
Voragh, Ca'Non Master of the Klingons
Please contribute relevant vocabulary or notes from the last
year or two. I’ve fallen woefully behind in updating my files.
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