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Topic: Klingonaase


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  NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Klingonaase
Klingonaase is a non-canon fictional language appearing in works by John M. Ford related to the science fiction series Star Trek, in which it is depicted as the language of the Klingon race.
Klingonaase continues to appear in fan fiction about Klingons, and is used by Klingon fan clubs in personal and club names, mottos, and statements of principle, often alongside tlhIngan Hol.
The klingonaase terms here are taken from John M. Ford's The Final Reflection and from the Star Trek RPG, and the tlhIngan Hol terms from Marc Okrand's The Klingon Dictionary.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Klingonaase   (836 words)

  
 tlhIngan Hol or Klingonaase or more
Until I saw this poll I was under the impression that the Klingonaase reffered to by Korax in Trouble with Tribbles was reffering to (within the consistancy of the trek universe of course) the language later seen on TMP.
Ford never documented Klingonaase well enough for it to be used for anything beyond the few phrases he wrote down.
It is unfortunate however, that with the much more evolved (or at least developed), tlhIngan Hol, (Not to mention the demise of the FASA licence, the recent death of John M. Ford and so on), the need to develop more Klingonasse in a Quasi-canon sense is unlikely.
www.klingon.org /smboard/index.php?topic=112.msg620   (4960 words)

  
  Klingonaase - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Klingonaase   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Klingonaase is a fictional language appearing in works by John M. Ford related to the science fiction series Star Trek, in which it is depicted as the language of the Klingon race.
Klingonaase first appeared in 1984 in the tie-in novel The Final Reflection, which features a detailed view of Klingon society.
It also appears in the Klingon supplement for the FASA Star Trek role-playing game of the 1980s, which is partly based on materials created for the novel.
www.encyclopedia-glossary.com /en/Klingonaase.html   (184 words)

  
 klingonaase   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Klingonaase was a term used by John Ford in "The Final eflection", and some vocabulary was developed for it, but aside from the fact that both are attributed to the Klingons, it has nothing in common with Okrand's Klingon language.
Current knowledge of klingonaase is limited to the phrases dropped in John Ford's "The Final Reflection." Note the lower-case: the Klingons don't capitalize language names.
And that is all the klingonaase codified at present.
www.pinette.net /chris/startrek/klinaase.html   (583 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
ReSent-to: sf-lovers-request@RU-BLUE.ARPA Current knowledge of klingonaase is limited to the phrases dropped in John Ford's "The Final Reflection." Note the lower-case: the Klingons don't capitalize language names.
Klingonaase is a sparse language, like Chinese in that 'a' and 'the' are absent or optional, and subjects and verbs can be omitted when context renders them unnecessary.
Klingonaase vocabulary: federazhon The United Federation of Planets.
kelvo.ton.tut.fi /~rixa/klingon/klingonaase.txt   (623 words)

  
 [No title]
With his Security overrides, he could look deeper into the record if he so chose, but he would then have to justify his decision to his commander, and he didn't want to be discussing this woman with Riker for some reason.
Then she did the one thing that he would never have expected, even given the fact that he knew that her training made her a specialist not only in engineering, but in Klingon culture as well.
In Old High Klingonaase, she sang to him, chanting the words of the woman's surrender to her mate, the only surrender a noble-born Klingon woman would ever make.
www.asstr.org /files/Collections/Alt.Sex.Stories.Moderated/Year1997/2557.txt   (4140 words)

  
 An Introduction to the Klingon Language   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
However, this guide should cover enough areas for the student of Klingonaase to be able to understand what a Klingon is saying, and be able to communicate back, albeit in a brutish, yet intelligible manner.
An English example of course is earthworm, while in Klingonaase one such example is jolpa' (transporter room), which is formed from jol (transport beam) and pa' (room).
Still, the useage of such suffixes outside of normal rules is not completely understood, and it is strongly urged that all students of Klingonaase stick to the rules until further understandings are made availiable.
www.pinette.net /chris/startrek/intro4.html   (1553 words)

  
 [No title]
As this is only rudimentarily understood, with the aid of the late Maltz, a transliterated form of the pIqaD system was concieved in order to facilitate translation/ transliteration of the various forms of Klingonaase.
With a little practice there should be a minimum of difficulty in forming words and phrases that are at least relatively intelligeable by most Klingons.
There will be a problem with having a 'Federation' accent, but even the most experienced non-native Klingonaase speakers manage to retain some sort of an accent regardless of the amount of training and use they recieve.
www.informatik.hu-berlin.de /~fitzner/misc/kli/e/kling3.txt   (1273 words)

  
 Klingonaase - free-definition   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Klingonaase is the alien species the Klingons' word for their language in John M Ford's novel The Final Reflection (1984), set in the fictional universe of Star Trek.
Set before the original Star Trek series, the story is about Klingons and their early dealings with the United Federation of Planets.
John M Ford also worked on the Klingon supplement for the FASA Star Trek role playing game and the materials created for the novel were also used there.
www.free-definition.com /Klingonaase.html   (185 words)

  
 Klingon language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The basic sound (and a very few words) were first devised by James Doohan for Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
Klingon is sometimes referred to as Klingonese, but among the Klingon-speaking community this is often understood to refer to another Klingon language, that is described in John M. Ford's Star Trek novels as Klingonaase.
thar'av'vul--from Klingonaase, term describing Vulcan slaves, slur describing one as an "educated" subservient; literally, "educated idiot"; see also "toDsaH".
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Klingon_language   (1992 words)

  
 Star Trek roleplaying game
The FASA version of the Klingon language is called Klingonaase.
Given the official canon which has since now been established, FASA's interpretation of Star Trek has to be classified as best as a part of the Star Trek Expanded Universe literature and at worst, as simply incorrect.
The rise of the internet, in particular, has given voice again to fans of the FASA version of the Klingons and Klingonaase, enthusiasm for "khomerex zha" and Klingon nomenclature (epetai, zutai; a Klingon worldview and Klingon honorifics respectively, both created by John M. Ford) and references to "human-fusion" and "Imperial" Klingons.
www.sfcrowsnest.com /scifinder/a/Star_Trek_RPg_28FASA29.php   (1984 words)

  
 An Introduction to the Klingon Language   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The (0) in the chart refers to the fact that these particular subject-object combinations are indicated by the absence of a prefix before the verb.
This suffix is used to indicate that the action described by the verb affects the performer of the action, the subject.
While it is not 'officially' required, and in some dialects almost never used, until otherwise corrected the careful student of Klingonaase would be well advised to use this suffix when speaking to an obvious superior.
www.pinette.net /chris/startrek/intro5.html   (2171 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
This usenet news article has been floating on the net for fifteen years and is probably still the best guide to most of what we know of klingonaase.
There may be a few snippets of klingonaase in some other books and FASA roleplaying supplement "The Klingons" (long, long out of print), but nothing substantial.
[Ford had the dialogue in mind when he was writing these snippets of klingonaase, but he didn't have a transcript of it, so he probably used it mostly as a "look and feel" guide, unlike Okrand who actually based tlhIngan Hol on it.
kelvo.ton.tut.fi /klingon/klingonaase.html   (751 words)

  
 Klingonaase
Klingonaase is a sparse language, like Chinese in that 'a' and 'the' are absent or optional, and subjects and verbs can be omitted when context renders them unnecessary.
And that is all the klingonaase codified at present.
I'm not certain how closely this vocabulary corresponds to the dialogue in ST:TMP; any major discrepancy is explainable by the fact that they were speaking the "battle language" dialect in those scenes.
www.rcub.bg.ac.yu /~alexp/books/klingon.html   (514 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
A complex language only due to lack of reference material, Klingonaase is a language that requires a high fluency in order to avoid a dangerous (and possibly fatal) slip of the tongue/vocal apparatii.
This is where the major complications arise when trying to understand and translate Klingonaase, for some of these dialects differ in only a few words, mostly those referring to words classified in the second and third classes of exclusion used by this text.
In Klingonaase, a noun without a suffix can be made plural by the use of a pronoun, whether a verb prefix (see PART 5: VERBS) or a full word (see PART 6: OTHER WORDS).
services.tos.net /text/klingon/kli-lang.txt   (10078 words)

  
 honorific   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
In klingonaase, a prefix attached to the linename indicating the warrior's personal status.
Any serving ship's officer would be tai-, or perhaps vestai- if highly placed.
Epetai- is very rare and would be reserved for Thought Admirals, leaders of great households and the Emperor.
qurgh.wizage.net /tkeold/tke/h/honorific.html   (59 words)

  
 [No title]
As all military personell are taught this from the begenning of their tours of duty, Battle Language may indeed pave the way for such a unified language.
Students of Klingonaase should bear this in mind, as claiming a personal possession of a superior is considered a strong insult!
In fact, these words are the few that manage to 'jump across the dialectic gaps' that exist between Klingonaase dialects, so thse words will most likely be know by a native speaker regardless of which dialect is being spoken.
www.textfiles.com /sf/STARTREK/klinlang.txt   (10071 words)

  
 Klingonaase in curse warfare
klingonaase is definitely the more nuanceed than tlhIngan Hol; perhaps because of this, it is ideally suited for advanced curse warfare.
However, the relative lack of words with which to construct a proper insut may prove an impediment to all but the most skilled word slayers.
One wanting to use klingonaase specifically is largely limited to getting creative with the words straav’/e (slave) and kuve (servitor)
www.klingon.org /smboard/index.php/topic,810.0.html   (396 words)

  
 I.K.S. Gorkon, Book 3 : Enemy Territory (Star Trek: All) by Keith R.A. DeCandido - The Dark Spiral   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Klingons are aliens too, and KRAD does not let the reader forget that -- his protagonists think and speak and behave like *Klingons*.
The Klingon language (a combination of Okrandian tlhIngan Hol and Fordian klingonaase) is sprinkled throughout, adding authenticity to the prose.
The female characters are particularly well-drawn in the I.K.S. Gorkon series, with much stronger roles than usually seen in the televised Trek.
www.darkspiral.com /item/1416500146   (788 words)

  
 A Brief History of Klingon (print version)
Much of the book revolves around a game, a kind of Klingon chess, and Ford provides vocabulary not only for his game but also a range of words and titles of respect and rank as well.
Ford called his creation "klingonaase" and has explained that he wasn't attempting to produce a language so much as create a nonhuman mindset for his readers.
These words and phrases have been popular with Klingon fans, but are a linguistic dead end.
www.morgenwelt.de /futureframe/000131-klingon.htm   (1290 words)

  
 Questions with Klingonaase
My questions are about Klingonaase (as in the one first shown in TFR).
The words for Klingonaase that I am using are found on the internet at
I use the = sign knowing that the translations are not exact but rather the closest word retaining the meaning of the original word
www.klingon.org /smboard/index.php?topic=365.0   (358 words)

  
 Khemorex Klinzhai! -- tlhIngan Hol
Klingonaase is a somewhat different Klingon language described by John M.
Unfortunately, mIqIraH's klingonaase page no longer exists, please let us know if you have any information about him!
A brief overview over the other Klingon language, including a vocabulary list.
www.khemorex-klinzhai.de /e/Hol   (408 words)

  
 tlhIngan Hol(Klingon Language of The STAR TREK)
Klingonaase is Klingon Language before linguist Marc Okrand invented.
Mark E. Shoulson from the Klingon Language Institute explains "Klingonaase":
Klingonaase was a term used by John Ford in "The Final Reflection", and some vocabulary was developed for it, but aside from the fact that both are attributed to the Klingons, it has nothing in common with Okrand's Klingon language.
www.geocities.com /Area51/Nebula/1008   (637 words)

  
 Adult "SEX" Stories - Over 2000+ Adult Stories. All FREE!
Only Starfleet training could have kept him from killing her where she stood, as the harsh tones of the mightiest insult of his people rolled over him.
She put her hand out to him and again in that perfect unaccented Klingonaase said, "ChoHoHvIpbe'neS - batlh Daqawlu'taH!"
He gravely took her hand and answered in Standard, "I apologize for my rudeness.
adult-stories.com /stories/story307.html   (4115 words)

  
 USS Vigilance, NCC-72209 Star Trek Links
You can look in their Aliens database, learn things about all of the Trek television shows, get current news on conventions, and more, here.
Star Trek.com is a useful fan resource containing, among other things, a list of Klingonaase phrases.
The WebTrekkie is an excellent place to find all sorts of information about Star Trek--the live-action shows and the animated one, the actors, the aliens, the worlds, and more.
4dw.net /aerden/vigilance/treklinks.html   (539 words)

  
 Klingon page
If you would like to know more about Klingons, click on one of the choices below.
The most interesting variation is Battle Language, which is a shortened version using only the "bare bones" of nouns, verbs, and adjectives.
Click on one of the choices below for examples of Klingonaase.
www.ou.edu /class/eipt6143/StarTrek-Klingons/Klingon.html   (342 words)

  
 zha riest'n, Mr. Ford! | Programming in Tongues's Show Archive | PodShow
In this he created a fascinating view of the Klingons - AND provides us with the first written Klingon dialect!
Here's a table of Klingonaase as revealed in "The Final Reflection"
Kahless' hand,'' an oath referring to the story of the Emperor
www.podshow.com /shows/index.php?mode=ext_detail&episode_hash=af15ec17479f9e55422a75d327a06b18   (245 words)

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