(I know, I don't usually answer here. Fact is, I hardly ever even see posts from this list _except_ ones from SuStel, which for whatever reason aren't sorted into the right mail bucket. But just something to mention.) On 11/1/21 11:54, SuStel wrote:
We have different words for the noun /wind/ and what it does, /blow./ I'm not sure Klingons would say things like *SuS SuS* /the wind blows,/ because it's just saying the same word over again. I suspect they'd say something like *SuS 'e' DaQoylaH'a'*/Can you hear it blow?/ meaning, sort of, /Can you hear that it is windy? /This is just my guess.
Not that there's anything wrong with your suggestion, but do note that "just saying the same word over again" is not all that uncommon or strange-sounding in many languages. You can live your life or die a horrible death; W.S. Gilbert's Judge in _Trial by Jury_ sings of how he "danced a dance," or you can sing a song. OK, these are not _precisely_ the same words, but you could probably find examples like these that have the same word. Heh, we joked about how "song song song sing sing sing sing song" in _Good Morning, Starshine_ would just be "bom bom bom bom bom bom bom bom." (Krankor brilliantly does "sing a song, song a sing" as "bomna' yIbomchu'; bomchu' yIbomna'", breaking grammar on purpose). You can even ask "where did the fly fly off to?" I remember once someone told me that verbs that do this are called "unergative" verbs (or maybe they were the "unaccusative" ones.) A brief glance at Wikipedia pages does not seem to support this, or at least it's more complicated. ~mark