Law of Alien Names: Difference between revisions

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* The ''[[Star Trek]]'' franchise had plenty of these: Kalo, Malin, Cadmar, Domar, Talas, Talla, Keval, Melora, Latara, Liria, Gilora, Tagana, Onaya, Damar, Danar, Toran, Nador, Aluura and Anara. The token [[Proud Warrior Race Guy]]s, the Klingons, had names such as Kang, Kor, Koloth, K'Voc, Kaz, Klag (Klingons are very fond of K, it seems), Morak, Brok'Tan, Leskit and Thopok.
** In the original series, there seemed to be a specific rule about this. ''Every'' named Klingon had a name beginning with K, while male Vulcans had names beginning with S and ending in K, with three letters in the middle, and females had names beginning with T'. ''Enterprise'' stuck to this mostly, as did the earlier movies (with the exception of Saavik, a half Vulcan-half Romulan woman, and Maltz, a Klingon crewman). Worf broke the pattern.
*** Yet this was in fact subverted in the ''TOS'' episode ''Amok Time'', as the Vulcan male Spock's fiancee preferred was named "Stonn." Perhaps it's spelled with a silent "K"?
*** A [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshade]] is hung on the similarity of Vulcan names in the [[Expanded Universe]] novel "The Lost Years", which explains that the S--K pattern is in honor of Surak. In a flashback, a contemporary rival of Surak berates another Vulcan (who has just changed his own name to fit the pattern), pointing out as the years go by, Surak's followers are going to have to come up with increasingly ridiculous names. Also note: Assuming that their alphabet has 26 letters, this allows for only 17576 distinct male Vulcan names. (And this includes names without vowels!)
**** The ''TOS'' production staff was acutely aware of this, if not terribly concerned. ''The Making of Star Trek'' by Stephen E. Whitfield, published in 1968, reproduced a series of tongue-in-cheek memos that started with an extensive "official" list of Vulcan names (all in the S--K pattern), complete with accidental duplicates; later memos in the series justified these duplicates have having different pronunciations before spinning off into extreme silliness.