Klingon Word of the Day for Friday, September 27, 2019 Klingon word: 'oynot Part of speech: noun Definition: unspecified flesh (of an animal) Source: qep'a' 23 _______________________________________________ AFAIK it's only been used in Discovery (by Qov): QongtaHvIS HeghDI' SuvwI', 'oynot, Hom je neH yugh. A warrior who dies in his sleep is no more than flesh and bone. (DSC "Battle At the Binary Stars") CULTURAL NOTES: (KGT 87): Large animals are usually chopped into pieces, sometimes with attention paid to which piece is which... sometimes not (the {ghab}, for example, is just a chunk of the midsection of an animal, including any organs that may have remained attached after the carving). (KGT 27): The word {ghab}, however, which refers to any chunk of the midsection of an animal, has slightly varying meanings depending on region. In most of the empire, including the First City, {ghab} is rather inclusive: basically, whatever was chopped off the animal as a single piece, with or without bones or internal organs. In some areas, {ghab} is never applied to a cut of meat lacking bones. Instead, the phrase {ghab tun} (perhaps translatable as fillet, though literally, "soft {ghab}") is sometimes heard. The same concept would be expressed in most of the Empire, including by speakers of {ta' Hol}, by a longer phrase: {Hom Hutlhbogh ghab} ("{ghab} that lacks bone"). The expression {ghab tun} would probably not be used by most. (KGT 99): A diner transfers a portion to his or her plate ... if one is available, by simply grabbing the desired quantity of food with a hand... If necessary, two hands may be used to break off ({wItlh}) a slab of the desired fare. (KGT 88): A mixture of animal parts is {Daghtuj}, regardless of whether the parts are from the same type of animal. (KGT 83): the gastronomically uneducated might consider Klingon food to be nothing but small animals (still alive) or chunks of barely dead animals thrown together indiscriminately with odoriferous herbs PUN: Backwards {'oynot} is {tonyo'}, i.e. Antonio, from whom the moneylender Shylock sought his "pound of flesh" (Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice) SEE ALSO: Ha'DIbaH animal, meat (n) ghab meat from midsection of animal (n) Hom bone (n) melchoQ marrow, bone marrow (n) to'waQ ligament, tendon (n) DIr skin, hide (n) -- Voragh Ca'Non Master of the Klingons