Actually, we seem to already have one: {ghIlo'meH}: (Felix, 2/13/2018): The word {ghIlo'meH} (has it been canonized?) has rather an interesting origin. As far as I can tell, it began its journey in the book “Star Trek: Forged in Fire”, where the author decided to "klingonize" the word *glommer* as *{glo'meH} (which violates ordinary syllable structure in exactly the same way that *glommer* does). Then *{glo'meH} was used as an English word in “How to Speak Klingon”, which was then properly klingonized as {ghIlo'meH}. It's essentially come about through a strange game of Telephone/Chinese Whispers ... but then again, I suppose that's true of much of language in general. See “How to speak Klingon: essential phrases for the intergalactic traveler” by Ben Grossblatt (San Francisco: Chronicle Books, ©2013). ISBN 9781452118147. Voragh From: James Landau via tlhIngan-Hol Sent: Tuesday, July 18, 2023 6:17 PM From the Klingon wiki: http://klingon.wiki/En/Glommer<https://urldefense.com/v3/__http:/klingon.wiki/En/Glommer__;!!BpyFHLRN4TMTrA!8KdmC3x42r02SZZhuaZQMbCcy5u7-_iAxgYYC76b1FZI7Z_G-dqyzjSYATmprBo_Zo3k52S4Tnjk6AO6457hxa-aVEgg$> This is one of the concepts Marc Okrand can create a canon word for, for the third edition of TKD.