tlhIngan-Hol Archive: Tue Nov 08 12:01:20 2011

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Re: [Tlhingan-hol] Eurotalk - New Specialism - Time

Philip Newton ([email protected]) [KLI Member] [Hol ghojwI']



On Tue, Nov 8, 2011 at 19:19, André Müller <[email protected]> wrote:
> There's another possibility.
> We count days in two independent systems: days, months, years on the one
> side, days of the week on the other. So the first day of the year isn't
> always a Monday (or Sunday, for some). The Mayas had a similar calendar
> system with two (or even three) independent counting systems.
>
> So it might be similar for Klingon:
> A new day starts at dawn, but the time is still counted from the midnight
> on. That also coincides with my sense of time: even at 3 o'clock in the
> morning, I'd still say it's not the new day, yet, because for my inner clock
> the new day starts when I get up... or maybe when the sun goes up. Maybe
> that's what David meant.

Similarly in England for many years, when the calendar starts in
January but the new year (when the year number gets incremented)
started on (IIRC) 25 March - Lady Day.

The Calendar FAQ links to a tombstone of a boy (
http://www.tondering.dk/main/index.php/calendar-information/1-information/6-did-he-die-before-he-was-born
) with an inscription saying that he was "borne May y 13 An. Do. 1683
& dyed Feb 19 the same year".

Which is similar to, say, a duty shift starting at {cha'maH cha'vetlh
rep} on the 14th of Octember and ending at {loSvatlh rep} on the same
day.

Cheers,
Philip
-- 
Philip Newton <[email protected]>

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