Klingon Word of the Day: lolSeHcha
Klingon Word of the Day for Wednesday, November 09, 2022 Klingon word: lolSeHcha Part of speech: noun Definition: attitude-control thruster Source: TKD (93 KE, 121 EK) This Klingon Word of the Day is brought to you by qurgh (qurgh@kli.org).
Klingon Word of the Day for Wednesday, November 09, 2022 Klingon word: lolSeHcha Part of speech: noun Definition: attitude-control thruster Source: TKD (93 KE, 121 EK) _______________________________________________ I.e. Small propulsion units used to control the spacial orientation of a spacecraft (its attitude: i.e. {Der} "yaw", {tor} "pitch", {ron} "roll"). AFAIK never used in a sentence. (Qov [date?]): These would be the small cross-shaped rocket packs one sees on the sides of the Apollo series Service Module, or the clusters of rockets in the nose and on either side of the tail of the Space Shuttle. (They are also the small square openings in four spots around the saucer of the Enterprise-A which are surrounded by orange paint.) (HolQeD 11.2: 8-9): Weirdly, although Maltz said he knew of no noun meaning attitude, the noun {lol} may show up in {lolSeHcha} attitude control thrusters. Although the middle element of this word, {she}, is certainly the verb control, the full etymology of this word is far from clear. (If the final element, {cha}, is, in fact, {cha} torpedoes, this may shed some light on early versions of the device. On the other hand, something else may be going on here; maybe {lolSeHcha} is shortened from a longer construction. Maltz didn't know the answer, but he said it was an interesting question. TREK NOTES: Chang's cloaked BOP fired upon Kronos One, causing it to list and spin almost out of control. The "attitude control thrusters" were disabled. (ST6) "Maneuvering thrusters are not responding!" (Ens. Ro, TNG "Cause and Effect") SEE ALSO: 'eDSeHcha take-off/landing thrusters (n) chuyDaH thrusters (pl. n.) vIj thruster (sg. n.) laQ fire [e.g. thrusters] (v) ghoS thrust (v) vo' propel (v) Der yaw (i.e. aircraft); veer right/left (v) tor pitch (i.e. aircraft) (v) ron roll, bank (i.e. aircraft); be rolling -- Voragh, Ca'Non Master of the Klingons Please contribute relevant vocabulary or notes from the last year or two. I’ve fallen woefully behind in updating my files.
This is one of the words I frequently used as an example for all those unnecessary vocabulary that one would never use. ...until few years ago, when I got the opportunity to translate the website of the European Space Agency, describing their new spacial device. :-) -- Lieven L. Litaer aka the "Klingon Teacher from Germany" http://www.tlhInganHol.com http://klingon.wiki/En/LISApathfinder
What are some of the other "unnecessary" words you like to use? I wondered about {choljaH} ponytail holder, {quHvaj dandruff}, {ngav} writer's cramp, and {nIvnav} pajamas. Okrand must have been a bit bored when he came up with these. I suspect Okrand came up with {nIvnav} while trying to translate the old Groucho Marx joke "I just shot an elephant in my pajamas... and how he got in my pajamas I'll never know!", although we only got {'e'levan} in 2017. (Maybe he preferred a "targ in my pajamas" instead.) OTOH Worf and Alexander were seen wearing pajamas in several TNG and DS9 episodes: "Genesis", "Ethics", "A Fistful of Datas", "Firstborn", “Change of Heart” and “Time’s Orphan”. (See the illustrations in TKW pp. 70, 146 and 176.) Voragh -----------------------------------Original Message----------------------------------- From: Lieven L. Litaer via tlhIngan-Hol Sent: Wednesday, November 9, 2022 11:56 AM This is one of the words I frequently used as an example for all those unnecessary vocabulary that one would never use. ...until few years ago, when I got the opportunity to translate the website of the European Space Agency, describing their new spacial device. :-) _________________________________________________________ Klingon word: lolSeHcha Part of speech: noun Definition: attitude-control thruster Source: TKD (93 KE, 121 EK)
participants (3)
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Klingon Word of the Day -
Lieven L. Litaer -
Steven Boozer