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Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Tue Feb 02, 2016 11:05 pm
by Mikey
OK, here's one: does anyone (except Seafort) know where ST: DS9 got the term "jem'hadar?"

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Tue Feb 02, 2016 11:30 pm
by Jim
Dune?

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Tue Feb 02, 2016 11:34 pm
by Mikey
Jim wrote:Dune?
That was "sardaukar."

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2016 1:12 am
by Graham Kennedy
I seem to remember it's a rank in an army somewhere. I want to say... Indian?

I always thought Jem'Hadar was one of the very best species names they ever came up with in Star Trek.

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2016 3:47 am
by Mikey
Graham Kennedy wrote:I seem to remember it's a rank in an army somewhere. I want to say... Indian?

I always thought Jem'Hadar was one of the very best species names they ever came up with in Star Trek.
Ding, ding.

Beginning with the British Indian Army, "jemadar" was a junior CO rank, inferior to "subadar." It has since been replaced with "naib subadar."

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2016 12:42 pm
by Jim
Mikey wrote:
Graham Kennedy wrote:I seem to remember it's a rank in an army somewhere. I want to say... Indian?

I always thought Jem'Hadar was one of the very best species names they ever came up with in Star Trek.
Ding, ding.

Beginning with the British Indian Army, "jemadar" was a junior CO rank, inferior to "subadar." It has since been replaced with "naib subadar."
Didn't naib subadar copilot the Falcon on the second Death Star run?

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2016 3:33 pm
by Mikey
Jim wrote:
Mikey wrote:
Graham Kennedy wrote:I seem to remember it's a rank in an army somewhere. I want to say... Indian?

I always thought Jem'Hadar was one of the very best species names they ever came up with in Star Trek.
Ding, ding.

Beginning with the British Indian Army, "jemadar" was a junior CO rank, inferior to "subadar." It has since been replaced with "naib subadar."
Didn't naib subadar copilot the Falcon on the second Death Star run?
Nien Nubb or something like that.

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2016 7:44 pm
by IanKennedy
Kangaroos cannot fart
I'm not sure that they cannot fart, just that they don't need to. If you stuck an air hose up their arse and filled them up I'm sure they'd manage to fart. Now there's an image :happydevil:

Image Image

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2016 8:15 pm
by Captain Seafort
Mikey wrote:Beginning with the British Indian Army, "jemadar" was a junior CO rank, inferior to "subadar." It has since been replaced with "naib subadar."
Previously known as a Viceroy's Commissioned Officer, as distinct from a King's or Queen's Commissioned Officer.

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2016 9:58 pm
by Mikey
Captain Seafort wrote:
Mikey wrote:Beginning with the British Indian Army, "jemadar" was a junior CO rank, inferior to "subadar." It has since been replaced with "naib subadar."
Previously known as a Viceroy's Commissioned Officer, as distinct from a King's or Queen's Commissioned Officer.
IIRC, all ranks conferred on native troops were considered Viceroy's Commissions, not just junior CO's - that way, a Brit officer of the same rank as a native Indian or Nepalese officer would still always be superior.

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2016 10:21 pm
by Captain Seafort
Mikey wrote:IIRC, all ranks conferred on native troops were considered Viceroy's Commissions, not just junior CO's - that way, a Brit officer of the same rank as a native Indian or Nepalese officer would still always be superior.
You're correct in saying that the vast majority of Indian commissioned officers were VCOs (although there were a few who received a King's/Queen's Commission), but JCOs weren't a subset of them - it's simply the post-independence term for a VCO (given that there hasn't been a Viceroy to award commissions for almost 70 years). It's also not correct to say that "a Brit officer of the same rank as a native Indian or Nepalese officer would still always be superior", because VCOs were different ranks to those awarded to British officers, and if a native officer received a (rare) King's or Queen's Commission, their commission was treated in exactly the same way as a British officer's.

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2016 11:36 pm
by Mikey
Well, thanks for clearing that up.

Re: Post your weird obscure trivia

Posted: Thu Mar 03, 2016 10:18 pm
by mwhittington
"Stewardesses" is the longest word in the English language that can be typed with just the left hand.

Rubber bands last longer when refrigerated.

The top speed of a rain drop falling from the sky is 22 MPH.

You have taste receptors in more than just your tongue. They are also found in the small intestine, sinus cavity, and esophagus.