On 10/9/2019 10:44 PM, Will Martin wrote:
I think that clipped Klingon is most appropriate when there is urgency to the message, as in battle. If someone says {nuqDaq puchpa’}, then point to the bathroom and get out of the way.
I don’t see {nuq mI’lIj} as obviously urgent, unless shouted by a suspicious guard pointing the unfriendly end of a nasty weapon at you.
In other settings, I’d just consider it poor grammar spoken by an illiterate, uneducated, backwoods peasant, or maybe a local who is speaking loud and slow for a tourist he considers an idiot who has to look up every word in a guidebook.
We have quite extensive information about when to use Clipped Klingon. /The Klingon Dictionary/ describes Clipped Klingon as a form of day-to-day language, as opposed to the language taught formally to non-Klingons. It says it is used frequently in military contexts where quick communication is needed. It says Clipped Klingon is also used extensively in all other contexts, implicitly linking the Klingon lifestyle to military matters. /Power Klingon/ tells us that the prevailing form of speech during battles is Clipped Klingon. It recommends using Clipped Klingon in everyday speech to show an allegiance to military jargon. It can also be used to express urgency. /Klingon for the Galactic Traveler/ tells us that a bat'leth instructor will generally issue commands in Clipped Klingon. It describes some rituals that use clipped words in them. It again describes how Clipped Klingon is used in battle situations, and adds contexts in which standard phrases are expected to be heard. It says that because you may not be able to properly interpret Clipped Klingon if you don't already know what the phrase is supposed to say, its use is typically only found in such times. It describes times when Clipped Klingon would be inappropriate, such as ordering a drink at a bar if your desired drink isn't already known. It illustrates switching from Clipped Klingon to full Klingon to express annoyance and to challenge one's honor. We're told that Clipped Klingon is often used in song lyrics, partly to fit the meter, partly because songs are often associated with battle, and partly to enable useful ambiguities. Given all that, I would say it's pretty clear that the hotel desk manager who asks *nuq mI'lIj?* isn't expressing any annoyance with an ignorant tourist and isn't evidence of a backwater dialect; they're simply employing Clipped Klingon in a very routine part of their jobs in a way consistent with what we're told. A guest with a reservation shows up, so the desk clerk asks the very standard question, "What number?" -- SuStel http://trimboli.name