Question: Who invented the Klingon language?
Answer: Scotty
- Kesuvaglar
Not really correct. James Doohan, who played Scotty, indeed devised the first few words of Klingon, but it was linguist Marc Okrand who really invented the language. You can buy his book, "The Klingon Dictionary" and learn the language.
And in any case, it wasn't any university.
Its just like boggle but in the Klingon language, and yes Klingon is a language it was developed over the years by the Klingon language institute
Its just like boggle but in the Klingon language, and yes Klingon is a language it was developed over the years by the Klingon language institute
NO!
Straight from the official Klingon dictionary: vut paq. Just for the record the Klingon language is really called klingoneese. (No Joke!) :)
klingon
Klingon
The Klingon Language Version of the Bible is available, though it's not exactly a translation. Just search for Bible and Klingon in Google.
There does not seem to be a person named Winstone who can only speak Klingon. Klingon is actually a language that comes from the Star Trek television series and is not real.
In Klingon, you would say "naDev ghIch vIghoS." This translates to "I go to the bathroom here." However, Klingon language often prioritizes different phrasing, so context might vary.
The Klingon language was originated by linguist Marc Okrand for the "Star Trek" franchise. He developed it for the films, starting with "Star Trek III: The Search for Spock" in 1984, creating a fully functional language with its own grammar and vocabulary. Okrand's work has since expanded, and Klingon has become a cultural phenomenon among "Star Trek" fans.
Klingon
Korean was a language that naturally developed on the Korean peninsula. King Saejong the Great was responsible for devising the current Hangeul alphabet for the Korean language. (It previously used the Chinese ideographs -- Hanzi.) Korean is not a created language; it is not Esperanto or Klingon.