Klingon Word of the Day for Wednesday, February 10, 2021 Klingon word: loltaH Part of speech: verb Definition: maintain an attitude (aircraft) Source: This Klingon Word of the Day is brought to you by qurgh (qurgh@kli.org).
Klingon Word of the Day for Wednesday, February 10, 2021 Klingon word: loltaH Part of speech: verb Definition: maintain an attitude (aircraft) _______________________________________________ qughmeH Duj vIlolmoH I put the vessel in the attitude for cruise (or cruising). [HQ 11.2] DuHIvmeH SuvwI' lol ghaH the warrior is in a stance to attack you [HQ 11.2] SEE: lol be in an attitude (i.e. aircraft); be in a stance/pose (i.e. people or animals) (v) lolchu' be in a correct attitude (i.e. aircraft) (v) lolchu'taH maintain a correct attitude (i.e. aircraft) (v) lolmoH maneuver an aircraft to be in some attitude or other (v) lolSeHcha attitude-control thrusters (n. inherently plural?) muD Duj airplane (n) (De’vID < MO, 3/01/2019): I got confirmation from Maltz that {lol} does not take an object when used for a martial arts stance. The verb to use for that is {much}. (HQ 11.2): The attitude of a plane is its orientation relative to something, such as the {ghangwI'} "horizon". […] Weirdly, although Maltz said he knew of no noun meaning attitude, the noun lol may show up in {lolSeHcha} "attitude control thrusters". […] The attitude of an aircraft is often talked about in terms of angles. The word for angle is {tajvaj}. Klingon {taH} means "be at a negative angle". (Qov (who is a pilot) [DATE?]): The attitude of an airplane is its orientation with respect to the horizon. It is explicitly independent of its angle of attack, direction of travel, speed, or whether or not the pilot takes instructions well. In English we define four basic attitudes: cruise, nose up, nose down, and banked. SEE ALSO: ron roll, bank [an aircraft] (v) Der yaw (v) tor pitch (v) QoD maneuver (engines) (v) TREK TRIVIA: – "Inertial dampers failing. We're losing attitude control! Maneuvering thrusters are not responding!" (Ro Larin, TNG "Cause and Effect" [after colliding with the USS Bozeman]) – "Adjust the axial stabilizers to match the attitude and rotation rate of the Enterprise." (Picard, TNG "Genesis") – "I've regained attitude control of the Enterprise." (Picard, TNG "Genesis") -- Voragh, Ca'Non Master of the Klingons Please contribute relevant vocabulary from the last year or two. I’ve fallen behind in updating my files and adding cross-references for related words.
My favorite T-shirt of all time has a graphic of an artificial horizon (a.k.a. “attitude indicator”) showing that the aircraft in question is 75% or so inverted and somewhat nose down (nose towards the ground), with the words “Bad Attitude” under it. lolHa’lI’ muD Duj. I chose {-lI’} instead of {-taH} because in an airplane, all bad attitudes are foreseeably temporary, given the presence of The Earth’s Surface (which I put in “title case” because of its extreme significance for a pilot). QapHa’chugh muD Duj QuQ muD Duj SeHmey je, tlhoy jeDHa’pa’ muD, ‘ej lojpa’ nIn, toSlaHlI’ muD Duj. lojpa’ nIn, qughlaH muD Duj. ‘ach tlhoy gIrtaHchugh muD Duj reH mev muD Duj, tera’ ghormo'. SaqlaH pagh SaqHa’laH (‘ej Qaw’eghlaH). Saqbe’laHbe’. [I’m realizing that since we don’t have a root verb for either crashing or taking off, unless there’s a word I’m missing, we don’t have a nice, neat way of disambiguating {SaqHa’} to mean take off (un-land) or crash (land badly). Any suggestions? Perhaps we are limited to context… but even then, what if we crash during the take-off? How do we say “un-land badly”?] bISaqHa’be’chugh, bISaqta’. [Any landing you can walk away from…] charghwI’ vaghnerya’ngan rInpa’ bomnIS be’’a’ pI’.
On Feb 10, 2021, at 11:22 AM, Steven Boozer <sboozer@uchicago.edu> wrote:
Klingon Word of the Day for Wednesday, February 10, 2021
Klingon word: loltaH Part of speech: verb Definition: maintain an attitude (aircraft) _______________________________________________
qughmeH Duj vIlolmoH I put the vessel in the attitude for cruise (or cruising). [HQ 11.2]
DuHIvmeH SuvwI' lol ghaH the warrior is in a stance to attack you [HQ 11.2]
SEE: lol be in an attitude (i.e. aircraft); be in a stance/pose (i.e. people or animals) (v) lolchu' be in a correct attitude (i.e. aircraft) (v) lolchu'taH maintain a correct attitude (i.e. aircraft) (v) lolmoH maneuver an aircraft to be in some attitude or other (v)
lolSeHcha attitude-control thrusters (n. inherently plural?) muD Duj airplane (n)
(De’vID < MO, 3/01/2019): I got confirmation from Maltz that {lol} does not take an object when used for a martial arts stance. The verb to use for that is {much}.
(HQ 11.2): The attitude of a plane is its orientation relative to something, such as the {ghangwI'} "horizon". […] Weirdly, although Maltz said he knew of no noun meaning attitude, the noun lol may show up in {lolSeHcha} "attitude control thrusters". […] The attitude of an aircraft is often talked about in terms of angles. The word for angle is {tajvaj}. Klingon {taH} means "be at a negative angle".
(Qov (who is a pilot) [DATE?]): The attitude of an airplane is its orientation with respect to the horizon. It is explicitly independent of its angle of attack, direction of travel, speed, or whether or not the pilot takes instructions well. In English we define four basic attitudes: cruise, nose up, nose down, and banked.
SEE ALSO: ron roll, bank [an aircraft] (v) Der yaw (v) tor pitch (v) QoD maneuver (engines) (v)
TREK TRIVIA: – "Inertial dampers failing. We're losing attitude control! Maneuvering thrusters are not responding!" (Ro Larin, TNG "Cause and Effect" [after colliding with the USS Bozeman])
– "Adjust the axial stabilizers to match the attitude and rotation rate of the Enterprise." (Picard, TNG "Genesis")
– "I've regained attitude control of the Enterprise." (Picard, TNG "Genesis")
-- Voragh, Ca'Non Master of the Klingons Please contribute relevant vocabulary from the last year or two. I’ve fallen behind in updating my files and adding cross-references for related words.
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On Wed, 10 Feb 2021 at 21:10, Will Martin <willmartin2@mac.com> wrote:
[I’m realizing that since we don’t have a root verb for either crashing or taking off, unless there’s a word I’m missing, we don’t have a nice, neat way of disambiguating {SaqHa’} to mean take off (un-land) or crash (land badly). Any suggestions? Perhaps we are limited to context… but even then, what if we crash during the take-off? How do we say “un-land badly”?]
{ghor ngeQ} -- De'vID
participants (4)
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De'vID -
Klingon Word of the Day -
Steven Boozer -
Will Martin