Saturday 15 August 2009

Counselor Deanna Troi

Another Lieutenant commander
Do females get this character?

Q: In the real world, are women more than 60%- 40% ratio more feeling than men?

Deanna Troi

Deanna Troi
Counselor Deanna Troi

Counselor Deanna Troi
Species Half Betazoid (through mother)
Half human (through father)
Home planet Betazed
Affiliation Starfleet
Posting USS Enterprise-D Counselor
USS Enterprise-E Counselor
USS Titan Counselor
Position Counselor
Rank Lieutenant commander,
Commander
Portrayed by Marina Sirtis
This box: view • talk

Deanna Troi (pronounced /diːˈænə/) is a main character in the science-fiction TV series Star Trek: The Next Generation and related TV series and films, portrayed by actress Marina Sirtis. Troi is a human/betazoid hybrid and has the empathic ability to sense emotions. She serves as the ship's counselor on the Enterprise. In the seventh season, Troi takes the Bridge Officer's Exam, and (with the help of William Riker) is promoted to the rank of Commander, but continues as counselor.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deanna_Troi

Addenda

Lore (played by Brent Spiner) is a prototype android and the brother of main character Data and of B-4. However, while Data is virtuous and B-4 is primitive, Lore is sophisticated, clever, jealous and self-serving, making him the evil twin brother of the group.

Lore was introduced in the episode "Datalore", the episode in which he was activated. He returned in "Brothers" and in both parts of "Descent", at the end of which he was deactivated and dismantled permanently.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lore_(Star_Trek)#Lore

lore | l | n.1 [OE lar = OFris. lare, OS, OHG lera (Du. leer, G Lehre), f. WGmc base also of LEARN.] 1 The act of teaching; the condition of being taught; instruction, education; a piece of instruction; a lesson. Now arch. & dial. OE. 2 That which is taught; doctrine, teaching, esp. religious doctrine. Now poet. & arch. OE. b A doctrine, a precept; a creed, a religion. OE-L16. 3 Advice, counsel; an instruction, a command. Now rare or obs. ME. 4 Orig., that which is learned; learning, scholarship, erudition; (now only arch. & Sc.: cf. LEAR n.1). Later, the body of traditional facts, anecdotes, or beliefs relating to some particular subject or held by a specific group. ME. b A branch of knowledge, a science. ME-M16.
1 COLERIDGE We have learnt A different lore. J. M. NEALE In the Cross we found our pulpit, In the Seven great Words, our lore. 2 SIR W. SCOTT Can piety the discord healCan Christian lore, can patriot zeal? 3 MILTON Understanding rul'd not, and the Will Heard not her lore. 4 R. C. A. WHITE Typical jury lore suggests that women are less likely to convict than men. R. MANNING Edith was very knowledgeable in country lore.
lored a. (rare) learned; stored with knowledge: M19. loreless a. (rare) without learning or knowledge ME.

lore | l | n.2 E17. [L LORUM.] 1 A strap, a thong, a rein. rare. E-M17. 2 Zool. A long flat appendage or surface; spec. (a)a mouthpart in certain insects, as homopterans and hymenopterans; (b)the region between the eye and the side of the beak in a bird, or between the eye and the nostril in a snake; = LORUM. E19.

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Excerpted from The Oxford Interactive Encyclopedia
Developed by The Learning Company, Inc. Copyright (c) 1997 TLC Properties Inc.

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