Shakespeare In Klingon? 80
stevegee58 writes "As if the Klingon opera described recently here at Slashdot weren't enough, here's an interesting offering for Shakespeare buffs. The Washington Shakespeare Company (based in Arlington VA) will soon be performing selections from Hamlet and Much Ado About Nothing in Klingon."
Awesome! (Score:5, Funny)
I heard a rumour that BOTH people who speak Klingon are going!
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You'd think that the two people who speak Klingon would be the ones performing in the play.
That's why they're going!
Re:Awesome! (Score:5, Funny)
As opposed to all the North American opera-goers who speak Italian? :)
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I heard that Klingon is a very musical language, can you confirm that?
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It sounds like very large cats be raped with very large baseball bats.
No no, you're thinking of German!
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Really, how does that sound? Maybe you have a recording of your experiment? It would be interesting to hear, but I do not have a baseball bat or a cat.
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Klingon is supposedly the most frequently spoken artificial language. Never underestimate the power of nerddom.
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The most used artificial language (as opposed to the most spoken) is arguably the Morse abbreviation sublanguage.
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You know, that's kinda what I thought would happen but.... I've done "The Klingon Christmas Carol" (http://cbtheatre.org/Klingon-Xmas-Carol.html) as a sound/light designer for 3 years (and I'm about to do a 4th) and we've basically sold out every year. Plus, we got a gig for Paramount doing a few excerpts from Klingon Hamlet that are on the Star Trek VI BluRay.
Fantastic! (Score:5, Funny)
Ahh! This is great! I've always wanted to see Hamlet in the original Klingon!
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Ahh! This is great! I've always wanted to see Hamlet in the original Klingon!
Pfft! All ripped off from the original Romulan sources.
Re: Cat got your tongue? (something important seem (Score:4, Funny)
That was an opera.
Enough is enough. I have had it with all this motherfucking Klingon shit on this motherfucking site.
Now I bet that sounds better in Klingon.
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DaqDaq mupuQmoH Hoch tlhIngan Hol Dochmey jay'!
Yeah, that sounds better
Obligatory... (Score:2)
Takh bakh o takh bekh? (Apologies to those who actually do know Klingon...)
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Takh bakh o takh bekh? (Apologies to those who actually do know Klingon...)
For audio reference... [moviesoundclips.net]
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Yes a little joke put into Star Trek VI, Just to give the audience a chuckle, during the movie to break up a politically tense moment. Has gone out of hand and gone overboard.
I am surprised that they didn't redo mythology to make Hobgoblins actually Vulcans to have visited earth in the middle ages.
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Don't be absurd. Those were clearly agents of the Shadows.
taH pagh taHbe'. (Score:1, Interesting)
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Unless you can translate this to English, mods, how do you even know if it's offtopic? It COULD be questions about the venue, followed by an enthusiastic statement of intentions to attend... would that be "Offtopic" ?
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FYI, if you paste this text on Google translator and use the "detect idiom", it will say that this is Swedish.
He who brings a date to the play (Score:3, Funny)
will be proclaimed their king!
What? (Score:1)
Not all parts translate well (Score:1, Funny)
"To kill or not to kill, that is the question".
"Alas poor Yorrik, he died without honor".
"All the world's a battlefield, and all the men and women merely warriors".
"As he was valiant, I honour him. But as he was a Romulan, I slew him."
"Cowards die many times before their deaths; a Klingon never taste of death but once."
"Life every man holds dear; but the Klingon holds honor far more precious dear than life."
And now for something completely different... (Score:3, Funny)
Mad props to the Monty Python gang for many laughs over the years.
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toH, mevyap! Dogh 'oH. Dogh, Dogh, Dogh!
Honest question (Score:2)
Why does every invented/imaginary language have so many apostrophies?
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Yeah Klingon is worse than Ada in that regard, but easier to debug I reckon.
I just can't believe that people have that .... (Score:2, Interesting)
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Ouch, there's a hook in the roof of my mouth!
Some folks have free time because they design their lives such that they do.
Further, I disagree that any structured language is less valuable if you focus on improving the health of the brain.
If you want to get all statistical about it, anyone who can't speak Chinese is doing it wrong.
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I agree with you to a point. All those other lanugages would be more beneficial to learn than Klingon. Well, execpt Esparanto, I'd have to take exception at that.
If I had a choice between learning Klingon and Esperanto, it'd be Klingon all the way.
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That being said, what's wrong with learning fictional languages? It's almost a given that you'll have something in common with other people who learn it beyond the fact that you know the same language. If you enjoy doing something, you'll find time to do it. Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra?
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Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra?
Best. Episode. Ever.
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Funny how that alien can speak English words when it's convenient to describe the various situations that his metaphors describe. :-)
'Shaka, when the walls fell'
WTF now you can speak enough English to talk about walls falling? Haha.
I've heard it said that (Score:2)
The act of constructing the Klingon language was itself an aid in understanding how other languages were constructed, and perhaps even contributed to understanding "dead" languages?
While I have no evidence to support the claim, it certainly made sense to me when I heard it.
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The act of constructing Klingon was based on our understanding of how many other languages work, or have worked in the past - i.e. Linguistics as a study - I highly doubt it contributed anything to Linguistics as a whole. Its a clever language in and of itself, but not revolutionary. I highly doubt there is very much in Klingon that hasn't occurred elsewhere in another human language. The sheer variety of ways that humans have chosen to develop their languages is just staggering, and almost anything you can
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Elvish
The adjective form of the noun "Elf" is "Elven". However, there are many different languages spoken by Elves, Quenya being the most prominent. There is no such thing as an "Elvish" language.
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Old news is old (Score:1, Informative)
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Man, and I thought I had no life!
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By my count, it's more like 400.
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They even have Klingon language camp
The first camp entirely situated in parents' basements!
Vogon Poetry in Klingon? (Score:3, Funny)
.
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tujbogh pem nI' po 'I'wIjDaq SuDqu'bogh DochHom'e' tlher vItu'bogh gha'tlhIq
the ode of respect of a small green lumpy thing which I found in my armpit on the morning of a long, hot day.
The books are published (Score:2)
Hamlet in Klingon was published about 10 years ago.
ISBN-13 - 978-0671035785 (Amazon [amazon.com]
Much Ado about Nothing was published in 2003
ISBN-13: 978-1587155017 (Amazon [amazon.com]).
There's also Gilgamesh, also published in 2003.
ISBN-13: 978-1587153389 (Amazon [amazon.com]).
As for why - well, why not? It's an activity they're interested in, and if people can communicate meaningful information, is it less a language than the artificial ones we use to program our computers with? C/C++/Java/PHP/Perl/Python/Ruby/Assembly/Machine Code/etc are all
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"A Christmas Carol" has also been translated into Klingon.
Commedia Beauregard - translated works is their shtick - performs it every year. This year they're doing it in Chicago, in addition to the regular Minneapolis.
http://www.cbtheatre.org/CHI-works/KCC2010-CHI/KCC-CHI-2010.htm [cbtheatre.org]
Props on their effort, they do a good job with it.
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I think the novel part about the Klingon language is that it is an unnecessary language invented by people who intentionally decided to learn a language that it unlikely to ever be useful.
The programming languages exist because compilers cannot speak English, and computer programmers cannot agree on one perfect means of communicating one's wishes to the compiler. A better programming language analogy would be with the non-mainstream [computersight.com] languages, such as LOLCode and Brainfuck. Those languages are not meant to
Meh... (Score:2)
Wake me when someone performs it in Vogon...
Other Non-Languages? (Score:2)
Impossible (Score:2)
It's hard enough to translate Shakespeare into another natural language without losing a great deal (see Doug Hofstadter). Given the limited vocabulary of Klingon (see your Klingon dictionary), you will get a lengthy, tedious baby-talk retelling.
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It's hard enough to translate Shakespeare into another natural language without losing a great deal (see Doug Hofstadter). Given the limited vocabulary of Klingon (see your Klingon dictionary), you will get a lengthy, tedious baby-talk retelling.
Since it's Klingon, you're more likely to get a lengthy, tedious baby-talk reyelling.
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Really don't want to have an Us vs. Them post (Score:1)
Don't get me wrong - I like Star Trek and consider myself a fan, but damn this just screams "I am a dork, give me an atomic wedgie!"
Conversely, if someone were to say redo Ride of the Valkyries featuring costumes that were all inspired by Mandalorian Armor, I would consider that "mighty" and "badass".
Having Shakespeare in your own language (Score:1)
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But Shakespeare wrote in Modern English...
So what? (Score:1)
Seriously, so what? As a Shakespeare lover this does not interest me in the least.
Is there something magical about Klingon that adds a new dimension to Shakespeare? I doubt it.
I think Shakespeare used the proper language (of the time) to present us with a view and a philosophy of life.
It is not something that can be translated.
How will Klingon add to this and therefore, why bother?
Ok, I have another idea. How about we re-write the Odyssey as a rap song.
Novel? Yes. Odd? Definitely! Adding new meaning to Home
Yes (Score:2)
Yes, this is true.
Do you watch sports on TV? (Score:1)