If you want better they should have stuck with DSC or Kelvin style.I just found and edit added this before your post.
Better: https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/the...cussion-goes-here.304648/page-7#post-14282292
If you want better they should have stuck with DSC or Kelvin style.I just found and edit added this before your post.
Better: https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/the...cussion-goes-here.304648/page-7#post-14282292
I guess it's like the JJprise in the first movie with its inward curving pylons that put the nacelles closer together than we were used toPlease, for the last time... I cannot be any clearer, I don't like that look.
Place a hull between the nacelles on the Miranda and you'll get a TMP era California.
That really doesn't work because the California class doesn't have a engineering section in the saucer, that presumably the Farragut has.
It would be more like the NX Refit at that point.
The Farragut?Could that ship not exist in the PU? Or maybe looks different?
If you're referring to the Farragut, it is the Prime Universe.Could that ship not exist in the PU? Or maybe looks different?
You all hear Uhura's the Farragut?! from ST'09 when you read this thread, right? It's not just me.
Of course. Love that scene.You all hear Uhura's the Farragut?! from ST'09 when you read this thread, right? It's not just me.
I just rewatched the scene. The officer assigning Uhura pronounces it ‘farra-good” good (like in good/bad). Uhura says “farra-gut” (gut like in stomach).Yes, and her horribly mangled pronunciation of it.
I just rewatched the scene. The officer assigning Uhura pronounces it ‘farra-good” good (like in good/bad). Uhura says “farra-gut” (gut like in stomach).
What is the ideal way to pronounce Farragut?
I always thought it was pronounced as Fair-a-get.
Least that's the way folks in Tennessee say it.
I believe that the British say Far-a-get.
Ah! I just looked up the ending of Generations on YouTube. Captain Picard pronounces Farragut. It sounds like something in-between -good and -gut, unless I am mistaking the schwa. Not sure I can duplicate that pronunciation but it is the Englander Sir Patrick Stewart, so it's gotta be correct.Or Generations.
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