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DrAndreaKnollwatcher

Speaking of quotes

I was playing around with the sounds in the room and noticed that most of the Star trek quotes were from Worf. He is quite the character. Here are some of my favorite quotes by him:

 

"I am not a merry man!"

 

"I like my species the way it is."

 

"If you were any other man, I would kill you were you stand!"

 

OK, I know you guys have some good Worf quotes, too. Dont keep us in suspense. =0]

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Today is a good day to die!!!

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"You're just supposed to sit here?" - Seeing Worf covered in beauty mud with his goatee getting dipped is hillarious.

 

Worf: "I feel a sneese coming."

Geordi: "A Klingon sneese?"

Worf: "Only kind I know."

 

"I shall have a talk with Mr. Barkley." - after Barkley programs a Wild West holodeck program complete with ladies standing outside a brothel that Worf brought his son to.

 

"Madam, have you ever considered a career in Security?" - after a colonist picks up after her drunken father.

 

Worf: "Holding us off with an inoperative phaser was an act of unmitigated gall."

Old man: "I'm sorry."

Worf: "I admire gall."

 

Q: "I am mortal! What must I do to convince you?"

Worf: "Die."

 

But of course the best Worf line comes from the episode Genesis:

"BUUURRRRP!!"

;)

Edited by Dumbass

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I forgot about that one! I love it! =0]

"You're just supposed to sit here?" - Seeing Worf covered in beauty mud with his goatee getting dipped is hillarious.

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"cellular peptide cake... with mint frosting"

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From "Sarek"

 

William Riker: Is it my imagination or have tempers become a little frayed on the ship lately?

Worf: I hadn't noticed.

[William Riker and Worf walk into Ten-Forward, where a large bar fight is in progress.]

Worf: I see what you mean.

 

From "Disaster"

Worf: Congratulations. You are now fully dilated to ten centimeters. You may now give birth.

Keiko: That's what I've been doing!

Worf: The computer simulation was not like this. That delivery was very orderly.

Keiko: WELL I'M SORRY!!

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Heh, one of my favorites comes from the episode that has those terrorists trying to steal some type of explosive engineering stuff while the Enterprise is being treated for something, and Picard is the only one aboard. It goes something like this...

 

"Any real horse rider has his own saddle."

"Of course." Crusher, Worf

 

This comes after a long discussion about horses, which ends from a quite from Mr. Ed. ;) I love it.

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Data: There once was a lady from venus, whose body was shaped like a-

Picard: Thank you mister Data!

Worf: :: turns to Data shrugging :: I don't understand their humour either.

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What about the episode where he gets temporary command and he gingerly sits in Picard's chair, then settles in and grins, "Nice chair, comfy seat!"

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"cellular peptide cake... with mint frosting"

 

Two methods exist for an antigen to be processed and presented on the cell surface. Both MHC class I and II require a peptide to be bound for them to be stable. Otherwise, they are not expressed on the cell surface.

 

The Endogenous Pathway

The endogenous pathway is used to present cellular peptide fragments on the cell surface on MHC class I molecules. If a virus had infected the cell, viral peptides would also be presented, allowing the immune system to recognize and kill the infected cell. Worn out proteins within the cell become ubiquitinated, marking them for proteasome degradation. Proteasomes break the protein up into peptides that include some around nine amino acids long (suitable for fitting within the peptide binding cleft of MHC class I molecules). TAP, a protein that spans the membrane of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, transports the peptides into the lumen of the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Also within the rough ER, a series of chaperone proteins, including calnexin, calreticulin, ERp57, and immunoglobulin binding protein (BiP) facilitates the proper folding of class I MHC and its association with ß2 microglobulin. The partially folded MHC class I molecule then interacts with TAP via tapasin (the complete complex also contains calreticulin and Erp57 and, in mice, calnexin). Once the peptide is transported into the ER lumen it binds to the cleft of the awaiting MHC class I molecule, stabilizing the MHC and allowing it to be transported to the cell surface by the golgi apparatus.

 

The Exogenous Pathway

The exogenous pathway is utilized by professional antigen presenting cells to present peptides derived from proteins that the cell has endocytosed. The peptides are presented on MHC class II molecules. Proteins are endocytosed and degraded by acid-dependent proteases in endosomes. The nascent MHC class II protein in the rough ER has its peptide binding cleft blocked by Ii (the invariant chain; a trimer) to prevent it from binding peptides cellular peptides or those from the endogenous pathway. The invariant chain also facilitates MHC class II's export from the ER in a vesicle. This fuses with a late endosome containing the endocytosed, degraded proteins. It is then broken down in stages, leaving only a small fragment called CLIP which still blocks the peptide binding cleft. An MHC class II-like structure, HLA-DM, removes CLIP and replaces it with a peptide from the endosome. The stable MHC class-II is then presented on the cell surface.

 

There is also a mechanism to associate peptides from endocytosed proteins with MHC class I, termed cross-presentation.

 

The short story is that cellular peptides are produced from, and necessary for, white blood cells in the production of antibodies. Strange thing to make a cake out of.

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The short story is that cellular peptides are produced from, and necessary for, white blood cells in the production of antibodies. Strange thing to make a cake out of.

 

It's a Worf quote from Data's dream in TNG: "Phantasms."

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Since you're getting scientific here...peptides are chains of amino acids with peptide bonds. All proteins are peptides for example.

 

To get back on topic...

 

"Romulan Ale should be illegal." (since my favs have already been mentioned)

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I love those quotes! Michael Dorn really did his character justice. He brought something really special to the Star Trek realm. It was really neat. I miss that about TNG being off the air. But, its something I really look forward to in the re-runs. =0]

 

Riker> "Tough little ship."

Worf> "Little?"

 

Worf> ::Upon facing his death against the Borg:: "Perhaps today IS a good day to die! Prepare for ramming speed!"

 

Data> "You must talk to him; tell him that he is a good cat, and a pretty cat, and..."

Worf> "I will feed him"

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"Romulan Ale should be illegal." (since my favs have already been mentioned)

 

The complete interaction, counting a line that was deleted from the final copy but shouldn't have been, is:

 

Worf: "Romulan Ale should be illegal."

LaForge: "It is."

Worf: "Then it should be more illegal."

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Hm . . . no one mentioned "Assimilate this!"

Yeah, I was wondering if someone was gunna say that.

 

I think my fav. quote is the "I am not a merry man." line.

Edited by Chell Reno

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From the DS9 episode Change of Heart:

 

Worf: I have a sense of humour! On the Enterprise I was considered quite amusing.

Dax: That must have been one dull ship.

 

 

 

From the DS9 episode Children of Time:

 

Gabriel: Are you the Son of Mogh?

Worf: Yes, I am.

Gabriel: Is it true you can kill someone just by looking at them?

Worf: Only when I am angry.

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"Huhhhhhhh..... Irving Berlin....." -as Data sings at Riker and Troy's wedding

 

"Do not hug me!" (can't remember when)

 

Data: "... and you must tell him he is a good cat, and a pretty cat."

Worf: "I will feed him." while dangling the cat far away from himself

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How can no one have mentioned this one???

 

Worf: "No, no, no. Men do not roar. Women roar. Then they hurl heavy objects. And claw at you."

 

wesley: "What does the man do?"

 

Worf: "He reads love poetry. He ducks a lot."

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Data: There once was a lady from venus, whose body was shaped like a-

Picard: Thank you mister Data!

Worf: :: turns to Data shrugging :: I don't understand their humour either.

 

Actually, Picard said "Captain to Security!" Then he sent Data to Tasha's quarters so that Data could finish the poem.

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I was just watching ST:TNG today and Worf said: "I do not swim. It is too much like...bathing."

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