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== Radio Alphabet ==
 
''Discussions moved to [[Talk:Colonial Wireless Alphabet]] by [[User:Joe.Beaudoin|Joe Beaudoin]] at 20:07, 10 October 2005 (EDT).''
 
== Racetrack ==
 
Is it just me or does Racetrack have a vaguely Canadian accent in her scene on the Raptor early in [[Final Cut]]? --[[User:Peter Farago|Peter Farago]] 02:10, 10 September 2005 (EDT)
 
== Stating the obvious ==
 
:''Mister (Mr), Miss, and Doctor have all been used, but Missus {Mrs} has not.''
 
The concision fairy frowns in disapproval. Why is this interesting? --[[User:Peter Farago|Peter Farago]] 02:26, 17 September 2005 (EDT)
 
Nothing much since we haven't seen anyone married. Given the gender equality in BSG, however, it may well be that "Mrs" is not used. --[[User:Redwall|Redwall]] 17:20, 17 September 2005 (EDT)
 
== General American ==
 
On a somewhat smaller matter, there is no linguistically accepted version of English called "General English," with a capital G.  I am willing to accept a lower case g, "general English," to indicate "common sense" notions about the accent/group of accents. --[[User:BlueResistance|BlueResistance]]
 
:You are correct. The article previously referred to Standard American English (SAE), which I have encountered in contrast to African American Vernacular English (AAVE) in sociolinguistics. As I'm sure you can tell, I intend to refer to the mid-western "newscaster accent" used throughout the entertainment industry.
 
:As for Wikipedia, they referred to this accent as [[Wikipedia:Standard Midwestern|Standard Midwestern]] until last February. It was then [[Wikipedia:Talk:General American#move to "General American"?|moved]] to [[Wikipedia:General American|General American]] based on [[Wikipedia:User:Angr|User:Angr]]'s statement that "the accent is not standard in any official sense, nor is it limited to the Midwest."
 
:Since they are serving as our primary reference, I am inclined to follow their conventions on the matter. Perhaps you could take up your point with them? I realize that we are not powerless to employ our own terminology, but consistency strikes me as a self-evident virtue. --[[User:Peter Farago|Peter Farago]] 02:31, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
 
:: Sigh. General American bothers me. I'd ''much'' prefer Standard American English. I mean--that's a term that linguists use when discussing American accents. I wish Wikipedia had a page entitled that, but I don't want to get into a land war there (or, really anything there as time is finite). A few things have to be understood about SAE (or, as it stands, General English):
 
:: 1) It doesn't really exist as a spoken dialect. No one grows up learning SAE the way one can grow up speaking Texan English or any of the various sub-dialects of AAVE or whatever. However, Americans seem to be able to sense what it is. This is still under research.
 
:: 2) When used in a non-scholastic setting (like this wiki), saying someone speaks SAE generally means that the region they learned English in is not identifiable by the way they speak. Apollo speaks SAE, for instance. However, Jamie Baber or however it's spelt, is British and really speaks some form of British English dialect (I've not heard him speak myself).
 
:: With these two things in mind, using a term like SAE to refer to dialects of characters is perfectly fine. I mean--the dialect is a kind of mental construct and so doesn't really exist and the characters, likewise, don't really exist. ;) OK. That was a joke. My problem with the term "General American" is that I've never seen it before in a linguistic context. "Standard American English" is a term used in all caps like that in many texts by various authors. I'm tired and I think I'm losing coherency. Does my point about, for lack of a better word, officialness come across clearly? I sure hope so. --[[User:Day|Day]] 03:04, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
 
:::I would be happy to have the relevant links marked as Standard American English and go to Wiki's General American article through pipes. The term General American was introduced on October 8th by [[User:Troyian|Troyian]] - I'd like to know if he is personally in favor of the term, or was just matching wikipedia's terminology. --[[User:Peter Farago|Peter Farago]] 03:09, 19 October 2005 (EDT)


== Valley Girl Accent ==
== Valley Girl Accent ==

Revision as of 18:29, 15 January 2008

Archive
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This page is an archive. Do not edit the contents of this page. Please direct any additional comments to the current talk page. Please add new archives to Archive 2.


Radio Alphabet

Discussions moved to Talk:Colonial Wireless Alphabet by Joe Beaudoin at 20:07, 10 October 2005 (EDT).

Racetrack

Is it just me or does Racetrack have a vaguely Canadian accent in her scene on the Raptor early in Final Cut? --Peter Farago 02:10, 10 September 2005 (EDT)

Stating the obvious

Mister (Mr), Miss, and Doctor have all been used, but Missus {Mrs} has not.

The concision fairy frowns in disapproval. Why is this interesting? --Peter Farago 02:26, 17 September 2005 (EDT)

Nothing much since we haven't seen anyone married. Given the gender equality in BSG, however, it may well be that "Mrs" is not used. --Redwall 17:20, 17 September 2005 (EDT)

General American

On a somewhat smaller matter, there is no linguistically accepted version of English called "General English," with a capital G. I am willing to accept a lower case g, "general English," to indicate "common sense" notions about the accent/group of accents. --BlueResistance

You are correct. The article previously referred to Standard American English (SAE), which I have encountered in contrast to African American Vernacular English (AAVE) in sociolinguistics. As I'm sure you can tell, I intend to refer to the mid-western "newscaster accent" used throughout the entertainment industry.
As for Wikipedia, they referred to this accent as Standard Midwestern until last February. It was then moved to General American based on User:Angr's statement that "the accent is not standard in any official sense, nor is it limited to the Midwest."
Since they are serving as our primary reference, I am inclined to follow their conventions on the matter. Perhaps you could take up your point with them? I realize that we are not powerless to employ our own terminology, but consistency strikes me as a self-evident virtue. --Peter Farago 02:31, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
Sigh. General American bothers me. I'd much prefer Standard American English. I mean--that's a term that linguists use when discussing American accents. I wish Wikipedia had a page entitled that, but I don't want to get into a land war there (or, really anything there as time is finite). A few things have to be understood about SAE (or, as it stands, General English):
1) It doesn't really exist as a spoken dialect. No one grows up learning SAE the way one can grow up speaking Texan English or any of the various sub-dialects of AAVE or whatever. However, Americans seem to be able to sense what it is. This is still under research.
2) When used in a non-scholastic setting (like this wiki), saying someone speaks SAE generally means that the region they learned English in is not identifiable by the way they speak. Apollo speaks SAE, for instance. However, Jamie Baber or however it's spelt, is British and really speaks some form of British English dialect (I've not heard him speak myself).
With these two things in mind, using a term like SAE to refer to dialects of characters is perfectly fine. I mean--the dialect is a kind of mental construct and so doesn't really exist and the characters, likewise, don't really exist. ;) OK. That was a joke. My problem with the term "General American" is that I've never seen it before in a linguistic context. "Standard American English" is a term used in all caps like that in many texts by various authors. I'm tired and I think I'm losing coherency. Does my point about, for lack of a better word, officialness come across clearly? I sure hope so. --Day 03:04, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
I would be happy to have the relevant links marked as Standard American English and go to Wiki's General American article through pipes. The term General American was introduced on October 8th by Troyian - I'd like to know if he is personally in favor of the term, or was just matching wikipedia's terminology. --Peter Farago 03:09, 19 October 2005 (EDT)

Valley Girl Accent

Day and I believe that Pythia likely spoke with High rising terminals, also known as a "valley girl accent". We have concluded this based on the fact that no less than 67% of the direct quotes from her book of prophecy begin with the coordinating conjunction "and", as in the following passage:

"And, like, the lords anointed a leader to like, guide the Caravan of the Heavens to their new homeland?, and, like, unto the leader they gave a vision of serpents numbering two and ten?, as like, a sign of things to come?, which is like, totally spooky. And then, like, the Arrow of Apollo will open the Tomb of Athena, which is totally boss, but Zeus like, got all uppity and warned the leaders of the twelve tribes that any return to Kobol would exact a price in blood, which is totally gross, 'cause blood is gross, y'know? And like, a real bummer, since Kobol is hot shit."

So say we all. --Peter Farago 20:19, 17 September 2005 (EDT)

NO, that was meant to sound religious, in the tone of "And the number shall be "three". "Four" be too many, and "two" be too few (unless though then proceedeth to "three"). "Five" is right out. ---Ricimer, 17 Sept, 2005
The effect is, as noted, somewhat different when you read them all out in a list. --Peter Farago 20:39, 17 September 2005 (EDT)
Damn both of you. My deykoard is ruimed from spittake effect with kola! Spencerian 18:03, 23 September 2005 (EDT)
You should read the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle sometime; half of the sentences begin with "and". The thought of dark-age Anglo-Saxon monks speaking with valley-girl accents is very jarring. --Saforrest 23:07, 10 February 2007 (CST)

Sanskrit to do

  • Link to credible text repository & audio recording.
  • Transliterate Sanskrit properly, using IAST. --Peter Farago 00:53, 14 November 2005 (EST)

Hopefully the Don Davis sources may be of help to others in further translation from his Matrix Revolutions tracks (noted in our article now). Enlightening stuff--I use the "Navras" track and its chant in my daily workouts--gets my heart rate up. I was wondering why Elosha's chant seemed so damned familiar, and now I know why. Wild how my favorite SF topics and music merge like this. Speaking of which, I think a music article on BSG will be due sometime... --Spencerian 10:09, 14 November 2005 (EST)

Am I the only one who finds this matrix stuff to be badly off-topic? Davis's transliteration isn't very good, either. --Peter Farago 14:04, 14 November 2005 (EST)
I'm going to strike this. If anyone wants to make a note of the coincidence on the references page, that would be fine. --Peter Farago 21:12, 14 November 2005 (EST)

Other Accents

What about all of the Canadian accents? I'm no linguist, but the way Tigh speaks sounds very different to the way Adama speaks. Besides, many characters on the show are played by Canadian actors like Aaron Douglas, Tricia Helfer, and Tahmoh Penikett, each with varying degrees of accent. --Drumstick 19:51, 17 January 2006 (EST)
Many Canadian accents are very similar to the Midwestern SAE used in Hollywood. If you can name a character with a particularly strong accent, I'd be happy to identify them here, but Hogan, Douglas, Helfer and Penikett don't seem to fit the bill.
Note that place of origin and accent do not necessarily coincide - nobody would claim that Lee Adama speaks with a British Accent, although Jamie Bamber certainly does. --Peter Farago 20:32, 17 January 2006 (EST)
I've always felt that Hogan's accent is somewhat obvious, but again, I'm not much experienced with Canadian-accented English. (I only know two or three Canadians myself.) Besides, you make a good point: even if Hogan's accent is strong enough to be considered noticable, it is no where near as different from SAE as, say, Baltar's. Drumstick 21:35, 17 January 2006 (EST)
For me, Tigh's just got a few words that stick out. Unfortunately, the only word that comes to mind off the top of my head is one that doesn't really exist: Kobol. Everyone else says it as if it were some American saying Co-Ball (['kou.'bol]) or something (equal stress on both syllables), whereas he seems to say ['kou.bl] (with the syllabic l at the end). That's hack-IPA, there, because I've yet to take the time to figure out the way the thingie for it works, here. --Day 23:51, 17 January 2006 (EST)
Michael Hogan may be Canadian, but his accent sounds to my ears more like American Irish. The Canadian accent at any rate owes a lot to Celtic influences (that "aboot" that Canadians say is straight from Scotland/Northern Ireland), so it's possible that it's Canadian but it doesn't sounds like Canadian accents that I'm familiar with. The name "Tigh" is Gaelic for "house". He's also a drinker. So my sense is that his character has been outfitted with a Scots/Irish-American persona. For what it's worth, I'm a Scot living in the States myself, and profoundly lacking in confidence in the average American's ability to recognize accents. I'd say 95% of Americans guess that I'm Irish, when no one from the UK or Ireland would make that mistake.--Haecceity

I am Canadian, and Hogan does have a distinctly Canadian accent. It's hard to pin it down specifically, but I would guess northern or eastern Ontario: if I'm right, the Irish comments were right on, as eastern Ontario was heavily settled by Irish immigrants, though the accent has evolved a bit since then. --Saforrest 22:58, 10 February 2007 (CST)

Ah, Michael Hogan is from Kirkland Lake! That explains the accent. --Saforrest 23:00, 10 February 2007 (CST)

Texas Accent

Y'know, Baltar's Six definitely refers to his "nucular device" in "Epiphanies". --Peter Farago 14:49, 21 January 2006 (EST)

Actually, that's not a Texas thing. We talked about that specifically in one of my classes, since that's such a common misconception due to G. W. Bush's hailing from our state and and pronouncing it thus. Apparently that's common in many Southern dialects (as in "The South" which includes states as far north as Virginia, but not, say, New Mexico). Not that Texas is really excluded from that list, I just thought I'd point out that it's more common than many city-dwellers think (including myself before I attended the afore mentioned lecture). Personally, I say it "NEW-clee-er" only slightly more often than "NEW-cue-ler". I feel like I"m rambling on, so I won't go into what factors contribute to a dialect switching the L and the following vowel in this word. --Day 23:57, 21 January 2006 (EST)
      • PREACH! Ramble on, my friend. The mispronunciation of "NEW - clee - ar" as "NUKE - yoo - lar" is quite possibly my biggest language-related pet peeve, and it warms my heart to learn that there are those out there whose minds are open to re-education on the matter of nit-picky pronunciation issues, and furthermore, who would spread the word after learning something new? Very refreshing. To be honest, I have something of a Six/Tricia Helfer wannabe complex, and it actually makes me cringe and hurt a little inside every time I her her utter those three errant syllables, as if the miniseries kickoff infanticide-genocide double-whammy wasn't enough to alert me that my heroine was, perhaps, less than perfect... ;) I think you're all pretty fabulous for noticing *and* for the informative commentary that followed (and even managed to get a few W jibes in - excellent!). --omg octagons!! 14:19, 16 November 2006 (CST)
Sounding off for a minute: the pronunciation is officially "New-clee-er", and Bush is yet again and embarrassment for pronouncing it wrong, then refusing to correct himself because he believes that he is infallible. --Ricimer
See, now you're gonna start arguing right and wrong with a descriptive linguist. We're not your prescriptive Highschool English teacher. *wink* --Day 15:29, 22 January 2006 (EST)
PREACH! Ramble on, my friend. The mispronunciation of "NEW - clee - ar" as "NUKE - yoo - lar" is quite possibly my biggest language-related pet peeve, and it warms my heart to learn that there are those out there whose minds are open to re-education on the matter of nit-picky pronunciation issues, and furthermore, who would spread the word after learning something new? Very refreshing. To be honest, I have something of a Six/Tricia Helfer wannabe complex, and it actually makes me cringe and hurt a little inside every time I her her utter those three errant syllables, as if the miniseries kickoff infanticide-genocide double-whammy wasn't enough to alert me that my heroine was, perhaps, less than perfect... ;) I think you're all pretty fabulous for noticing *and* for the informative commentary that followed (and even managed to get a few W jibes in - excellent!). --omg octagons!! 14:24, 16 November 2006 (CST)
It should be noted, to offset any non-germane commentary on the current president, that President Bush is not the only one who has difficulty in pronouncing "nuclear." I spent some minutes in childhood laughing at this. --Spencerian 15:38, 16 November 2006 (CST)

Names

I don't think its worthwhile to discuss the "meaning" of names that were borrowed from TOS here. --Peter Farago 23:17, 15 March 2006 (CST)

Not sure that's entirely true (obviously :-) ), since in several cases Larson clearly borrowed those names from Hebrew/Greek himself, deliberately, and RDM is following in his footsteps.--Uncle Mikey 23:20, 15 March 2006 (CST)
I think we need to edit down "Names" a lot for relevance/concision. --The Merovingian 23:58, 15 March 2006 (CST)
I can accept that—some days I'm good at concision, other days, not so much. I'd actually originally intended to merely provide a couple of key examples, and I kinda got carried away :-)--Uncle Mikey 10:14, 16 March 2006 (CST)
By the way, Merv—thank you for your additions/clarifications to the names. And you may be right about the Roslin entry not really being highly relevant. I'll admit I just thought it was an amusing coincidence. And it may be more relevant than you think. The Cylons are clones, of a sort (albeit not clones of real human beings, but of 12 synthesized templates), and a Cylon-hybrid child saved Roslin's life... OK. It's a stretch :-) I can be convinced to remove the Roslin entry without much arm-twisting.--Uncle Mikey 13:21, 16 March 2006 (CST)
Well RDM saying he deliberatley chose Dualla and Gaeta's names knowing their meaning is from the podcast of "Final Cut"; I think the Zarek thing is from the companion book. --The Merovingian 17:08, 16 March 2006 (CST)

French in the Colonies

I wanted to point out that we recently realized that french is a spoken language in at least some of the Colonies. This is the first real language, other than english, that we see as present beyond accentuation. I guess you'll want proof? Here it is.

On the Very top of the chalk board are the words :

  • Aller ("to go")
  • Avoir ("to have")
  • Etres ("to be")

Three verbs of the French Language. Just Thought I'd mention it, since as far as I remember there is no other Earth Based Language which is seen beyond certain accents. --Sauron18 04:37 June 06 2006

Nice catch, Sauron. Actually, the prayer chant sung by Elosha at the end of the miniseries is a Sanskrit prayer, so that's two possible languages in the Colonies outside the accented suggestions. Your discovery should be an interesting one to add. Also, we see "NaOH", which I think is the chemical name for ammonia...curious that the Colonials use our chemical naming process, too... --Spencerian 13:22, 6 June 2006 (CDT)
sodium hydroxide ^_^ --Mercifull 13:33, 6 June 2006 (CDT)
It looks like it's part of an equation. X + NaOH yields -> Y. This does appear to be the first written instance of foreign language. --Steelviper 13:36, 6 June 2006 (CDT)
Ugh...stereochemistry (shudder). Oh, well the only other "french" thing we've got in BSG is when Stinger says "esprit de corps" in "Pegasus", but I think that and the LDYB II blackboard thing are just mistakes. --The Merovingian (C - E) 15:59, 6 June 2006 (CDT)
I don't think they're any more mistakes then talking of dogs horses and such. There's no reason why languages other than english can exist within the Colonies. Might even be a second language to them since they're teaching it to preschoolers--Sauron18 17:05 June 06 2006
Very nice find, Sauron. --Peter Farago 20:39, 6 June 2006 (CDT)

Clean-Up

Anything in particular, or just in general? I always look at an article's talk page when I see a delete or clean-up tag and I'm often annoyed because the tagger hasn't posted about why they tagged. I'm not looking for an exhaustive list, just maybe the direction you think the article should be headed or something. --Day (Talk - Admin - SotS) 02:28, 19 July 2006 (CDT)

Sorry, I thought I'd be able to get to this myself but I'm juggling 5 projects; I just meant it as a reminder tag for myself like 2 hours later. Basically a few new edits (the most recent ones) specifically in the "name origin" section sounded like too much speculation; I mean "well, Adama could stem from the Greek "Adamas"..." when we know that Glen Larson originated "Adama" as it sounds like "Adam". I'll get to this in a minute. --The Merovingian (C - E) 10:12, 19 July 2006 (CDT)
Done. Finished cleanup. --The Merovingian (C - E) 12:17, 19 July 2006 (CDT)

I accept what you say about my "speculation" on the derivation of the name "Adama" but you've pretty much removed all the others, including my observation on the the name "Helena." As it happens, I happen to think that my reference to the Emperor Constantine's mother is more apt than Helen of Troy, because (according to the admittedely apocryphal Golden Legend of Jacopo da Varagine) Helena was a ruthless proselyte who wasn't remotely concerned who or how many people she had killed in her religious and political zeal for Imperial Christianity, especially if they weren't Christians (and for her bloodthirsty piety she was later made a Saint of the Orthodox Church) Helen of Troy however was (in all probability) nothing more than an archaic-period poetic device for a casus belli. The character traits of Empress Helena seem far more appropriate to Admiral Cain's personality than do those of the adulterous Face that launched a Thousand Ships. Of course, it could be just a coincidence, but in a show loaded with mythological and historical references, without asking the writers, we'd never know for sure, and sometimes even they might not really know why they use a reference; artistic works are often full of imagery and symbolism that even the work's creator isn't fully aware of the meaning of. That's why there are art historians. - Tawakalna Q'ubt ut-Allah.

There is a level of permissable speculation, but these other things you were saying were so obscure I don't think they are relevant, or worth including. --The Merovingian (C - E) 13:58, 19 July 2006 (CDT)
I don't see the significance of most of these edit reversions of Tawakalna's contributions, Merv. The Adama speculation is no less interesting than what can be found in "The Matrix" character name studies (given that no explanations have been, or probably will be forthcoming about them). Speculative: yes. Factual or interesting: (as far as all name and word origins go): Yes. While "Helena" might have been picked out of a hat by the writers, it nonetheless has an interesting comparison to history and/or mythology. Tawakalna obviously has a good grasp of this history, so unless you have a better source, I recommend restoration of the Adama, Tigh, Cain and Agathon edits. --Spencerian 15:05, 19 July 2006 (CDT)
Well if you feel it was okay, yeah, add it back. --The Merovingian (C - E) 16:40, 19 July 2006 (CDT)
My two cents: I find practically none of this speculation interesting or insightful. The Matrix comparison is a bad one, since I don't find that line of inquiry interesting, either. --Peter Farago 14:47, 20 July 2006 (CDT)

Well, that's two to one against, so let's just leave it shall we? It was only an observation after all; if people really find such speculation useless to the point of being offensive, then it's hardly worth my time to carry on with something that's clearly creating hostility. - Tawakalna

Well it wasn't offensive, and you could put it back if you want. --The Merovingian (C - E) 09:26, 21 July 2006 (CDT)

Starbuck's Tattoos

Kattee Sackhoff has two tattoos with a non-English language. One is the Latin "bona fiscalia" (public property). That fits nicely with the other Latin names on the show. Another is the Japanese Kanji for "choice" on the back of her neck. Maybe those should be added? There could be a new title like "non-English languages" with that, the French noted above and also the Sanskrit in Elosha's prayer --Serenity 12:28, 26 September 2006 (CDT)

Those are noted on Tattoo at present (though I thought that article might be disappearing... I could be wrong). I'm guessing that those aren't intended to be visible onscreen, given the efforts they seem to take to conceal them, but they are visible at times. That's a tough one. --Steelviper 12:33, 26 September 2006 (CDT)
I know that they are on both Kattee's page and the tattoo one. They might try to hide them now and then, but they are clearly visible several times. The only one they really cover up is the crucifix. I found the Japanese one to be actually more visible once she switched to the ponytail. It's not just one or two times and I for one, don't try to explain them away as production errors or something --Serenity 12:45, 26 September 2006 (CDT)

How many accents does D'anna Biers use?

Well, I just finished indulging a random little craving I had for "Final Cut," and all I heard was Kiwi, Kiwi, Kiwi. I'm not at all sure who this 'second' copy of D'anna who uses the Americanish voice is - does the sentence refer to whoever we see in the theatre watching the movie at the very end, or is there something I'm spacing on? As far as I know, there's never any mention of another copy who, as the section states, lives on Cylon-Occupied Caprica, and it never occurred to me that the D'anna at the Cylon film festival was actually an additional version. I guess it's conceivable that the movie premiere was on Caprica, but do we ever hear anyone say that? If memory serves me, the next time we see D'anna isn't until "Downloaded," and the article states that all post-DL'ed D'anna's only speak with a NZ accent. So, even if I'm a space cadet and missed the part where we learned about another D'anna on Caprica in FC, I still don't really notice a noticeable change in her accent during the few words the "other" copy says right before the episode ends. So, if I'm just missing something obvious here and everyone else knows which "Second" D'anna is being described in this subsection, would anyone mind either "translating" for me so I can catch up with reality? Or perhaps rephrase the first few sentences so that an episode title is used as a reference point? And maybe substitute names for "her" and "she," etc.? Because I'm starting to wonder if I'm crazy like Gaius, here, and I can't figure out how to put all the pieces together on my own! And if nobody else hears another accent or remembers two D'anna models in FC, should we just delete the Kiwi section or reduce it to one sentence? --omg octagons!! 06:47, 17 November 2006 (CST)

She is a different Three, she is in Caprica, as the place is labelled as "Cylon-Occupied Caprica". Also, the Three we see in Caprica in "Downloaded" is not D'Anna Biers. --Sauron18 07:07, 17 November 2006 (CST)

Aerelon Accent

(It is probably some subtle nuance that a Colonial character like Baltar could notice, but that is indistinguishable from an American accent to the audience).

No, listen. None of these characters are actually speaking English. The whole thing is a conceit to make it intelligible to the viewer. I'm sure that in the fictional universe of BSG, Boomer does speak with a "trace of an Aerelon accent", but since the show chooses to represent this as Standard American English, there's little point speculating about phonological variations that we can't hear. It's not a matter of Baltar being able to hear something we can't, the showmakers have just chosen not to give us the information. --Peter Farago 01:38, 10 September 2005 (EDT)

Yeah. I tend to agree. My agreement is influenced by a couple of things in addition to the above.
One: I have a BA in Linguistics. I know a bit about accents and the sounds of human speech, etc. I'm also somewhat used to hearing differences in sounds that most Anglophones aren't used to (like distinctions that are meaningful in other languages, but not in English). These two things make it hard for me to believe that, after reading about this theory and listening to Boomer speak with the purpose of hearing an accent, I'd somehow be unable to hear it simply because I'm missing it.
Two: I'm a rather large Tolkien dork and am familiar with the idea of "translating" something into English for the benefit of English-speaking viewers (to say nothing of over-dubbed versions of this show for non-English-speaking viewers. Additionally, being familiar with Tolkien's special flavor of language-centric crazy, I don't get that, well, vibe from RDM. He seems much more interested in the story and the cinematics than correctly representing the names of people from Dale as corrupted Old English names in order to show their long-ago linguistic connection to the Rohirrim, whose language is tacitly represented by Old English--as he should be.
If, for whatever reason, the BSG production/directorial staff were interested in drawing parallels to Colonial accents with the use of English accents, it would be much more apparent. What is more likely is, as Peter posits, they aren't giving us the information. That's been screened out if for no other reason than the fact that they didn't really think about it. It's not a big deal. I think this is evidenced by Baltar's remark about Boomer's accent, actually. If they were keeping tabs of language enough to care about accents, they would realise the extreme unlikelihood that even a stereotypically recognized majority of an entire planet's population would have an accent that was the same. I mean--What's the most common (and thus, best seen as stereotypically Earthly) accent on our world? Chinese. Which is, you know, not precisely an accent. ;o)
I think, actually, that the BSG crew are paying attention to accents, however. It's just not in a way that identifies characters geographically or--whatever. They pick accents that will predispose American and British (and, thus, probably Australian) viewers to certain preconceptions about their characters. Baltar speaks, more or less, the Queen's English, which will predispose Westerners to assume he's intelligent, wealthy, well bred and well educated. Baltar is these things. Kara Thrace speaks pretty standard American English and does it with a fairly high volume. She assumes the stereotypes of the loud American, so to speak. Notice, too, that the reporter had an English accent. At the end of her documentary, I half expected her to say, "This is D'anna Whatever, BBC news." I don't even get the BBC in Texas.
This is getting absurdly lengthy. I apologize. I tend to do this when words are at issue. Anyway, one final point: I don't think the same thing can be necessarily said for "race". Since where your genes are from, geographically, is a rather more visual thing, I tend to think that this would more easily occur to a TV producer as something worth keeping track of. That doesn't mean that it did and they are, but that most of my arguments here don't apply to that case much. I'll, ah, I'm done now. ;o) --Day 03:31, 10 September 2005 (EDT)
Well said. --Peter Farago 04:01, 10 September 2005 (EDT)

It is true that Grace Park is a fluent speaker of Korean, but her English--either as Sharon Valerii or as herself in interviews--bears no trace of a Korean accent whatsoever. I am married to a native Korean speaker, have friends and colleagues who speak Korean either as their first or second language, and have been studying the language for a few years myself, so I am absolutely certain that Korean has no bearing on what might or might not be considered an Aerelon accent. --BlueResistance

I tend to agree, but felt like someone would bring up her bilingualism inevitably and that it would be better to address it directly. If Grace Park (and thus Boomer) has a trace of any accent, it ought to be Korean, so I felt it worth a mention. --Peter Farago 02:31, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
You said that Grace Park's bilingualism would come up eventually. I would recommend limiting discussions of her bilingualism to the actress' bio page. The label "Korean" doesn't meaningfully describe anything that's going on when Sharon/Boomer is speaking. My own Korean is getting good enough that I'm approaching true "bilingual" status, but nobody would use "Korean" to describe my English. --BlueResistance
Discussing Park's bilingualism on the actress' bio page would not shed any insight for a reader of this page, nor would it allay any questions that such knowledge might raise. I understand that her spoken English is flawless, but the fact that it is not actually her first language is at least marginally relevant here, and is given the footnote it deserves.
As for her "northwestern" accent, I don't truly believe that that's any different from General American/Standard Midwestern - the only phonological difference I can think of is the caught/cot merger, which is too subtle to deserve the name "accent". --Peter Farago 03:00, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
Perhaps it should be specifically noted here that her Korean fluency doesn't seem to have any impact whatsoever on her English accent. I agree with Peter that it's important to note it here, so that someone who doesn't know any better doesn't come along and think we missed that point and that they've solved our problem by mentioning a (non-existent) Korean accent. Sometimes, when you are making an argument or assertion, you have to mention some things that are, really, irrelevant in order to make clear that they are, indeed, irrelevant so that others will not wrongly think that they are. Make sense? --Day 03:08, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
I was just about to say something like that. Thanks, Day! --BlueResistance 03:10, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
Tried to make it a little more forceful. You can tell that this wiki is great because we spend whole evenings discussing single sentences. --Peter Farago 03:18, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
Nice edit. And I hope you were being serious. I spent a lot of time in college working on a print publication and for the last couple years, I was the Editor in Chief (kind of a joke because there were only six of us on staff). In any case, it was a humor publication and sometimes we'd spend hours debating about the wording of a single sentence in order to deliver the most punch. It almost always paid off. In this case, we're not looking to be funny, but I still think it pays to make sure a sentence communicates exactly the information we intend: no more and no less. --Day 17:48, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
Quite serious. Concision is nothing without precision. --Peter Farago 23:48, 19 October 2005 (EDT)
So, you're not really the Concision Fairy. You're the Concision/Precision Fairy. Which is less concise, but more precise. Maybe you're the (Con|Pre)cision Fairy. Phleh. --Day 16:16, 20 October 2005 (EDT)

I just watched "Dirty Hands" last night, and the accent Baltar speaks with is unmistakable to an English girl like me - it's a Yorkshire accent :) so I've edited to reflect that, the accent isn't "diluted", but Yorkshire accents are different to a more general north English accent therefore it could seem that way. Marianne 06:38, 19 June 2007 (CDT)

Which is somewhat impressive, given that the actor's bio says he was born and raised in London, so for him Yorkshire is a "second accent". Not as impressive as any American actor *credibly* doing anything other than another American accent. but I digress.Toddsschneider 08:15, 25 July 2007 (CDT)

Commander-in-chief

With regard to the recent edit by OTW, I feel its a bit obvious that she is in a capacity of being a commander-in-chief. After all, she is the one who promotes Adama to admiral. Also, Adama is later ordered by then-President Baltar to settle New Caprica; so, yes, the President is a commander-in-chief, and does have ultimate command of the military.

As to the issue of her not exercising her control over Adama, not to mention Cain later on, it's because she needs the military as much as the military needs the civilian fleet. They're really dependent on each other, and tied at the hip. -- Joe Beaudoin So say we all - Donate - Sanctuary Wiki — New 17:32, 22 August 2007 (CDT)

The issue arises over Roslin and Adama's relationship in the Miniseries. It's that not Roslin had to compromise and make a deal with Adama, but he barely recognized her authority and thus she agreed to share power with him for the time being. Similar to Cain. Theoretically she could order Cain around, but Cain wouldn't listen. She is similar to early Adama there. --Serenity 17:42, 22 August 2007 (CDT)
Another indication comes from the mini-series when Lee Adama, aboard Colonial One, defers to Laura Roslin's authority as president, rather than his father's orders. As for the real-politik power-sharing between Adama & Roslin at the beginning, as time passes and they come to understand and have greater confidence in each other, it appears the office of president as head of government and military has been restored and re-asserted in preservation and continuation of the Articles of Colonization and pre-attack Colonial society (a theme echoed in the mini-series, and episodes such as Dirty Hands). --Fredmdbud 02:30, 23 August 2007 (CDT)

Improvements?

After "Razor" I was wondering if we should start this article by discussing the identified languages by colony, noted uses of "non-English" languages, and then continue with the cinematic and series-colloquial aspects. We've known that the clergy have used an old language (note services for the dead), and that Aerelon and Gemenon have had distinct languages as well. The question that should come up is, what is the standard or common language to all colonists? The naval Colonial Fleet had to have had one to function, which is what we hear in the show. But civilians use it, too. But every so often the regional dialects and unique names appear.

We can't fanwank the use of English, but we should note the likelihood that the colonists came from Kobol with, or over time developed a common language between them. I just think this article is too out-of-universe and so makes little sense in its current form. --Spencerian 11:52, 13 December 2007 (CST)

I feel like I'm starting to sound like a broken record here, but I really don't get the objections to this "out of universe" perspective. My purpose in writing the original version of this article was to put together a cogent, out-of-universe, critical analysis of language in the series, not language in the show's universe. Has everyone decided against the utility of such articles now? And if so, why? --Peter Farago 12:53, 13 December 2007 (CST)
I don't see anything wrong with that either. This is an article that almost demands it. If you remove those parts, there is nothing left. We could write a few lines about the in-universe languages, but it wouldn't be much. What could be done is separate the two areas better. First do the out-of-universe stuff and then some in-universe info. For example putting the Aerelon accent under the real-life English accents might not be such a good idea, even though it naturally contains out-of-universe information. --Serenity 13:12, 13 December 2007 (CST)
I probably didn't make myself clear. For articles such as these, the order of the information is just as important as the cinematic analysis. In other words, note the specific languages/dialects used or said by the characters. Next, the rest. As an encyclopedia, the emphasis should be on the in-show content first (if any...the Computers in the Re-imagined Series article would look like crap if we applied that since there's no technobabble). If result unbalances the article as read, I can understand that, and it might be better to leave it closer to its format. Right now, my eyes dance around it. The subject matter is fine. The order of it, not so much. --Spencerian 17:17, 13 December 2007 (CST)