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- NOTE ON ANONYMOUS KLINGON FONT 1.1
- PIQAD 1.1-VAD GhUNWI'BE'HEY GhITlh
-
- This is a Klingon font a friend in Los Angeles sent me. When I got it,
- it was horribly disfigured; the spacing for 24- and 48-point was, well,
- impossible to rationalize, so either there had been an error in
- transferring files, or the person who designed the font had made some
- serious blunders. Anyway, I fixed the spacing so that it is regular,
- and it should print well. I have also added a 12-point font, and
- converted the font ID to NFNT 1024,1025, 1026.
-
- The only sad thing is that I don't know how the font is supposed to
- work. In his "Klingon Dictionary" (New York and London: Pocket Books,
- 1985) Marc Okrand (who created Klingon for the Star Trek films) says the
- following:
-
- "There is a native writing system for Klingon (called pIqaD) which seems
- to be well-suited to the various dialects. This writing system is not
- yet well understood and is, therefore, not used in this dictionary.
- Instead, a transcription system based on the English alphabet has been
- devised. An article is being prepared for the "Klingon Encyclopedia"
- which will explain the details of pIqaD." (p. 11)
-
- I don't know how "canonical" this font is, though as a linguist, font
- designer, and Star Trek fan I've decided I'm going to write to Mr Okrand
- and see what he thinks. But if anyone has seen this font before with
- docs about its orthographic system, please let me know!! As it is, two
- things are of note: it is missing the C and the Q; and upper and lower
- cases are identical. Punctuation is minimal. For "amateur" purposes I
- guess one can just type randomly with it; but if it's to be a linguistic
- representation of Marc Okrand's Klingon then it seems pretty weird.
- (pIch vighajbe'!) For those interested, the transcribed Klingon
- alphabet runs thus:
- a, b, ch, D, e, gh, H, I, j, l, m, n, ng, o, p, q, Q, r, S, t, tlh, u,
- v, w, y, '
-
- I am thinking of remapping this font so that these correspond to:
- a, b, c, d, e, g, h, i, j, l, m, n, f, o, p, q, k, r, s, t, z, u, v, w,
- y, x ,
- but this would involve creating two new letters. That I won't do
- without consulting this world's expert on Klingon epigraphy and
- orthography..... So be looking for Klingon 2.0, well, sometime.
-
- tlhIngan Hol DaSovlaHchugh, HIghItlh!
-
- Michael Everson,
- meverc95@irlearn,
- Dept of Archaeology,
- University College Dublin,
- Belfield, Dublin 4,
- Ireland.
-