Next Post »
+ Show First Post
Total: 281
Posts Per Page:
Permalink

"How anthropocentric of you."

Permalink

"I was young. I hadn't left the planet yet."

Permalink

"That's fair. I'm not conversational in any languages belonging to species I'm not, and I have left my original planets."

Permalink

"Maybe I should teach you Klingon next."

Permalink

"It won't take us that long to get to Betazed. Not everyone is naturally polyglottaly inclined."

Permalink

"Well, it'd be a start."

Permalink

"And then in addition to -" She coughs and switches to serviceable Klingon - "This is the peaceful surveyor vessel Prometheus! I am unarmed, and my location is regularly transmitted to Federation supervisory authorities!" - she switches back - "I could also talk about the threat of baobob seedlings?"

Permalink

"Or opera," he says. "Your pronunciation's not bad."

Permalink

"I learned that by rote. I only know what a handful of the individual words mean," confesses Isabella.

Permalink

"I can tell."

Permalink

"Is Klingon a difficult language?"

Permalink

"It trips up human speakers worse than, say, Vulcan, but it's manageable."

Permalink

"How do Vulcans do with it?"

Permalink

"I don't know any Vulcans who speak it."

Permalink

"I guess we can find out, then. I do know about half the alphabet from an educational game I had when I was six, but I've forgotten the other letters."

Permalink

"Half an alphabet is better than no alphabet," he laughs.

Permalink

"This is certainly true."

Permalink

"Do you want to learn the rest, then?"

Permalink

"Yes, I believe I would like that."

Permalink

"It turns out your little speech contains every letter of the alphabet," he says. "So we can start there. I just need something to write on."

Permalink

Isabella laughs, pauses their ongoing waltz, and presents him with her PADD.

Permalink

He writes out the message in Klingon, then asks her to name all the letters she remembers.

Permalink

She points out those letters, and the sounds corresponding to them.

Permalink

So, starting from the first word, he fills in the gaps in her knowledge of each symbol and then sounds out the word slowly so she can hear how they fit together.

Permalink

Isabella produces another PADD so she can take notes without having to disrupt the display he's teaching her from, and is very attentive.

Total: 281
Posts Per Page: