2013-06-14

Time 3: More Time Markers, Some Numbers

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More Time Markers

These new terms are used in exactly the same way as DaHjaj today, wa'leS tomorrow, tugh soon, not never and so on.

cha'Hu'the day before yesterday
cha'leSthe day after tomorrow
povamthis morning
povvamthis afternoon
ramvamthis night
povetlhthat morning
povvetlhthat afternoon
ramvetlhthat night
latlh pothe other morning
latlh povthe other afternoon
latlh jajthe other day
latlh ramthe other night
DaHjaj pothis morning
DaHjaj povthis afternoon
DaHjaj ramtonight
wa'Hu' poyesterday morning
wa'Hu' povyesterday afternoon
wa'leS potomorrow morning
wa'leS povtomorrow afternoon
DungluQnoon
pemjepmidday
pagh repmidnight
ramjepmidnight

Most of the above terms are derived from the following root nouns representing parts of the day.

jajday (from dawn to dawn)
jajlo'dawn
pomorning
pemdaytime
povafternoon
choStwilight, dusk
ramnight

Seconds, Minutes, Hours

Klingon also has nouns for seconds, minutes and hours.

lupsecond (n)
tupminute (n)
rephour (n)

To understand how to count with these units of time, you will need to learn some numbers.

Some Basic Numbers

The following are the ten digits of Klingon you will be expected to use.

paghzero, 0
wa'one, 1
cha'two, 2
wejthree, 3
loSfour, 4
vaghfive, 5
javsix, 6
Sochseven, 7
chorgheight, 8
Hutnine, 9

To count in tens, attach the number-forming unit maH tens unit to the number:-

wa'maHten, 10
cha'maHtwenty, 20
wejmaHthirty, 30
loSmaHforty, 40
vaghmaHfifty, 50
javmaHsixty, 60
SochmaHsixty, 60
chorghmaHsixty, 60
HutmaHsixty, 60

To count eleven, twenty seven and so on, simply state wa'maH wa', cha'maH Soch and so on.

wa'maH vagh15
cha'maH cha'22
wejmaH Soch37
loSmaH vagh45
vaghmaH Hut59

To count in the hundreds, attach the number-forming unit vatlh hundreds unit to the number:-

wa'vatlh100
cha'vatlh200
wejvatlh300
loSvatlh400
vaghvatlh500
javvatlh600
Sochvatlh700
chorghvatlh800
Hutvatlh900

These numbers are used in the same way as tens numbers:-

wejvatlh wa'maH vagh315
wejvatlh Soch307
loSvatlh vagh405
loSvatlh cha'maH cha'422
Hutvatlh vaghmaH950
javvatlh javmaH jav666
Sochvatlh HutmaH790
Hutvatlh HutmaH Hut999

We will be going back to numbers to look at them in greater detail further down the line, but for now here is how you can use these numbers to tell the time.

Like all the above time markers, these terms come before the object-verb-subject portion of the sentence.

For convenience, you can use a standard Terran day of 24 hours, each hour 60 minutes long, each minute 60 seconds long. When telling the time, the hours part is expressed as X-hundred hours - X-vatlh rep - even if the time is something like 14:00 hours or 19:00 hours:-

pagh repmidnight,
zero hundred hours
wa'vatlh rep01:00
cha'vatlh rep02:00
wejvatlh rep03:00
loSvatlh rep04:00
vaghvatlh rep05:00
javvatlh rep06:00
Sochvatlh rep07:00
chorghvatlh rep08:00
Hutvatlh rep09:00
wa'maHvatlh rep10:00
wa'maH wa'vatlh rep11:00
wa'maH cha'vatlh rep12:00
wa'maH wejvatlh rep13:00
wa'maH loSvatlh rep14:00
wa'maH vaghvatlh rep15:00
wa'maH javvatlh rep16:00
wa'maH Sochvatlh rep17:00
wa'maH chorghvatlh rep18:00
wa'maH Hutvatlh rep19:00
cha'maH vatlh rep20:00
cha'maH wa'vatlh rep21:00
cha'maH wa'vatlh rep22:00
cha'maH wa'vatlh rep23:00

A time such as X hours:Y minutes (e.g. 11:23) is stated as X-hundred, Y hours. The comma in the time is a convenience inserted here so you can separate the hours figure from the minutes figure.

Witching Hour: To state a time lying after midnight and before 1 am (00:01 - 00:59) the format is pagh, Y rep where Y represents the minutes.

00:01pagh, wa' rep
00:15pagh, wa'maH vagh rep
00:59pagh, vaghmaH Hut rep
01:23wa'vatlh, cha'maH wej rep
02:45cha'vatlh, loSmaH vagh rep
03:32wejvatlh, wejmaH cha' rep
04:17loSvatlh, wa'maH Soch rep
09:20Hutvatlh, cha'maH rep
11:30wa'maH wa'vatlh, wejmaH rep
14:15wa'maH loSvatlh, wa'maH vagh rep
17:30wa'maH Sochvatlh, wejmaH rep
21:10cha'maH wa'vatlh, wa'maH rep
23:59cha'maH wejvatlh, vaghvatlh Hut rep

Other Klingon time units include:-

Hoghweek
jarmonth
DISyear

If, instead of describing a specific time, you want to describe something as having taken place "X minutes / hours / days / months / years ago," or something which will take place "X minutes / hours / days / months / years from now," place these terms after the number:-

leSdays from now
Hu'days ago
waQmonths ago
wenmonths from now
benyears ago
nemyears from now
pIqtime period ago
rettime period from now

To number days ago, days from now, you can attach leS or Hu' directly to the number:- thus loSleS means four days from now, and SochHu' means seven days ago.

For all the other units, the unit term remains separated from the number. Note that none of the time units takes a plural suffix of any type.

wejleS3 days from now
wa'maH SochleS17 days from now
chorghleS8 days from now
HutHu'9 days ago
chorghmaHHu'80 days ago
vaghHu'5 days ago
wa' waQone month ago
cha' waQ2 months ago
Soch wen7 months from now
cha'maH vagh ben25 years ago
wa'maH jav nem16 years from now
jav rep pIqsix hours ago
bID rep pIqhalf an hour ago
wa' Hogh pIqone week ago
javmaH lup pIqsixty seconds ago
wa' tup pIqone minute ago
cha'maH tup rettwenty minutes from now
cha' Hogh rettwo weeks from now
wej Hogh jav jaj jav rep vaghmaH tup retthree weeks, six days, six hours and fifty minutes from now
bID rep rethalf an hour from now

Twenty-First Century

To describe longer periods requires other terms. bov means era (n), and vatlh DIS poH means century:-

qeylIS bovThe Era of Kahless
vatlh DIS poH cha'maH wa'The Twenty-First Century

Finally, of course, the word for time itself is:-

poHtime (n)
poHtime (v)

And yes, poH is also a verb. be' vIpoHta' I timed her.

And that's almost it for time-related posts. The last lesson will bring everything together with one last question: "What Time Is It?"

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