How could I not remember the most obvious related words: qaw memory (i.e. the ability) (n) qaw remember (v) And while I'm at it... (Lieven < MO, 2/05/2018): ... {qaw}, he said, is a perfectly fine noun meaning memory in the sense of the ability to remember or the power of recall. It does not refer to specific memories or recollections. That's a different word: {wov'on}. It's more common to hear {wov'on qaw} "he/she remembers a memory" than {wov'on ghaj} "he/she has a memory", though the colloquial (English) translation of the former would be "he/she has a memory". Someone who remembers a lot of stuff or who can easily remember things (like dates or lines of a play) may be said to have a {qaw pov} "excellent memory". [qepHom 2021 re] Q & A in re {pol} "keep, save, store": MO: Make use of the verb {ngeq} "store, hoard, cache". When referring to memorizing something or knowing something by heart, the usual expression is along the lines of {ghuQ ngeqpu' qawwIj} "I've memorized the poem (literally "my memory has stored the poem"). [….] Q: Can this verb be used in the computer meaning sense? To "save" / store" a file on a disk? MO: Yes. Both words can. -- Voragh ------------------------------Original Message------------------------- Klingon word: ngonDer Part of speech: noun Definition: nostalgia Source: qep'a' 27 [2020] _______________________________________________ AFAIK never used in a sentence. (qep'a' 2020): Often the object of {SIQ} Apparently nostalgia is something to be endured, like pain: 'oy' DaSIQjaj May you endure the pain! (PK) yIn DayajmeH 'oy' yISIQ. To understand life, endure pain. (TKW) SEE: SIQ endure, bear (v) SEE ALSO: pa'logh past, the past (as a whole) (n) qun history (n) vIbHa' time-travel into the past, move through time toward the past (v) -- Voragh, Ca'Non Master of the Klingons