Klingon word: mu'tlhegh Part of speech: noun Definition: sentence Source: TKD _______________________________________________ AFAIK Okrand has used {mu'tlhegh} in a Klingon sentence just once: lutvam bejlu'taHvIS, tlhIngan Hol mu'tlheghmey chu'qu' vIchenmoHbogh luQoylu'. It's [i.e. ST3] the film for which I devised Klingon... (NASM) and once as a "Category Title" in TalkNow!: mu'tlheghmey Phrases (TNK) SOME GRAMMAR NOTES: (HQ 5.1): The usual term for proverb is {vIttlhegh}, literally "truth rope" and formed, no doubt, by analogy with {mu'tlhegh} sentence or, literally, "word rope." (TKD 59): As in any language, Klingon sentences range from the very simple and straightforward to the very complex and convoluted. (TKD 65f.): What is a single sentence in English is often two sentences in Klingon. (Okrand, HQ 4.2:5-6): What I find myself doing a lot, especially with these Skybox things... The English is these long, long complicated sentences, and I said, "no way," I'd take this long sentence and split it up into two or three. So they went and counted the periods, and said "wait a minute, we gave you two sentences, you're giving us back six, what's going on here?" (HQ 12.2:8-9): For an opera, play, story, speech, and so on, the final portion is its {bertlham}. This word usually refers to the last aria or other musical portion in an opera, last speech in a play, last sentence or so of a story or an address. The {bertlham} of a well-known work is often well-known itself, as is its beginning ("bI'reS}). -- Voragh Ca'Non Master of the Klingons