Why is Troi the only Betazoid who speaks with an accent?
Neither of her parents have that accent, no other on-screen Betazoids either.
Maybe because she's half human ?
Why is Troi the only Betazoid who speaks with an accent?
Neither of her parents have that accent, no other on-screen Betazoids either.
Why is Troi the only Betazoid who speaks with an accent?
Neither of her parents have that accent, no other on-screen Betazoids either.
Maybe because she's half human ?
Wouldn't 200 years before TWOK be "wrong" too?Ron Moore took the date in The Wrath of Khan and forgot to add 100 years to account for the 24th Century. You can either say the guy was ranting and didn't notice his mistake or maybe through some twisted explanation, he was talking about Arik Soongh's work (although mistake would be the easier explanation).
For TNG and later:
Do they have to touch the combadge to respond or not? If not, how does the combadge know when the user is talking to it and not to another party present in the room?
Humans don't have different blood colors, but do have variation in blood composition, and do have variation in colored compounds in other areas, like skin. So it doesn't seem unreasonable that Klingons could have a variation in colored compounds in their blood, hence the different blood colors.I think that's a noble effort to explain, but I can't buy it. Humans have different blood types, but different blood types don't have different colors. My O- blood looks no different than my friend's AB+ blood type. At least not without a microscope to do some cross matching.
They don't; that's just all we 'see' as viewers. There are references to 'all-vulcan' ships, suggesting that member races tend to favour the company of their own kind, with perhaps a few token 'aliens' on each ship.Why does the United Federation of Planets have 90% human officers in Starfleet with a token %10 being Bolian/Vulcan?
Why is Troi the only Betazoid who speaks with an accent?
Neither of her parents have that accent, no other on-screen Betazoids either.
Maybe because she's half human ?
What? Accents are genetic?
Let's say, as an example, a family of three from Ohio in which both parents speak with an american accent, and their biological son speaks with a thick welsh accent, don't you wonder a bit how that happened? Not genetic maybe, but weird.
Let's say, as an example, a family of three from Ohio in which both parents speak with an american accent, and their biological son speaks with a thick welsh accent, don't you wonder a bit how that happened? Not genetic maybe, but weird.
That's not genetic, that's environmental.
Take a kid born to American parents in Spain. There's every chance he or she will imitate their parents' way of speaking, but also equal chance they'll pick up the foreign accent they're surrounded by.
Maybe Troi had some version of a cleft palate?
(I'm not mocking with this. I was born with a cleft palate, and I am constantly asked where I'm from. People understand what I say perfectly, it's HOW I say it that gets the curiosity.)
The only issue with that is that McCoy specifically refers to the red blood of the Klingon imposter to know that he isn't Klingon. If some Klingons had red blood, how would McCoy know he definitely isn't one?
DON'T WAIT FOR THE TRANSLATION. ANSWER ME NOW.Why did Troi claim that she had never kissed Riker with a beard in Insurrection?
DON'T WAIT FOR THE TRANSLATION. ANSWER ME NOW.Why did Troi claim that she had never kissed Riker with a beard in Insurrection?
I never understood how they made the whole economy work. That's the big one that pops into my head.
<snip>.
DON'T WAIT FOR THE TRANSLATION. ANSWER ME NOW.Why did Troi claim that she had never kissed Riker with a beard in Insurrection?
Well... offhand the only occasion that springs to mind of Deanna kissing a bearded Riker was TOM Riker... Maybe she's separating the two there?
Less convoluted answer: He comes in, making teasing comments and such, clearly being flirtatious, so she returns the teasing with 'yuck' and the 'never kissed you with a beard' was the first thing that comes to mind in response.
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