Am 11.10.2017 um 18:10 schrieb SuStel:
I don't see the difference here, either. Using *vItlh* doesn't relate your sentence to numbers; you're just saying, /that's a lot./ Which is what *law'* is saying with *'ul law'.*
I think the difference, which I just suggested in another message, is that *vItlh* is more general than *law'**. law' *is only about quantity, while *vItlh* is about quantity or size or intensity or whatever it is by which you measure a thing.
All of this is just guessing, so no offense, but I see it acutally the opposite: {law'} means "many" without thinking of numbers, while {vItlh} is used when one can expect an answer in numbers or measure the thing you talk about. Like saying "this thing costs more" or "the price for this is higher". I know this sounds very vague as well, and I may be wrong. It seems to me that Okrand has avoided to say {Do law'} "a lot of speed" because both speed are "a lot" already: Speed of sound really is {Do law'}. So he wanted to say that the measured amount of the speed is high. That's different from saying that one is faster than the other. It's saying that the number of the speed is higher - not just saying it's {law'}. And yes, you can also measure electricity, I know, but perhaps that was not important when talking about "it consumes a lot of electricty". Disclaimer: I'm not saying I'm right and I do not want to convince anyone. This is only my interpretation that anyone can use as they want. -- Lieven L. Litaer aka the "Klingon Teacher from Germany" http://www.klingonisch.net http://www.klingonwiki.net/En/