And everyone forgets about the poor Lethe...![]()
And everyone forgets about the poor Lethe...![]()
It needs a new ad campaign to improve its image. How about: "Lethe good times roll!"
And everyone forgets about the poor Lethe...![]()
I'm surprised you didn't comment on the clever joke in that Lethe comment.![]()
One of my pet peeves which I'm experiencing again in The Romulan War is the author's unnecessary use of swear words and other vulgarities. The reason I single Martin out in particular is because he's the only one I've noticed doing it. I recall Kobayashi Maru using the word "fuck" for no real good reason and Archer thowing around several g.d.'s when he's ranting. I realize that this language isn't used in most onscreen Trek for censoring reasons, but why is it necessary to bring it into Trek lit? For stories that are (for the most part) supposed to be about mankind striving towards higher levels of maturity, awareness, respectfulness, etc., why drag that sort of language in? It doesn't make the story feel any more "real" to me if that is the intent. He also seems to enjoy being much more vulgar with sexual issues too which I don't find endearing at all. Of course, it's just a pet peeve. Perhaps I'm just too sensitive.![]()
For stories that are (for the most part) supposed to be about mankind striving towards higher levels of maturity, awareness, respectfulness, etc., why drag that sort of language in?
One of my pet peeves which I'm experiencing again in The Romulan War is the author's unnecessary use of swear words and other vulgarities.
That's not bothering me so much, since I like the idea of learning Rihannsu while I'm reading. What is bothering me is how little of the book has actually been spent on the Enterprise.One of my pet peeves which I'm experiencing again in The Romulan War is the author's unnecessary use of swear words and other vulgarities.
That didn't bother me. What did bother me was the dialogue peppered with untranslated words from Romulan and other languages. For example, units of measurement. The Romulans don't use the metric or imperial system -- but they don't speak English, either. While we're reading, we accept that (thinking inside the box) we're reading a translation from an alien language -- so why not have the hypothetical translator convert the measurements into ones we're familiar with?
For stories that are (for the most part) supposed to be about mankind striving towards higher levels of maturity, awareness, respectfulness, etc., why drag that sort of language in?
And everyone forgets about the poor Lethe...![]()
It needs a new ad campaign to improve its image. How about: "Lethe good times roll!"
I'm surprised you didn't comment on the clever joke in that Lethe comment.![]()
He forgot.
Remember what Lt. Uhura said to Excalbian Abe Lincoln? "We've learned not to fear words." Some would argue that a more mature society wouldn't get too bothered by the fact that certain words are derived from Anglo-Saxon rather than Latin. Words are only as negative as the attitudes imposed onto them.
Remember what Lt. Uhura said to Excalbian Abe Lincoln? "We've learned not to fear words." Some would argue that a more mature society wouldn't get too bothered by the fact that certain words are derived from Anglo-Saxon rather than Latin. Words are only as negative as the attitudes imposed onto them.
Bolding added to ask... whaa???![]()
One of my pet peeves which I'm experiencing again in The Romulan War is the author's unnecessary use of swear words and other vulgarities. The reason I single Martin out in particular is because he's the only one I've noticed doing it. I recall Kobayashi Maru using the word "fuck" for no real good reason and Archer thowing around several g.d.'s when he's ranting. I realize that this language isn't used in most onscreen Trek for censoring reasons, but why is it necessary to bring it into Trek lit? For stories that are (for the most part) supposed to be about mankind striving towards higher levels of maturity, awareness, respectfulness, etc., why drag that sort of language in?
I like curse words. Curse words are the natural reaction to virtually everything that has ever happened on Star Trek.One of my pet peeves which I'm experiencing again in The Romulan War is the author's unnecessary use of swear words and other vulgarities. The reason I single Martin out in particular is because he's the only one I've noticed doing it. I recall Kobayashi Maru using the word "fuck" for no real good reason and Archer thowing around several g.d.'s when he's ranting. I realize that this language isn't used in most onscreen Trek for censoring reasons, but why is it necessary to bring it into Trek lit? For stories that are (for the most part) supposed to be about mankind striving towards higher levels of maturity, awareness, respectfulness, etc., why drag that sort of language in? It doesn't make the story feel any more "real" to me if that is the intent. He also seems to enjoy being much more vulgar with sexual issues too which I don't find endearing at all. Of course, it's just a pet peeve. Perhaps I'm just too sensitive.![]()
Well, one of the few times swearing has come up in the franchise, it was established that Our Heroes of the 23rd Century suck at it ("A double dumbass on you!"), so there's some truth to what you're saying.Maybe a lot of humans in Starfleet just don't swear because alien cultures are better at it than we are, and our attempts at profanity are embarrassingly lame by comparison. And since we can't pronounce things like the notorious Betazoid expression wrb'xhlaknui-f'tangtangzhp correctly, there's just no point.
I expected there might be a response like this and had considered it. IIRC Uhura's quote was in reference to the word "Negress" and whether it was derogatory or not. To be honest, I'm not all that sure exactly what she means by this... Perhaps she just meant that people do not jump to assumptions of insult when such words are used, or maybe she meant that when insulting words are thrown at people, they no longer react with fear to them. I'm sure if ol' Abe called her a "Nigger", she may not have reacted in fear but I bet this would still be interpretted in a negative manner. I'm also pretty sure I've never heard a Star Trek character drop the F-bomb. Somehow I don't think common use of such language was what Uhura was defending. I don't "fear" the word, I just don't see it as appropriate. In a universe where we've never before seen this before, when characters start using it in the novels, it appears as out of sorts as if they started farting on the bridge.For stories that are (for the most part) supposed to be about mankind striving towards higher levels of maturity, awareness, respectfulness, etc., why drag that sort of language in?
Remember what Lt. Uhura said to Excalbian Abe Lincoln? "We've learned not to fear words." Some would argue that a more mature society wouldn't get too bothered by the fact that certain words are derived from Anglo-Saxon rather than Latin. Words are only as negative as the attitudes imposed onto them.
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