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Re: [Tlhingan-hol] Klingon Word of the Day: ghItlh

Steven Boozer ([email protected])



> Klingon Word of the Day for Friday, January 24, 2014
> 
> Klingon word: ghItlh
> Part of speech: verb
> Definition: write, mark (upon), engrave, incise

As used in canon:

  ghItlh vIghItlhta'bogh DalaD'a' 
  Will you read my manuscript? TKD

  DaH maloS.  peghItlh!
  [(untranslated) st.k (8/96)
 

HQ 2.4:  To mark (upon) something is {ghItlh}. This isn't just writing; it's any kind of marking. (Note that {ghItlh}, to write, refers to the physical act of writing. It doesn't mean to create a composition. 

KGT 80:  Indeed, the verb {ghItlh} is most commonly translated as "write", but it always refers to the act of writing-that is, of making marks on some surface--not to the act of composition. Its use in the contexts of both sculpting and writing suggests that writing began as carving.


st.k (7/09/1998):  The verb for write in the sense of compose is {qon}, literally "record". This is used for songs and also for literary works (poems, plays, romance novels, and so on). As has been pointed out, it's as if the song or story is somehow out there and the "writer" comes into contact with it, extracts it (to use Qov's nice phrase), and records it. 
   The verb usually translated "write," {ghItlh}, refers to the physical activity of writing (moving the pencil around, chiseling, etc.) 
   The question is, if you can {ghItlh} it, must you also {qon} it? That is, is everything that is written down the result of composition (in the sense described above)? 
   The answer is "not necessarily." There's another verb, {gher}, which doesn't have a straightforward equivalent in English, but which has sometimes been translated (not entirely satisfactorily) as "formulate" or "compile" or "pull together." The idea seems to be that of bringing thoughts together into some kind of reasonably coherent form so that they can be conveyed to someone else. 
   Thus, one would usually say {naD tetlh gher} "he/she compiles the Commendation List" or "he/she writes the Commendation List". (Maltz laughed at, but accepted, {Soj tetlh gher} for "he/she writes the grocery list".)
   One would probably {gher}, rather than {qon}, a suggested list of readings, a gazetteer, a simple menu, or the instructions for assembling a toy (assuming the latter is not really an exercise in creative writing). 
   One might also say {QIn gher} "he/she formulates a message" or, more colloquially, "he/she writes a message". But now it begins to get tricky. Using {gher} here implies that the writer of the message was passing along some information he or she got elsewhere, such as scribbling down a telephone message. Saying {QIn qon} "he/she composes a message" or "he/she writes a message" (literally "he/she records a message") suggests that the writer is presenting some new information as opposed to merely passing something along. It may also imply that the written message has some sort of literary merit, and thus be a compliment. 
   But not always. {HIDjolev qon} "he/she composes the menu" suggests that the speaker thinks the list of available fare is written with a certain literary flair. This is not likely to be said of menus in Klingon restaurants (whose menus, if posted at all, tend to be rather pithy), and thus could easily be taken as an insult. 
   Similarly, something like {bom gher} "he/she formulates the song" would be taken as a disparaging comment about the song or its composer (and is, in fact, sometimes heard when the song in question is of non-Klingon origin).   
   This should help somewhat, but it will no doubt raise additional questions about usage. Maltz seems to be willing to try to tackle them as they come along.


KGT 79:  The closest to a general term in this realm may be the verb {raQ}, which means "manipulate by hand, handle". It can be applied to carving, sculpting, metalworking, and the like but is really much less specific, referring to activities that involve having some control over some object.

KGT 80:  Carving or incising is also done on flat surfaces, usually a stone panel or {nagh beQ} (literally, "flat rock"), a term that has been extended to mean the resulting artwork itself as well as similar pieces, including paintings.


Related vocabulary:

ghItlh  			manuscript (n)
De' chu' ghItlh  	newspaper (n) 

ghItlhjaj 			Wednesday  [if there's a pun, I don't see it!]

per  				label (n)
Degh  			emblem, symbol, insignia, marking, mark (n)
ngav 				writer's cramp (n)
QIn 				message (n

DIj 				use a pigment stick, paint with pigment stick (v)
ngoH 				smear, paint using fingers (v)
nguvmoH			dye, stain, tint (v)


--
Voragh
Ca'Non Master of the Klingons



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