Stargate SG-1/G to L

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


Tropes used in Stargate SG-1 include:

Tropes A-F | Tropes G-L | Tropes M-R | Tropes S-Z

G

    • Played for many laughs in "200".

Teal'c: I do not understand why everything in this script must inevitably explode.
Marty: Trust me. Explosions make great trailers.

    • Also...

Marty: I'm talking about... a twist! Something nobody's expecting!
Jack: (enters after being Put on a Bus for many episodes) You mean something like this?
Vala: Wow, I don't think anybody will see that coming.
Daniel: Nope, there'll be spoilers.
Carter: Are you kidding? It'll be in the commercial.

    • And it should be noted that both Jack and the explosion scenes were included in the Syfy commercials for said episode.
    • From "Point of View":

Doctor Samantha Carter: Well if you're not gonna give us a second chance... I don't know any of you.
Jack: Well, exactly -- you don't know any of us. And we don't know you. For all we know, you could be her evil twin! But then we'd be dealing with clichés, and you know how I feel about those.
(turns to Major Carter from his reality)
Jack: No, actually you know how I feel about them.

Aris Boch: And you, O'Neill, you're considered, well you're a pain in the nik'tah.
O'Neill: Neck?
Teal'c: No.

    • Jack in "Absolute Power".

Shifu: A spark lights a flame, but the candle will burn only as long as the wick.
Jack: If I may sir, I think what he means is, the wick is the centre of the candle, and obstensively a great leader, like yourself, is essential to the whole ball of wax. Basically what it means is is that its better to have a big... long... wick right?

  • Ghost City: In "Bane", "Ascension", "2001", and "Menace".
  • Girlish Pigtails: Worn by Vala on occasion.
  • Give Me Liberty, or Give Me Death!: The Jaffa rebellion.
  • Glowing Eyes of Doom: The Goa'uld can make their host's eyes glow on command, which they often do at critical points in the story.
  • A God Am I
    • The Goa'uld take on the persona of gods of Earth's early mythologies. Some of the more deluded, such as Ra, Anubis, and Apophis, seem to buy into their own hype and actually believe themselves to be gods, while others, like Ba'al or Nerus, are aware that the Goa'uld are just parasitic snakes and only play the role of being divine to maintain their power.
    • The Asgard use holograms to depict themselves as the gods of the Norse pantheon, but only to primitive peoples under their protection who would not understand the concept of "aliens". They include tests within their "religious" sites to let them know when the population is ready to hear the truth.
  • God-Emperor / God Guise: Standard Goa'uld PR theme. Sufficiently advanced technology makes it easy for them to pass as classical pantheonic gods, and thanks to their ridiculous egos and the mind-screwery of the sarcophagi some of them even believe it themselves.
  • A God I Am Not: The ascended Ancients refuse to be worshipped or thought of as gods. The Ori on the other hand...
  • Gods Need Prayer Badly: The Ori manage to sap power from their worshipers, which is why they foster the religion of Origin.
  • God Test: When Gerak becomes a Prior of the Ori and is asked to destroy Jaffa who refuse to believe, Teal'c asks him what makes him believe they are gods, citing various impressive miracles they could have performed. He then points out that the Goa'uld performed the exact same miracles and posits that the measure of a god is not how much power they have, but how they apply it. If they were gods, they would not need Gerak to kill anyone on their behalf, or even ask such a thing of him.
  • Goal-Oriented Evolution: Averted in the initial seasons, where scientists find the idea of duplicate evolution of genetically compatible species to be completely unbelievable, and Ascension is a philosophical concept, unconnected to evolution in any way. However, towards the end of the series, and especially after the Ori are introduced in season nine, humans are explicitly described as evolving on "a path to Ascension," which has been repeated with at least four different branches of humanity that evolved independent of one another (the Ancients, humans of the Milky Way, humans of the Pegasus Galaxy, and the humans of the Ori Galaxy). Eventually, the philosophical portions of Ascension are dropped completely, and people can only Ascend at the conclusion of their "natural" evolution, and it comes regardless of their moral or spiritual status.
  • Going Down with the Ship: Colonel Lionel Pendergast aboard the Prometheus, who stays aboard to make sure that his crew can evacuate down to the planet surface.
  • Good Bad Bug: An in-universe example, where when replicator bugs took over a Goa'uld ship, they caused a security breach that allowed our heroes to escape a room they had been locked in.
  • Good Old Ways: Inverted; Teal'c, Bra'tac and other recurring Jaffa characters spend much of their time struggling to get the Jaffa to abandon their old traditions, since most of them were fostered by the Goa'uld. These include a lack of sexual equality and a government based on military assets.
  • Gosh Dang It to Heck: When particularly annoyed, Mitchell will exclaim "Mary and Joseph!"
  • Government Conspiracy
  • Grammar Nazi: Ironically, O'Neill does this often. Even while being tortured, he corrects the villain's grammar.

Jaffa: No matter what you've endured, you've never experienced the likes of what Anubis is capable of!
O'Neill: You ended that sentence with a preposition... bastard!

  • Green-Skinned Space Babe: Anise/Freya of the Tok'ra is a sexy female alien with sexual tension with both Daniel Jackson and Jack O'Neill (Freya, the host, likes Jack, but Anise, the symbiote, likes Daniel).
  • Groundhog Day Loop: The mostly-comedic "Window of Opportunity" episode, a fan favorite.
  • The Guards Must Be Crazy: For once the bad guys do not hold a monopoly on this trope, as incompetence is the general order of guards in the SG-1 universe.
    • When the Tok'ra are planning to surgically remove the Goa'uld Tanith from his host, he claims that he would rather die and take the host with him. He convulses and collapses to the ground and his two guards, with a third Tok'ra present, open his cell to check on him. Though they are armed, specifically with weapons that are non-fatal and can be used even against a human shield, Tanith is able to grab one by the throat and escape. Perhaps because the writers could not think of a way to show this without having the Tok'ra appear completely incompetent, the scene cut away after he grabbed the first guard. O'Neill subsequently lampshades just how incompetent they must have been to let him escape.
    • When Teal'c has been brainwashed into once again serving Apophis, he captures O'Neill, Carter and Daniel and locks them in a room aboard a ha'tak, whereupon Selmak breaks them out because there were no guards stationed there... which was the entire point, since Teal'c wanted to capture Selmak, too, and needed an adequate lure. Apparently Teal'c is so badass that he actually is a competent guard.
  • Guns Akimbo
    • In the Season One finale, to rescue Jack and Teal'c, Daniel takes Sam's sidearm and goes Akimbo while Sam uses the MP5. Later, he wields the Beretta M9 sidearm in one hand and the MP5 in the other. Granted, at that point he was just spraying and praying.
    • In "Seth", Jack, Sam, and Daniel do this with a pair each of zat'nik'tels.
    • In "200", Mitchell pitches a Zombie Apocalypse story that features him wielding two SMG's.
    • Teal'c has, throughout the series, operated two staff weapons and even two P90's. While this is never his standard equipment, when things get desperate he'll routinely pick up a second weapon (in the case of staff weapons, from an enemy Jaffa he's just killed) and wield both with great effectiveness.

H

  • Half-Human Hybrid
    • Two episodes features humans with Goa'uld DNA. The first is a harcesis, a child born of two Goa'uld hosts; the second is an experiment by Ex-NID operatives to gain access to the Goa'uld genetic memory.
    • The Serrakin -- a race capable of breeding with humans despite not being Human Aliens. They had liberated the humans of their system from the Goa'uld millennia ago and the two species now co-exist in a mixed society.
    • Adria is a human with the knowledge of the Ori bred into her DNA. She is described as an Ori in human form, their way of getting one of their own into the Milky Way without technically violating the rules the Ancients have against directly interfering.
  • Hand Blast: The Goa'uld hand device, useful for energy pulse attacks and brain scrambling.
  • Happily Adopted: Dr. Fraiser took in Cassandra, a young girl whose planet had been wiped out by Nirrti in the first season, and raised her lovingly as a daughter. However, when Cassandra returns in the fifth season she is now a teenager and, like all teenagers, is butting heads with her mother over dating, family dinners and other aspects of maturation.
  • Hard Light: Merlin shows an extreme fondness for hard light constructs, using them as the guardians and tests of his various workshops. SG-1 has had to face two knights and a dragon in order to prove themselves worthy of his knowledge.
  • Hash House Lingo: Oma Desala in "Threads".
  • Heel Face Turn
    • Teal'c, right in the first episode.
    • Aris Boch seems to have a change of heart, realizing that SG-1's fight against the Goa'uld is a worthy venture.
    • Harry Maybourne went from enemy to convicted US traitor to useful asset to grudging ally and friend. Eventually SG-1 even relocates Maybourne offworld to protect him from punishment for his original crimes.
    • Richard Woolsey, first an agent of Senator/Vice President Kinsey and the NID, then digs up information to incriminate Kinsey after getting a peek at his true nature. Notable for remaining a committed bureaucrat (though a relatively less obstructive one) after his change of allegiance.
  • Heel Race Turn: The Jaffa are the prime example, although due to the Kirk-like influence the team tends to have on certain worlds, there are certainly plenty of minor examples.
  • Heel Realization
    • In "Bane", Dr. Timothy Harlow realizes mid-sentence that Colonel Maybourne is not just willing to take unscrupulous shortcuts, but is actually planning to let Teal'c be transformed, and that by calling him in for assistance he has doomed Teal'c to a painful death.
    • In "Inauguration", Mr. Woolsey begins to realize that his superiors might not be as honorable as he believed when his conversation with Vice-President Kinsey seems to end with the implication that Kinsey is going to assassinate the president if he does not get his way.
  • Heroic Resolve: Mitchell was badly beaten by Merlin's holographic knight in "Avalon," but was able to gain a new reserve of strength when he thought back to how he refused to give up after he was injured when his F-302 was shot down over Antarctica. Since the knight is more of a test than an actual enemy, he defeats it and gains access to the riches and technology of Merlin.
  • Heroic Sacrifice
    • During "In The Line Of Duty," the Tok'ra infesting Sam decides to let itself die so that Sam wouldn't have to die with it.
    • Gerak knew that turning against the Ori would mean his immediate death, but still chose to help cure the Prior plague that was ravishing the Earth.

Gerak: If I do this, I will die. But I will die free!

  • Hero of Another Story
    • Colonel Makepeace, formerly the Trope Namer.
    • Colonel Reynolds after Makepeace is revealed to be The Mole.
  • Hero Worshipper
    • Felger to SG-1, much to Col. O'Neill's chagrin.
    • Lieutenant Colonel Cameron Mitchell starts season nine almost obsessed with working with SG-1. When he learns that he is actually going to be in command of the unit since all its prior members have been reassigned, he gets the band back together because he specifically wants to work with those three people.
  • Hide Your Pregnancy
    • Amanda Tapping was pregnant throughout the end of Season Eight, with her stomach hidden with the traditional practices of obstructing objects and dark, black clothing. She was on maternity leave when filming began for Season 9, leading to Carter being temporarily assigned to Area 51.
    • Lexa Doig became pregnant with her and husband Michael Shanks' second child during filming for Season 10, resulting in her character of Dr. Carolyn Lam having a greatly reduced presence and all but disappearing from the show.
  • History Repeats
    • "Spirits" revolves around a plan by the US Government to surreptitiously mine trinium from a planet inhabited by descendants of the North American Salish. When they learn of this, SG-1 is very upset over the repetition of the early history of the United States, and explicitly points out that we were supposed to have learned from our mistakes.
    • "Enemy Mine" has a similar plot, with the Unas in stead of the Native Americans on a planet sporting a naquadah mine. Daniel's diplomatic skills manage to save the day, quite thankfully -- because otherwise, the history repeat would have been of Little Big Horn.
  • Holodeck Malfunction: The episode "Avatar".
  • Honor Before Reason: The Ascended Ancients have as their primary philosophy a policy of non-interference amongst the lower planes of existence. They believe in this so strongly that they will not interfere when the Ori, their hated enemies who are planning their destruction, manipulate the lower planes in order to increase their own power, nor even when the inhabitants of the lower planes gain a weapon to kill Ascended beings. As Morgan Le Fay explains, if they interfere then they will be no better than the Ori.
  • Hostage Situation: In "Bad Guys", SG-1 is mistaken for a group of rebels on an alien planet and wind up taking a museum hostage. They realize that if they just let all the hostages go the military that surrounded the museum will storm in and kill them all, so they decide to hold on to the hostages until they can get the stargate working and gate off the planet. Unfortunately, the people in charge of the besieging forces seem to have no clue how to run a hostage negotiation, Daniel seems to have no clue how to play a hostage-taking terrorist, and there's a security guard who thinks he's John McClane, so Hilarity Ensues.
  • Hot Scientist: Sam Carter
  • How Dare You Die on Me!: When O'Neill is fading away at the end of "Lost City", Carter says that he cannot die now, they just won.
  • Human Aliens
    • Transplanted Humans for the most part, except for the Ancients, who came first and arranged for us to look like them after they left.
    • The Nox are woodland creatures that appear human with leaves and twigs in their hair. The reason why they look almost human is never explained.
    • The Jaffa are a genetic offshoot of humanity created by the Goa'uld. They are biologically human in most respects, except they have an abdominal pouch which is used to incubate larval Goa'ld; the Goa'uld larva in turn grants the Jaffa immunity from disease and an increased lifespan, but cannot be removed without killing the Jaffa.
  • Humans Are Special: Humans are not shown to be particularly smarter, stronger, faster or more "imaginative" than other species, but the Asgard point out that they have great potential.
  • Humans by Any Other Name
    • "Tau'ri", meaning "those from the first world", refers to humans from Earth to distinguish them from all the other humans of the galaxy.
    • "This form" is (rarely) used to refer to the general human species, to distinguish them from alien species. When the issue of the evolution of the Ancients and the subsequent identical evolution of humanity is raised, the term "this form" is used to refer to both Ancients and humans, since the technical issue of species classification is somewhat tricky.
  • Humorless Aliens: O'Neill is distrustful of the Aschen for precisely this reason. Also, Teal'c tends to miss the point of O'Neill's jokes. Funnily enough, the trope is also inverted in one episode; Teal'c, with prompting, tells a Jaffa joke that obviously amuses him, but falls flat on its face with the rest of SG-1.
  • Hurricane of Puns
    • The System Lord Yu has been punned so often that characters have actually put a moratorium on further punning, explicitly stopping others and explaining that it has all been done before.
    • When Ba'al begins cloning himself, Ba'al-related puns become quite common:

Cam: We've got a full count, sir. Two strikes, three Ba'als.

  • Hypocritical Humor: In "Cor-ai" Hammond says to Jack: "The US military is not in the habit of interfering with the affairs of other peoples." Jack just sort of looks at him and then at Carter and says, "Since when?"

I

Hammond: What am I supposed to say? (pulls out microphone) A glowing energy being is headed for Level 28. Lower your weapons and do not attempt to intercept it.
Hammond: Okay, people. Let me remind you. This mission is recon only. Do not engage the enemy. I'm allowing the use of this ship because of the obvious tactical advantage it provides you. Under no circumstances is it to be used to travel through time. (beat) Never in my life did I imagine ever giving that order.

Jack O'Neill: We came in peace. We hope to leave in one... piece.

  • I Did What I Had to Do: After Teal'c kills Sha're he is sad, but he points out that it was a choice between her life or Daniel's, and if he was in the situation again he would make the same decision.
  • I Die Free: Trope Codifier. Rebel Jaffa are frequently heard saying this when threatened by one of the Goa'uld or their followers, or in any other case where they're about to make an act of suicidal defiance.
  • I Gave My Word: In "Spirits", T'akaya agrees to hear out Daniel and Jack if they show her where Xe'ls is. When Xe'ls awakes he orders T'akaya to destroy the SGC, but she refuses until she has at least heard them out; Xe'ls points out that they have already learned of plans by the SGC to deceive them and that their word is worthless, but T'akaya still refuses to act, pointing out that her word would be worthless, too, if she broke her own promise.
  • I Have Nothing to Say to That: O'Neill being led into kicking Jaffa butt.
  • "I Know You're in There Somewhere" Fight: Often when talking to a loved one who has been taken as a host. A recurring question in early episodes was if there is any part of the host's mind/soul that survives. There is, and the Goa'uld just suppresses it. At least in the case of a young symbiote with a strong-willed host, it is even possible for the Goa'uld to momentarilly lose control.
  • I Made Copies: When General Hammond gives Mr. Woolsey a computer disk with evidence to incriminate Vice-President Kinsey in a conspiracy of blackmail and murder to gain control of the stargate, he points out that it is not the only copy before Woolsey even asks.
  • I Minored in Tropology: When Mitchell has to Sword Fight an armored knight, he reassures the rest of SG-1 that he studied fencing in college. When he gets his ass kicked by the knight he explains that he failed fencing. Luckily, the knight was more of a test than an enemy and he was able to defeat it after he gained a second wind.
  • I Resemble That Remark: Carter's response to being told that she seems tense is to, very tensely, reply that she is not tense.
  • I Say What I Say: The cloned O'Neill in "Fragile Balance".
  • I Take Offense to That Last One: In "Citizen Joe":

Joe Spencer: You're Brigadier General Jack O'Neill. Head of Stargate Command at Cheyenne Mountain. You used to command SG-1, which is now led by Lt. Colonel Samantha Carter. You once visited a planet called Argos, and the nanites in your blood caused you to age artificially. You've had the entire repository of the Ancients' knowledge downloaded into your brain. Twice! You have a thing for The Simpsons, fishing, Mary Steenburgen, the color peridot, and you're a terrible ping pong player.
[...]
Jack O'Neill: Well, first of all, Joe, I'm not a terrible ping pong player.

  • Idiot Ba'al: Pretty much everyone holds it at some point. Specifically, any Goa'uld (villain or not), any planet visited by a Prior of the Ori, and SG-1 from time to time.
  • If You Kill Him You Will Be Just Like Him
    • In "Cor-ai," Hanno is prepared to kill Teal'c as soon as he sees him, but one of the other villagers convinces him not to go through with it and take Teal'c prisoner for cor-ai (trial). He explains that if Hanno kills him in vengeance, then they will be no better than the Jaffa.
    • Subverted in "Bloodlines". After stealing an immature Goa'uld symbiote for the scientists to work on (it ends up replacing Teal'c's symbiote that he gave to his son), Daniel and Carter start to walk away. Daniel stops and takes aim at the tank of symbiotes since he's still raw about Apophis' kidnapping Sha're. Carter says this to Daniel, who seems to be convinced. They start away again, then Daniel suddenly turns around and machine-guns the tank anyway.
  • I'll Take Two Beers, Too!: When the team is under the influence of appetite-increasing phlebotinum.
  • Immortality Inducer: The sarcophogi, which can extend the human lifespan to over 1,000 years provided the person has regular access to its healing properties.
  • Impossibly Mundane Explanation: In "Window of Opportunity" Jack has prior knowledge of a briefing Carter is giving and claims that he is remembering things from the future. Carter suggests, "Maybe he read my report?" Daniel gives her a skeptical look and repeats, "Maybe he read your report?" as if it was the most ludicrous suggestion. Everyone else (O'Neill included) seems to agree.
  • Impostor-Exposing Test: In "Foothold", Maybourne cuts himself in front of Carter to prove he's human after an alien impostor is shown to have purple blood.
  • Impaled Palm: O'Neill inflicts this on Heru'ur in "Secrets".
  • Impaled with Extreme Prejudice: RepliCarter's preferred method of execution.
  • Imperial Stormtrooper Marksmanship Academy: The Jaffa, although simultaneously justified and lampshaded in later episodes when Jack explains that the staff weapons are designed to intimidate, while human weapons are designed to kill. (See Kinetic Weapons Are Just Better below.)
  • Implacable Man: Special note goes to the Kull Warriors, especially the first time SG-1 tries to catch one.
  • I'm Standing Right Here:
    • Dr. Felger is unsure if O'Neill knows he is there when he calls him a "brown-nosing little weasel." His tone makes it clear that he does not know which answer he would prefer: That O'Neill is talking about him behind his back, or that O'Neill is directly insulting him to his face.
    • Vala continuously refers to the SGC's attempts to understand the Goa'uld bracelet bond as pointless, to which Dr. Lee, who is running the tests, points out that he is actually touching her face at the time.
  • Incoming Ham: "Urgo", featuring Dom DeLuise. Just watch the background characters trying desperately to keep a straight face.
  • Inconvenient Summons: The Asgard love getting a hold of O'Neill this way. Frequently in mid-sentence.
  • Incredibly Lame Fun: When Jonas Quinn arrived on Earth he became fascinated by the Weather Channel and watched it for hours, to which Carter responds that here are at least five hundred other channels.
  • Incredibly Lame Pun: The System Lord Yu's name is frequently punned by the humans due to its similarity to the English word "you." When Dr. Elizabeth Weir, who was only learning of Yu for the first time, began to make her own pun, Daniel explained to her that every possible variation had been done to death, and it was no longer funny.
  • Infinite Supplies: Averted. The inability of the rebel Jaffa to even feed themselves is a recurring problem, as is their lack of weapons and supplies to wage their war. The Hak'tyl, a group of female Jaffa from the domain of Moloc, seek out an alliance with the SGC and offer their services as soldiers, scouts and spies in return for food and support.
  • In Harm's Way: Carter is a real adrenaline junkie in her spare time, and volunteers to take part in a dangerous alien competitive spaceship race in "Space Race."
  • Inkblot Test: When Vala is being examined for suitability to formally join the SGC, the reviewing doctor has her look at blots, but stops when she tries to game the system by saying that she sees abstract concepts, like 'courage', in the blots.
  • Insectoid Aliens: The Reetou, which are invisible to the human eye but can be sensed by a Goa'uld symbiote.
  • Insignificant Little Blue Planet: It turns out Earth played an integral role in the history of the universe, but for the present day and the past few millennia it has been little more than a backwater planet forgotten by the more advanced races.

Aris Boch: Contary to popular human belief, the Earth is not the center of the galaxy.

  • Insistent Terminology: Robert Kinsey never seems to get the titles of aliens corect.
    • In the season six episode "Disclosure" he refers to Thor as 'Commander', only to be corrected (With an upraised finger) to Supreme Commander.
    • In the season seven episode "Lost City" he refers to Bra'tac as 'Mister Bra'tac' only for O'Neill to point out that it is Master Bra'tac.
  • In Soviet Russia, Trope Mocks You:

Carter: I love what they've done with the place.
O'Neill: (noticing the people in pods) I love what the place has done with them.

  • In Spite of a Nail: We see several Alternate Universes, some created by Time Travel and others reached in other ways. In almost every one, Earth and modern America are indistinguishable from the universe of the Stargate Verse from the point of view of the public, despite the deviation point occuring decades or even thousands of years ago.
  • Instant Awesome, Just Add Dragons: One of Merlin's tests.
  • Instant Sedation: Averted more often than it is played straight.
    • In "In The Line of Duty", when Sam/Jolinar gets tranqued twice, the first case with "enough to knock out an elephant," it takes a minute before she is disabled.
    • "Spirits" is the one episode where it is played straight; SG-1 is incapacitated by small darts towards the beginning of the episode and collapse almost immediately after being shot.
    • Osiris is twice shot by a Goa'uld-specific sedative, and in both cases it takes several minutes before it takes effect. In "The Curse" he even managed to make good his escape before succumbing to the drug.
    • In "Memento Mori", Vala is injected with a sedative directly into her carotid artery, and she still' does not lose conciousness right away. She becomes unsteady on her feet and unable to talk, and is rushed into a vehicle by her kidnappers.
  • Interdimensional Travel Device: The Quantum Mirror, which makes a few appearances in early episodes before being destroyed offscreen. In one episode, Daniel accidentally uses it to travel to another universe; in a later episode, alternate-universe versions of Carter and Kowalski come back through it, looking for refuge from the Go'a'uld invasion fleet that just arrived on Earth in their universe.
  • Intergenerational Friendship: Teal'c seems to bond with children very readily (not in a creepy way).
    • In "Bane," Ally Martin discovers and helps hide the poisoned Teal'c after he escapes from NID custody. Once he is healed, he returns and gifts her a new super soaker.
    • In "Learning Curve," Teal'c gives Tomin knowledge of the Goa'uld to help defend his society, and becomes almost violent when he is told that Tomin cannot return and suspects that he has been mistreated.
  • Interservice Rivalry: Between the SG-3 Marines (Jarheads) and the SG-1 Air Force (Flyboys) after the former's introduction in "The Broca Divide". It is brief and does not appear in subsequent episodes.
  • In the Back: Colonel Simmons shoots O'Neill in the back in the climax of "Desperate Measures".
  • Invisible President: The President of the United States during the show's first seven season, stretching from 1997-2004, was unidentified either by name, image or party.
  • It's All About Me: In "2001", Senator Kinsey genuinely believes that O'Neill is willing to sabotage Earth's alliance with the Aschen, which could potentially save the planet from the Goa'uld, all in order to prevent Kinsey from becoming President of the United States.
  • It's Personal
    • Daniel Jackson joined SG-1 because his wife, Sha're, and brother-in-law, Skaara, had been taken as Goa'uld hosts. Throughout the series numerous other loved ones are killed or implanted by the Goa'uld.
    • Teal'c worked so hard to become First Prime of Apophis because Cronos, enemy of Apophis, had killed his father and he wanted to be in a position to exact vengeance. He later swore a "Jaffa revenge thing" against Tanith, the Goa'uld that lied to, betrayed and killed Shau'nac, his childhood love interest.
  • It's What I Do
    • When O'Neill gets upset at Felger's statement that there are "only" a dozen Jaffa for SG-1 to fight their way through, Felger points out that this is what SG-1 does. The whole team pauses for a few seconds before apparently agreeing and moving on.
    • In "Zero Hour", when O'Neill mocks Ba'al as he always does, his new aide asks if it is necessary to actually provoke him. O'Neill simply turns to him and says, "It's what I do."

J

Teal'c: You underestimate the satisfaction I will get from your suffering.

K

  • Kangaroo Court: "Cor-ai" features Teal'c being put put on trial for killing a man while he was still serving Apophis. The twist was that his prosecutor was the son of the man he killed, and was also the judge and jury. Jack greatly complains about this, only for Daniel to say that this has historical precedent. Which just pisses Jack off.
  • Kicked Upstairs: After General Landry settled in at the SGC he realized that most of the meetings he had to go to were basically pointless and orders Sergeant Walter "Chevron Guy" Harriman to go in his stead. When Walter protests, Landry threatens to promote him if that is what it takes.
  • Killed Off for Real: Major Kawalsky, Sha're, Martouf, Apophis (eventually), Narim (and the rest of the Tollan), Janet Frasier, Jacob Carter, Colonel Pendergast and the Prometheus, and the entire Asgard race. Abydos is destroyed and everyone on it is killed, but they are Ascended to A Higher Plane of Existence.
  • Killed to Uphold the Masquerade: Maybe. A reporter with information on the Stargate Program is killed in a car accident mere seconds after O'Neill fails to convince him not to run the story, but O'Neill claims (and is assured by General Hammond) that the Air Force had nothing to do with it. (The NID, on the other hand...)
  • Kinetic Weapons Are Just Better: Played straight; most characters use SMGs or handguns for the whole series and even Teal'c trades in his staff weapon for a P90 (or two) in the last three seasons.
  • King Arthur: Seasons nine and ten delve deeply into Arthurian legend, with the revelation that Merlin was an Ascended Ancient who retook human form in order to build a weapon to fight the Ori. Though Arthur himself never appears, SG-1 does visit Camelot and follows in his footsteps to look for the sangraal, the Holy Grail, which they believe to be the weapon that Merlin built.
  • The Kirk: More often than not, Samantha or Daniel.
  • Kissing Under the Influence: In the first season episode "The Broca Divide," before the heavy Ship Tease began between O'Neill and Carter, Carter attempted to force herself on O'Neill when she began to regress into a primitive being. It was not a funny scene.
  • Klingon Promotion
    • The Jaffa rite of joma secu, where a Jaffa commander is challenged to a duel to the death for his position. Played straight in "The Warrior" (Teal'c versus K'tano/Imhotep; Teal'c wins) and subverted in "Birthright" (Ishta versus Neith; Ishta wins but spares Neith when she learns the tretonin didn't work on Mala and she died).
    • In "Bounty", SG-1 points out that Netan's position in the Lucian Alliance is extremely tenuous and that if somebody managed to kill him they could probably take over the entire organization.
  • Knighting: In "Theads", Teal'c and Bra'tac are dubbed "blood-kin to all Jaffa" in recognition of their work in the overthrow of the Goa'uld, tapped once on each shoulder by a staff weapon.
  • Knights Templar: Plenty, but particularly the rogue NID, which became the Trust.

L

  • Lampshade Hanging: Frequently, often pairing up with Genre Savvy (see above); and forms the basis for much of the series' humour; particularly when Colonel Mitchell (Ben Browder) joins the cast. The episode "200" lampshades tons of tropes from sci-fi and movies in general to the show itself, including the act of Lampshading!
  • Large Ham: The Goa'uld have a habit of this for various reasons. Rodney McKay lampshades it in "Redemption, Part 2" after Anubis tells the SGC they're all going to die at the end of Part 1:

McKay: Hello, Anubis, this is your agent. You're playing it way over the top; could you please tone it down?

  • Laser-Guided Amnesia: "Fire and Water"; "Beneath the Surface"; "Fallen"; "Revisions"; "Collateral Damage"; "Memento Mori"
  • Law of Inverse Fertility: In the alternate timeline of "2010", Carter and her husband Ambassador Joseph Faxon are trying very hard to have a child, but so far are unsuccessful thanks to the Aschen.
  • Layman's Terms: Frequent. Especially whenever Daniel or Sam try to explain something to O'Neill. Whenever O'Neill uses a technical term himself it is usually cause for a double take from the other characters.
  • Leaning on the Fourth Wall: The episodes "Wormhole X-Treme!" and "200". Also, this gem of an O'Neill quote:

Local: (about Teal'c) He is Jaffa!
O'Neill: No, but he plays one on TV.

  • Learnt English From Watching Television: Orlin learned to speak English, and how to dress, by watching TV in Carter's house overnight.
  • Leave Him to Me: At the conclusion of "Talion", Teal'c has been shot at least twice by a staff weapon and is brought before Arkad, who tosses him a wooden staff and orders his men to leave them alone. He then fights Teal'c one-on-one, explaining how he has always admired the fierce warrior Teal'c, and that he wants to kill him himself. Teal'c, though viciously beaten, kills Arkad.
  • Left It In: In the "documentary" made about Wormhole X-Treme! at the end of "200", Martin Lloyd stops his interview to take a phone call, during which he is quite profane, and then goes back to talking about how much of a family the crew is after checking to make sure that they had not recorded his previous comments.
  • Lensman Arms Race: The SGC goes from a platoon-sized group of special forces going through a star gate they barely know how to operate, to a small fleet of interstellar star ships, in about eight years.
  • Let's Split Up, Gang!: Daniel lampshades it when the Russian Major he is trapped in a Goa'uld ziggaurat with leaves to explore the hallways and tells Daniel to wait there; commenting that both of them will be alone in a dark and dangerous maze.
  • Let Us Never Speak of This Again: The season one episode "Hathor" was heavily disliked by both fans and the producers, and in following episodes the characters mention that they have agreed to never talk about it again. True to that, the specific events of the episode are never revisited, with characters only talking about the "Hathor incident" without saying what actually happened.
  • Lie Detector
    • The Toka'ra have a lie detector which works via mind reading. Instead of actually reading if a character is being truthful or lying, it reads their conscious and unconscious thoughts and compares them, to see if their recollections match what they are saying. It is used to detect a zatarc, a person that the Goa'uld have brainwashed into an assassin and then covered up their brainwashing with false memories.
    • Vala is given a polygraph when she is being reviewed for suitability to formally join the SGC. Its use is in line with most flawed depictions of the polygraph, indicating that Vala is lying when she tries to compliment the doctor and noting each successive lie when she tries to cover herself.
  • Like a Son to Me: In "Talion", Bra'tac explains to Teal'c that he is like a son to him, and that he is so proud of him.
  • Like Reality Unless Noted: Unless the show outright says so, what's happening outside of the Stargate program is the year that particular season was produced.
  • Living Forever Is Awesome: Harlan, a human whose brain was uploaded into a robot body and refers to this process as a "gift". He is shocked that SG-1 does not share his opinion, though he does admit that others of his kind also had trouble acceptng their state of existence.
  • Long Game: The Aschen as a whole are a very patient race, and conquer other planets over the course of centuries. Their standard operating procedure seems to be forming an alliance with the current government and granting them superior technology in order to gain their trust, but slowly reducing their population by inducing wide-spread infertility through their medical treatments. After several centuries the planets inhabitants will be too few to prevent the Aschen from assuming complete control.
  • Long Runners: Stargate: SG-1 ran for ten seasons and a total of 214 episodes, with two additional DVD movies, and was followed by two spinoffs.
  • Look Both Ways: The female bounty hunter after Daniel Jackson in "Bounty" is killed by a bus as she stalks across a street. She probably should have reserched the planet and learned our traffic patterns.
  • Loophole Abuse
    • Daniel gets away with helping the Tollan escape because, as a civilian, he cannot be court martialled, and he could not be tried in civilian court without revealing the Stargate Program.
    • In another episode, one of the Nox helps the Tollan defend themselves by hiding one of their planetary defense turrets so it is not destroyed by the Goa'uld. When Carter calls her out on doing this despite her people's dedicated pacifism and neutrality, she remarks that she only hid the weapon -- she did not fire it. Carter remarks that that is a pretty fine line she did not cross.
    • In "Lockdown", O'Neill is complaining about his recent promotion to general, particularly about the pressure he is under to appoint a new member to SG-1. When he explains that he wants to keep it like it is, as a three-person team, Carter points out that there is no rule that says SG-teams have to have four members, and O'Neill latches on to that rationale as a way to avoid making the decision.
  • Lost Superweapon: When Earth is under the threat of a massive alien invasion and if the usual tricks and weapons do not work, there is the ancient outpost in Antarctica, whose chair can control and launch thousands of powerful drones, only requiring a humongous amount of power. Surprise!
  • Lost Technology: Lampshaded by Colonel O'Neill in a Season 6 episode where the Human Aliens have no artifacts from the Goa'uld.

O'Neill: That's weird. The Goa'uld are damn litter bugs, they leave all kinds of crap lying around.

  • Love at First Mind-Meld: Orlin falls in love with Carter the very instant he meets her, but he tries to justify it by explaining that Ascended beings can join their essences to another person and understand them on a fundamental level right away. Carter is skeptical and, even though she warms up to him eventually, never does fall in love with him in return.
  • Low Culture, High Tech
    • The slave races to the Goa'uld and Ori.
    • Earth, after the SGC begins truly piling up the alien tech.
  • Lower Deck Episode
  • Ludd Was Right
  • Luke, I Am Your Father: Wonderfully played with and torn to shreds during the 200th episode. For a moment, you almost believe...!