I'm a speaker of Klingon and co-founder of the former Klingon Wikipedia, which got moved to Wikia. There are no native speakers of Klingon. There used to be one, the son of D'Armond Spears, but he ceased to speak the language when he was about 4 years old. It's a well-known story. So unless there's a fluent speaker who manages to keep it completely secret that they're speaking Klingon with their child, unbeknownst to the speakers' community, then there is no other native speaker of Klingon at the moment. With about 20 to 30 fluent speakers and maybe around 200 (my guess) who can communicate in the language well enough, it is at least a possibility.
- André
2017-12-09 17:46 GMT+01:00 Milos Rancic millosh@gmail.com:
This [1] sounds like pretty valid and "maybe few" is infinitely larger number than 0. Besides the fact that you told me the same information ~5 years ago.
The insult was intentional.
[1] http://blog.longnow.org/02009/06/01/klingon-elvish-and- esperanto-linguist-takes-a-serious-look-at-invented-languages/
On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Gerard Meijssen gerard.meijssen@gmail.com wrote:
Hoi,' and you have it on good authority that there are native speakers of
Klingon?
Who are you fooling. At that, you are insulting. Thanks, GerardM
On 9 December 2017 at 17:10, Milos Rancic millosh@gmail.com wrote:
I suppose you have strong evidence that LFN has more native speakers than Klingon or you are just an ordinary liar?
On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 4:45 PM, Gerard Meijssen gerard.meijssen@gmail.com wrote:
Hoi, In an alternate universe maybe. Thanks, GerardM
Op za 9 dec. 2017 om 13:24 schreef Milos Rancic millosh@gmail.com
I've just said that Klingon makes more sense than LFN, as it actually has native speakers.
On Dec 9, 2017 06:55, "Gerard Meijssen" gerard.meijssen@gmail.com wrote:
Hoi, We had Klingon at one time.. Do you really consider revisiting that
?
Thanks, GerardM
On 8 December 2017 at 23:22, Milos Rancic millosh@gmail.com
wrote:
> > On Fri, Dec 8, 2017 at 10:58 PM, MF-Warburg > mfwarburg@googlemail.com > wrote: > > Can we, by the way, define more detailed criteria for which > > artificial > > languages should be eligible? > > Agreed. If we count native speakers, Klingon is, AFAIK, immediately > after Esperanto. > > _______________________________________________ > Langcom mailing list > Langcom@lists.wikimedia.org > https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/langcom
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