It strikes me that {bIS’ub} and {pIrmuS} are words that, like “animal” and {Ha’DIbaH} would be nearly impossible to distinguish between the pair of words by lipreading. Given that Okrand’s early work with the Star Trek, even before working on the Klingon language involved coming up with Vulcan words that would lip sync to video shot in English, I wonder… {pIrmuS} took form as a pun based on Pirimus and Thisby, the play-within-a-play in Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream because the inner character Pirimus was played by the outer play’s character named Bottom. But what does {bIS'ub} come from? Maybe just random sounds, maybe some other pun, or maybe Okrand built in the ability to fix this after the fact if he ever got it wrong in some future movie... charghwI’ vaghnerya’ngan rInpa’ bomnIS be’’a’ pI’.
On Oct 19, 2020, at 10:06 AM, Steven Boozer <sboozer@uchicago.edu> wrote:
Klingon Word of the Day for Saturday, October 17, 2020
Klingon word: bIS'ub Part of speech: noun Definition: bottom (interior) Source: HQ:v8n3p2 _______________________________________________
(IMO, HQ 8.3): The word for bottom, the counterpart of {yor}, is {pIrmuS}. This word refers to the underside of something, not the interior bottom (such as the bottom of a well or the bottom of a bowl where a few drops of milk remain after eating cereal). The word for the interior bottom of something is {bIS'ub}. If an item is located in the bottom of a box, it is located in the box's {bIS'ub}. If something is found underneath a box, it is found beneath the box's {pIrmuS}.
SEE ALSO: pIrmuS bottom (exterior) (n) yor top (exterior) (n) 'aqroS top (interior) (n) rav floor (n)
-- Voragh Ca'Non Master of the Klingons
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