They didn't even establish that the Romulan language had more than one dialect until Star Trek 2009.
I'm not sure I'd describe it that way. It established that Vulcan and Romulan are as similar to each other as Spanish from Mexico and Spain.
They didn't even establish that the Romulan language had more than one dialect until Star Trek 2009.
I do not think so, the communications officer did not know the Romulan dialect, the movie implied he knew Vulcan. Uhura spoke both, so she took over his post. If the languages were that close Uhura would not have gotten the job. If a non English speaker learns American English, she will have not problem understanding British English, apart from a few colloquial words and phrases.I'm not sure I'd describe it that way. It established that Vulcan and Romulan are as similar to each other as Spanish from Mexico and Spain.
MALE LIEUTENANT: Sir, I'm not sure I can distinguish the Romulan language from Vulcan.
PIKE: (to Uhura) What about you? Do you speak Romulan, Cadet?
UHURA: Uhura. All three dialects, sir.
The differences between any of those dialects are not that great, with a minor exception for Argentina which has Rioplatanese Spanish, which could still be understood by other spanish speakers, and Lunfardo but that is more like slang.It establishes there are three dialects, but also that the overall language is extremely similar to Vulcan. So in my analogy, Vulcan would be Castilian Spanish and Romulan would be Mexican, Peruvian and Argentinian Spanish.
I'm confused? What established that Vulcan and Romulan are as similar as Spanish Spanish and Mexican Spanish? And how did it establish that?I'm not sure I'd describe it that way. It established that Vulcan and Romulan are as similar to each other as Spanish from Mexico and Spain.
It was established in Star Trek 2009 as being similar enough that one communications officer could not distinguish between the two.I'm confused? What established that Vulcan and Romulan are as similar as Spanish Spanish and Mexican Spanish? And how did it establish that?
And in many cases your only one...
The differences between any of those dialects are not that great
"I'm not sure I can distinguish the Romulan language from Vulcan."
So he did not speak Vulcan either? If the two languages are that similar, why did they need Uhura?It was established in Star Trek 2009 as being similar enough that one communications officer could not distinguish between the two.
Probably not enough to provide the information Pike needed in that moment.So he did not speak Vulcan either? If the two languages are that similar, why did they need Uhura?
Looks like the universal translater in TOS worked better than the one in the Kelvinverse.Probably not enough to provide the information Pike needed in that moment.
So he did not speak Vulcan either? If the two languages are that similar, why did they need Uhura?
Looks like the universal translater in TOS worked better than the one in the Kelvinverse.![]()
Well, we all have our weaknesses.Looks like the universal translater in TOS worked better than the one in the Kelvinverse.![]()
So he did not speak Vulcan either? If the two languages are that similar, why did they need Uhura?
They needed to know if any transmissions they picked up were Vulcan or Romulan, thus the need to be able to distinguish subtle grammatical differences.
They were not bouncers. They all were cadets protecting another cadet from a "townie."Remember cupcake? That guy suffered from a major inferiority complex... I mean THREE YEARS later he was still upset that Kirk called him "cupcake" once, before he and the two others beat him within an inch of his life.
BTW, that was some unprofessional behavior! He and the two other bouncers were supposed to stop fights, not start them!! That was really big of Kirk to keep him in his team after that.
Welcome to Star Trek world were everything is made up and time doesn't matter.Why would Romulan and Vulcan have anything in common??? Because a coule of millennia before they lived on the same planet? I mean we live on the same planet as the japanese. How much do English and Japanese sound alike???
They were not bouncers. They all were cadets protecting another cadet from a "townie."
...![]()
It's TOS. There's no enlightened humanity here. There are killers who are not going to kill today.Such an enlightened people!!!
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.