On Sat, 8 Sep 2018 at 04:52, Alan Anderson <qunchuy@alcaco.net> wrote:
On Fri, Sep 7, 2018 at 5:49 PM Daniel Dadap <daniel@dadap.net> wrote:
What do you all think about {'oH} versus {ghaH}? Has Maltz ever said anything to point us more strongly towards one interpretation or the other, with regards to whether {ghaH} might apply to beings incapable of language?
On the old MSN expert forum, Marc Okrand said:
the question {yIH nuq?} "What is a tribble?" is exactly parallel to the statement {yIH 'oH} "It is a tribble"
[See http://klingonska.org/canon/1996-12-12b-news.txt for the full text of his message.]
A tribble is an animate being. It gets the pronouns {'oH} and {nuq}, not {ghaH} and {'Iv}.
But Klingons hate tribbles, so it might just be the case that tribbles are {'oH} whereas the beloved pet targ gets {ghaH}. ;-) While it's true that TKD 5.1 does not explicitly state that the distinction between {ghaH} and {'oH} is the same as that between {chaH} and {bIH}, the arrangement of the table strongly suggests that this is the case: {jIH} I, me {maH} we, us {SoH} you {tlhIH} you (plural) {ghaH} he/she, him/her {chaH} they, them {'oH} it {bIH} they, them {'e'} that {net} that It's a fairly obvious interpretation that the right column shows the plural corresponding to the left column. The sentence immediately following this table is: "The pronoun {chaH} they is used when it refers to a group of beings capable of using language; otherwise, {bIH} they is used." It seems to me that Okrand mentions this only because "they" is used for both in English and needed clarification. If the distinction between {ghaH} and {'oH} is in a different place than that between {chaH} and {bIH}, I'd have expected this to be mentioned. (However, the lack of mention of such a difference doesn't mean it doesn't exist, since TKD is meant to be a brief grammatical sketch.) In HolQeD 10:4, Okrand discusses birds that talk. He makes a point of saying that the usual suffix for birds is {-mey}, but that some Klingons use {-pu'} for birds which mimick speech. He does not mention whether they take {'oH} or {ghaH}, which could be interpreted either way. That is, it might be that the distinction between {'oH} and {ghaH} is so obviously the same as between {-mey} and {-pu'} as to be not worth mentioning (and hence those Klingons who use {-pu'} would use {ghaH}, and those who use {-mey} would use {'oH}). Or it might be that all animals always take {'oH} (or always take {ghaH}), and this doesn't change regardless of whether they talk. But in the latter case, the fact that a {yIH} is referred to using {'oH} implies that all animals are {'oH}. So in either interpretation, {'oH} is used for animals which don't talk. What's left open is whether those Klingons who use {-pu'} for talking birds would also use {ghaH}/{chaH} for them. -- De'vID