lieven:
For my translation of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, I talked to Marc Okrand exactly on this. He agreed that {targh ghu} is okay for "Targ puppy" or "baby targ". This also confirmed that an animal baby can use the word {ghu}. Okrand added: "Right. Or {targh Qup} for a somewhat older targ." So you may consider this as "canon", and it answers your question.
Cool! So now we can talk as much as we want about soft, cute, and silly baby animals, and in Ca'Non way too! Thanks for sharing. But before moving on there's something I'd like to make certain. jIH:
{vIghro'-ghu} SuStel: In English, the hyphen used this way represents a genitive relationship SuStel: Oh, hunter-killer isn't genitive. That's a different kind of relationship.
Initially, I couldn't understand when a noun-noun construction is to be interpreted as a genitive relationship, and when as something else. So I thought of the following: When a noun-noun construction makes sense if one read it as "noun 2 of noun 1" then it represents a genitive relationship, but when reading it as "noun 2 of noun 1" doesn't make sense then it's something else. So, the {vIghro' ghu} is genitive since it makes sense for it to be read as "baby of a cat", but the "hunter-killer" is something else since it makes no sense understanding it as "killer of the hunter". Would you agree with this approach? -- Dana'an https://sacredtextsinklingon.wordpress.com/ Ζεὺς ἦν, Ζεὺς ἐστίν, Ζεὺς ἔσσεται· ὦ μεγάλε Ζεῦ