voragh:
Hoch Hol ‘oH Hoch Hol’e’. “Every language is every language.”
hold on a tup.. wa'Hu' mu'ghomvam vIleghpu' 'ach jIchechpu'mo' jIjanglaHbe'. 'a DaH, jIchechbe'mo' jIghel vIneH: {Hoch Hol} means "every language", or "each language" ? qunnoH On Tue, Oct 25, 2016 at 9:06 PM, SuStel <sustel@trimboli.name> wrote:
On 10/25/2016 1:52 PM, Christa Hansberry wrote:
My friend who writes short stories has a character in one of her stories who has the super-power (they all have super-powers!) of being able to speak and understand any language in the universe. So in demonstration of this ability he says a line in German, and one in Welsh, followed by the declaration "vay' Hol qej vay' Hol!" which baffled me ("anyone's language is grouchy anyone's language"??), so I scrolled down to the footnote to see what she meant, and it said "any language, means any language."
So I tried to figure out what the correct way to say that would be, but I can't figure it out, and I can't correct her Klingon if I don't have a better solution myself. How would you translate this sentence?
The qej obviously comes from be grouchy, mean, even though that's the wrong kind of mean. Your friend got this out of the Bing Translator (try it!).
vay' Hol means someone's language; I'm not sure whether vay' can be used to mean any <thing>.
Better to reword the idea completely. Any problem with every language?
Hoch Hol vIjatlhlaHbej 'ej vIyajlaHbej I can definitely speak and understand every language
Another possibility, though I'm not sure whether it's grammatically acceptable:
Hochna' Hol vIjatlhlaH 'ej vIyajlaH I can speak and understand definitely-every language
Both of these sentences put forward the "yes, what I'm saying is really true" idea of the original in a way different than English.
-- SuStel http://trimboli.name
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