An outstanding movie in every way—and not just as a Star Trek movie. Fantastic script and story, great characters, superb visual effects (that still hold up today), first-rate editing and direction, and a brilliant score. 2009's Star Trek is absolutely nowhere near the class of Wrath of Khan. I’ll never forget the story about how, after finding out he’d be playing Khan in Star Trek Into Darkness, Benedict Cumberbatch was hand delivered the movie’s script by a studio rep who flew to London with the script handcuffed to him.Now, I don’t know about you, but I was skeptical. That sounds like an extreme way to ensure that no spoilers could be leaked online.
Contents Alphabet and punctuationTo give emphasis to important concepts, Iokharic employed a special character consisting of five lines radiating outwards, similar to a star or an asterisk (.), or the five heads of. When this character was written, the word was spoken with both the first and last syllables stressed. Historybelieved Iokharic was created by the dragon god so his creations could record their impressions of the world he hoped they would inherit.
Non-dragon scholars believed Iokharic was likely created long after its spoken form was standardized, as dragons had little need to write like other races. The script was believed to have been influenced by the, but dragons themselves dismissed such a connection.scholars had the theory that, rather than, were the ones who actually created Iokharic, as it was widely believed that the earliest kobolds served dragons, learning dragon ways. The oldest historical records of kobold history began with paintings, then pictograms, and gradually developed into the Iokharic script. LanguagesThe following languages commonly used Iokharic writing for their written forms:.Appendix Also see.References.