On Thu, 20 Jun 2019 at 12:46, mayqel qunen'oS <mihkoun@gmail.com> wrote:
De'vID:
> KGT Daghaj'a'? tenwal chorghmaH HutDaq De' DaSuqbogh tu'lu

ok, I found it. For the purpose of making this thread complete, I'm
pasting here the relevant info:

"Fruit or vegetables that come from a farm ({Du'}) are called either
{naH} alone or {Du' naH} ("farm fruit or vegetable," or "produce");
the wild variety is termed {naH tlhab} (literally, "free fruit or
vegetable")."

However, I still don't understand, if we could use plural on the {Du'
naH}, as in {Du' naHmey}, or {Du'mey naHmey}.

naH Segh 'oH Du' naH'e'.

wa' naH. wa' Du' naH.
cha' naH(mey). cha' Du' naH(mey).

nap.
 
De'vID:
> bIQubtaHvIS tlhIngan Hol Dalo'be'law'.

The problem is that thinking in klingon, doesn't always lead to the
given Ca'Non meaning.

For example, we have the {Say'qu'moH}, which is given as "sterilize".
But if I thought in klingon, I would understand it to mean, "to make
very clean", which is quite different from "sterilize".

Doch Da-sterilize-chugh, Dochvam DaSay'qu'moH. loQ nIbbe', 'ach pImbe' je.

--
De'vID