On 8/17/2017 11:11 AM, mayqel qunenoS wrote:
An exception—at least in English—would be if person A used an endearment of person B while talking to person C; person C would be justified in repeating the endearment, as > it is in the context of being what person A would say. A: *choHIvchugh vavoywI' vIja'!* C: *vavoylI' Daja'chugh qaHIvqa'.*
SuStel: * * However the question remains..
A uses an endearment of person B while talking to person C; person C repeats the endearment.
Is there a possibility that person C, in his effort to recreate what person A would say, is actually showing endearment too toward person B ? Perhaps even if he doesn't want to ?
Of course, in the above "if you attack me" example, context makes it difficult for person C to be actually showing endearment himself toward the father of A.
But what if we didn't have a "negative" example ? What if instead of the {choHIvchugh} we had {choQaHchugh} ? Couldn't it here be possible of an endearment being expressed from C, toward the "daddy" of A ?
Dunno. I was illustrating an exception that occurs in English, but we don't know if it happens in Klingon. -- SuStel http://trimboli.name