Am 11.11.2021 um 14:32 schrieb mayqel qunen'oS:
I still don't understand, and perhaps it's because I'm trying to find a greek/english word for {taymey}. So let's approach this differently.
I'm actually not sure what your problem is with this, especially since "prologue" and "epilogue" are both of greek origin. {taymey} is part of a book that is not part of the main contents. You could probable even read and understand the story without looking at the {taymey}. You might see it as a "frame", or as "additional information". In most cases, the taymey are shorter than the book itself. Look at this page of contents: bI'reS taymey <-- introduction telling you to read the book chapter 1 <-- story begins here chapter 2 chapter 3 chapter 4 <-- story ends here bertlham taymey <-- final word outside the story HommaH <-- appendix with additional information, like a glossary Does that help? -- Lieven L. Litaer aka the "Klingon Teacher from Germany" http://www.tlhInganHol.com http://klingon.wiki/En/AliceInWonderland