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There's something missing from J.J. Abrams' reboot of the moribund Star Trek franchise, and that something is Klingon. I mean Klingon the language. If ...
I decided to not make up any words having anything to do with Klingon geography or Klingon culture.
Klingon, the language spoken by a belligerent alien race in “Star Trek,” has developed from a few lines in a movie into the world’s most widely spoken fictional language.
Before becoming a fully-developed constructed language, Klingon was first spoken in Star Trek surprisingly late in the franchise's history.
The initial List of Dirty, Naughty, Obscene, and Otherwise Bad Words was drawn up in 2012, by employees of stock photo site Shutterstock.
Ultimately, I know that Klingon still can't be mainstream in high tech. Word's spell checker doesn't recognize it. But I still wish the companies producing these products luck, even the ones that ...
Would they be able to communicate? Probably. Klingon is weird, sure, but with a complex grammar and vocabulary, it is a language.
These are the words you hear at the very beginning of the very first “Star Trek” movie — the one from 1979 with Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock that was awkwardly called “Star Trek: The Motion ...
Klingon, the language spoken by a belligerent alien race in “Star Trek,” has developed from a few lines in a movie into the world’s most widely spoken fictional language.
It was only natural that they also spoke in their own language. Those first Klingon words were created by James Doohan — the actor who played chief engineer Scotty.