31 Aug
2017
31 Aug
'17
6:48 a.m.
On Aug 28, 2017 10:00, "Anthony Appleyard" <a.appleyard@btinternet.com> wrote: ---- My autotranslater's assembled Klingon-English dictionary says: tev N prize tey V scrape= teywI' N file(tool)= In the qep'a' 24 definition, does "close" mean merely "near to", or does it have an American English meaning which I as a British English speaker in England have not heard of? I am familiar with weather being described as "close" when the air is as stuffy outdoors as indoors. It means that something is a "close call". {tey yay} means the victory was decided at the last minute or almost wasn't. -- De'vID