fbpx

DaHjaj Hol 111109 where? #tlhIngan #tlh

No Comments » Written on November 9th, 2011 by
Categories: Podcasts
Tags:

Here’s the link: DaHjaj-Hol-111109

You can also subscribe via iTunes:
Advanced > Subscribe to Podcast > and enter the URL: http://bit.ly/tlh-pod

Hello, and welcome. You’re listening to DaHjaj Hol, your daily dose of Klingon language. I’m your host, Lawrence Schoen.

Time for another question word. It’s nuqDaq. N, U, Lowercase Q, Capital D, A, Lowercase Q. nuqDaq means where? You may have already noticed that this is little more than the word for what followed by the locative suffix –Daq, and you’d be right. As you’d expect from a locative phrase, it goes at the beginning of the sentence, as the following examples will make clear:

nuqDaq maSoplaH
where can we eat?

nuqDaq motlh vIngbogh chomvetlh Datu’
where do you usually find that whining bartender?

nuqDaq maqay’be’meH maQongnIS
for us not to be a problem, where do we need to sleep?

 

What happens when you’ve been spending most of a year making statements in a new language and suddenly find you can turn all of those statements into questions? It’s like the vast number of things you can say has suddenly more than doubled. Possibilities you haven’t imagined are all at once right in front of you. “Where?” becomes “here” in that respect. qo’mey poSmoH Hol.

Sweet Potato Pie
Today’s podcast is brought to you by Sweet Potato Pie, a collection of wonder and delight by Lawrence M. Schoen.

“Sweet Potato Pie” [is] weird and wonderful and will dig into you more with its strangeness than with its deep meaning, but as most stories don’t get a hold at all, that’s just fine.

— Matthew M. Foster, Tangent

Lawrence Schoen’s “The Amulet of Winter” is at the top level a quite entertaining story.

— Rich Horton, Fantasy Magazine

“The Sky’s the Limit” is the perfect mixture of humor and suspense.

— Sherwood Smith, author of the Inda series

Tags:

Leave a Reply