The verb {Hech} is given as "intend, mean to".
However I wonder.. does it always have to have the meaning "mean to" ?
For example, can we say:
{{juH} vIHechbe'; {jul} vIHech}I didn't mean {juH}, I meant {jul}
Everyone uses it that way, but I'm not so sure. I think the object of Hech is a thing you intended to happen or to do, not a thing you intended to say or write. Saying and writing are things you do, but they require their own sentences; the actual content is not something you do.
We know that 'e' Hech is perfectly legal. Hem
tlhIngan Segh 'ej maHemtaH 'e' wIHech Klingons are a
proud race, and we intend to go on being proud. (TKW) There
is one other 'e' Hech example in TKW, and no other
examples of Hech elsewhere at all.
I would expect saying or doing to be juH
vIghItlh 'e' vIHechbe'; juH vIghItlh 'e' vIHech. I'm
on the fence whether saying would require a
sentence-as-object-as-object: juH jIjatlh 'e'
vIHechbe'; jul jIjatlh 'e' vIHech or whether a
single word doesn't need to be treated as a quotation because it's
not exactly a sentence anyway.
-- SuStel http://trimboli.name