Yep, a high (color matched) collar uni, plus a no collar one.
View attachment 16009
Proper turtlenecks, along with "women on the bridge" are pretty much outdated 1960's era stuff and should be left in the past.
Yep!Agreed!
Also... Is that a Trill?![]()
Agreed!
Also... Is that a Trill?![]()
Common sense. They already have the uniforms made and that's what is associated with the Enterprise.Source?
the turtlenecks will be back and rendered in CGI just like those singing flowers on Talos.
Does that mean a mock turtleneck is made from mock turtles?made from actual turtles this time
Does that mean a mock turtleneck is made from mock turtles?
The future is faux.Does that mean a mock turtleneck is made from mock turtles?
Synthasoup.I thought they were hunted to extinction in order to make mock turtle soup?
Agreed!
Also... Is that a Trill?![]()
Yes. Her name is Sarah... which doesn't sound like a Trill name to me. Better than Naáshala Kunamadéstifee, I suppose.
Dax is a human name (French) As are Ezri (Hebrew), Jadzia (Polish), Curzon. (Anglo-Norman), Tobin (Irish) and Joran (Scandinavian) Kira has multiple human origins. Nerys is a Welsh name. Quark is a Slavic word. Odo is German. And that's just Deep Space Nine!Personally I'd prefer Naáshala Kunamadéstifee
But they seem to have this weird thing about sometimes giving aliens human names in New Trek, like Linus, the Saurian officer onboard Discovery.
Maybe in the 23rd century some aliens like to adopt a "human" name when dealing with humans?
Dax is a human name (French) As are Ezri (Hebrew), Jadzia (Polish), Curzon. (Anglo-Norman), Tobin (Irish) and Joran (Scandinavian) Kira has multiple human origins. Nerys is a Welsh name. Quark is a Slavic word. Odo is German. And that's just Deep Space Nine!
True, but I'm willing to bet the writers heard of them. Human is human. Spock wasn't exactly a little known name in 1964. Since every other mom in America since 1946 had Dr. Benjamin Spock's baby book on their nightstand.And generally those are names that are either little known to an ENglish speaking audience, or that are even unknown/very rare in their country of origin.
It's not nearly the same as naming a Trill "Sarah" and a Saurian "Linus". You know, that thing called nuance?
And generally those are names that are either little known to an ENglish speaking audience, or that are even unknown/very rare in their country of origin.
It's not nearly the same as naming a Trill "Sarah" and a Saurian "Linus". You know, that thing called nuance?
True, but I'm willing to bet the writers heard of them. Human is human. Spock wasn't exactly a little known name in 1964. Since every other mom in America since 1946 had Dr. Benjamin Spock's baby book on their nightstand.
True, but it doesn't really matter one bit where the writers got the name from, as long as it sounds alien to most of their primary audience. That's what's important.True, but I'm willing to bet the writers heard of them. Human is human. Spock wasn't exactly a little known name in 1964. Since every other mom in America since 1946 had Dr. Benjamin Spock's baby book on their nightstand.
Yeah I assume that's the reason he's named Linus.I'm fine with "Linus" because I assume that his native Saurian name is an untranslatable mess of clicks and hisses.
Sarah seems too average, especially since we should assume that the Trill in the 2250s are fairly new on the scene (i.e. she probably doesn't have a human grandmother or something). If her name was Sera or Seirraah it might be more palatable as an alien name.
But writers are often readers. Readers of fiction, history and other forms of non-fiction. That's why Trek is full of classical and biblical derived names. Names can come from a variety of sources. Ferengi is derived from anArabic word meaning "foreigner". I just read that originally Odo was to be called "Otto" a name related to Odo. Berman was the one who changed it. Berman was well traveled in his preTrek role a a documentary producer. So I wouldn't be suprised if he had ran across the name in his travels.I would not say that in every instance. With Odo for example, I find it very possible that whoever created it had never heard of the extremely obscure, very dated German name, but rather just strung two vowels and a consonant together and thought it was an original creation. I'm originally from Germany and until this conversation I had never even heard of "Odo" being used as a real world name, because it hasn't been a common name for centuries by what I could find out via Google.
So am I (and I'm sure so are you) and I have never heard of the name Odo before. Being well-read still doesn't mean that you know the entirety of all of humanity's collective vocabulary. Coincidences can happen.But writers are often readers. Readers of fiction, history and other forms of non-fiction.
I just read that originally Odo was to be called "Otto" a name related to Odo. Berman was the one who changed it. Berman was well traveled in his preTrek role a a documentary producer. So I wouldn't be suprised if he had ran across the name in his travels.
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