Nope, I'm not. I'm AustrianI am German (I think, you too, Hythlodeus?).
Nope, I'm not. I'm AustrianI am German (I think, you too, Hythlodeus?).
Not necessarily - we (the audience hear English -- at least in the U.S. and Canada and England, etc.) - but that's just because the UT on pout TVs broadcast that so we understand.English is "Federation Standard" though as stated by Christopher Pike in the last ep!
Good point, I sometimes have a tendency to stick with pre-JJ Trek in my head.
I'm glad they generally go with the "actor says the lines" approach though. It'd be tedious to do it the other way all the time. Seven years of Quark with the look of "looped dialogue"? No thanks.![]()
There have been specific references to the language depicted on screen actually being English in-universe, including what Saru said in this episode.Not necessarily - we (the audience hear English -- at least in the U.S. and Canada and England, etc.) - but that's just because the UT on pout TVs broadcast that so we understand.
Thy could ACTUALLY be speaking Esperanto for all we actually know<-- and THAT could be "Federation Standard".![]()
The UT on your TV just doesn't to confuse you...There have been specific references to the language depicted on screen actually being English in-universe, including what Saru said in this episode.
Kor
Actually, I don't know about.English is "Federation Standard" though as stated by Christopher Pike in the last ep!
So, Esperanto?Actually, I don't know about.
I wonder if "Federation Standard" is in fact its own thing, borrowing elements from various Federation languages in a phonic array that's almost like a code that's easy for the UT to disassemble and reinterpret and reassemble as needed. Kind of like a programming language is to assembler code and then to binary and them back up again.
Actually, I don't know about.
I wonder if "Federation Standard" is in fact its own thing, borrowing elements from various Federation languages in a phonic array that's almost like a code that's easy for the UT to disassemble and reinterpret and reassemble as needed. Kind of like a programming language is to assembler code and then to binary and them back up again.
Plummer is always speaking the lines that we hear in that scene though, if I recall correctly. Which is the same thing that was happening in the DSC scene.Well, a pre-JJ example is TUC.
It shows Chang speaking Klingon with it being translated, then the camera pans around and he's speaking English.
The message to the viewer is that he's still speaking Klingon (indeed, his line about not waiting for the translation makes no sense if he's actually speaking English), but it's just shown in English for our convenience.
Plummer is always speaking the lines that we hear in that scene though, if I recall correctly. Which is the same thing that was happening in the DSC scene.
Not necessarily - we (the audience hear English -- at least in the U.S. and Canada and England, etc.) - but that's just because the UT on pout TVs broadcast that so we understand.
Thy could ACTUALLY be speaking Esperanto for all we actually know<-- and THAT could be "Federation Standard".![]()
So, Esperanto?![]()
Pike identified the distress call in New Eden as Federation Standard (our first canonical reference to that). The distress call was made in 2053 by soldiers in an American church. It might be English. It could be Spanish or French or something. Probably not Esperanto.
Not necessarily - we (the audience hear English -- at least in the U.S. and Canada and England, etc.) - but that's just because the UT on pout TVs broadcast that so we understand.
Thy could ACTUALLY be speaking Esperanto for all we actually know<-- and THAT could be "Federation Standard".
There's nothing like global thermonuclear war to change what's in vogue.Esperanto isn't really popular worldwide. Most people use english for speaking with foreigners.
Therefore i really doubt it's Esperanto. IRL there are more people speaking Klingon than Esperanto![]()
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