The grammar offered an irresistible linguistic challenge. Klingon is difficult but not impossible, weird yet totally believable. Anyone can put on a pair of pointed ears or memorize some lines of dialogue, but learning to speak Klingon requires genuine hard work.
Most languages created for fictional worlds involve simple vocabulary substitutions, such as moodge for man in A Clockwork Orange, or meaningless streams of noise, like the high-pitched jabbering of the Ewoks in Return of the Jedi.
Klingon is something altogether different. There is a logic behind it;
a linguist doing field research among Klingon speakers would be able to
work out the system and describe it as he would an exotic indigenous
tongue. — Arika Okrent, Slate
Similar:
Point Park cancels 'The Adding Machine: The Musical' after student objections to offensive...
Citing student objections to offensive c...
Academia
How not to attract women to coding: Make tech pink
Just watched videos of the musicals "Tho...
Academia
Tom Bissell writes a letter to Niko Bellic about Grand Theft Auto V
I haven't played GTAV, and probably neve...
Culture
Skin of Evil (TNG Rewatch, Season 1 Episode 23)
My rewatch reflection on the Star Trek:T...
Design
Internet Archive puts classic 70s and 80s games online
Classic video games from the 1970s and 1...
Culture
Why typewriters beat computers
The BBC offers a pleasant bit of retroph...
Aesthetics

