~1:[1,#B],24:[1,#B],36:[1,#BI],37:[1,#B],42:[1,#BI],48:[2,#I],57:[1,#BI],58:[1,#B],59:[1,#BI],60:[1,#B],61:[1,#BI],62:[1,#B],63:[1,#BI],64:[1,#B],65:[1,#BI],66:[1,#B],67:[1,#BI],68:[1,#B],69:[1,#BI],70:[1,#B],72:[1,#BI],73:[1,#B],74:[122,#I],209:[1,#I],212:[1,#B]@1class@2Ancient naval term used to describe a group of ships sharing a basic design. Generally, a class of ships is named by Starfleet after the first ship of that type built. For example, the Constitution class (to which the original Enterprise belonged) was named after the Starship Constitution. Other classes of Starfleet ships have included Galaxy class, Excelsior class, Miranda class, Oberth class, Nebula class, Soyuz class, Daedalus class, and Ambassador class. Note that several graphics, readouts, and charts used in various episodes and movies have listed numerous other ship classes in an subtle effort to suggest that Starfleet has a wider range of ship designs than the studio can actually afford to build and photograph for the show. Unfortunately, models or blueprints do not exist for most of these (since they haven't been seen), although an occasional conjectural design will show up in graphic readouts or as a desktop display model, used as set decoration. Several such designs, in the form of “study models,” were used in the “graveyard” scene in “The Best of Both Worlds, Part II” (TNG), and in the junkyard of “Unification, Part I” (TNG). Some conjectural class designations include Apollo, Cheyenne, Deneva, Hokule‘a, Istanbul, Korolev, Merced, New Orleans, Niagara, Renaissance, Rigel, Wambundu, and Yorkshire. SEE: starships.
~1:[1,#B],38:[3,#B]@1claymore@2Two-handed sword with a double-edged blade, used by Scottish Highlanders in the 16th century on Earth. Chief Engineer Montgomery Scott found a claymore in the armory when all the phasers were changed to swords by the Beta XII-A entity. (“Day of the Dove” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B]@1cleaning processor@2Part of a starship's solid-waste-recycling system. The processor was used for sterilization and recycling of clothing. (“In Theory” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],9:[2,#I],16:[1,#B],20:[5,#I]@1Cleary@2(Michael Rougas). Engineering technician aboard the refitted Starship Enterprise when the ship intercepted the V'Ger entity in 2271. (Star Trek: The Motion Picture).
~1:[3,#B],25:[1,#B],38:[1,#B],92:[2,#I],100:[12,#I],119:[4,#I]@1Clemens, Samuel Langhorne@2(Jerry Hardin). (1835-1910). Noted 19th-century American author and humorist, famous for many classic novels written under the pen name Mark Twain. Data, traveling in Earth's past, met Clemens at a literary reception hosted by Guinan, who spent some time on Earth during her younger days. (“Time's Arrow, Part I” [TNG]). Clemens was noted for his bitingly satiric pessimism toward humanity, but this attitude may have been softened somewhat when he briefly visited the 24th century and witnessed the future of humanity as exemplified by the crew of the Starship Enterprise -D. (“Time's Arrow, Part II” [TNG]). The book about time travel that Clemens describes to the reporter is A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, first published in 1889.
~1:[2,#B],42:[1,#I],51:[2,#BI],58:[2,#B]@1Clemonds, Sonny@2(Leon Rippy). Country-and-western singer from late 20th-century Earth. Clemonds died of emphysema and extensive liver damage, but had arranged for his body to be cryogenically stored aboard an orbital satellite. He was revived in the year 2364 aboard the Enterprise -D and later returned to Earth aboard the U.S.S. Charleston. (“The Neutral Zone” [TNG]). SEE: cryonics; cryosatellite.
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],13:[2,#B],32:[1,#B]@1Clendenning, Dr.@2A resident of the Omicron Theta colony, killed by the Crystalline Entity's attack in 2336. Clendenning used gamma radiation scans to detect decay by-products from the entity's antiproton trail. Data, who had records and memories from Clendenning and the other colonists, was able to build upon Clendenning's work when searching for the entity in 2368. (“Silicon Avatar” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#BI],4:[1,#B],14:[2,#B],18:[1,#I],30:[1,#B],40:[1,#I],50:[2,#B],57:[1,#I],62:[1,#I],77:[11,#I]@1Cleponji@2An ancient Promellian battle cruiser discovered intact in the asteroid belt near Orelious IX by the Enterprise -D in 2366. Although the war between the Promellians and the Menthars had destroyed both civilizations a thousand years ago, the Cleponji survived in nearly perfect condition, surrounded by the deadly aceton assimilators that killed its crew. The Cleponji was destroyed by the Enterprise -D in a torpedo spread designed to destroy the aceton assimilators. (“Booby Trap” [TNG]). The Promellian battle cruiser was designed and built by Tony Meininger.
~1:[3,#B],31:[1,#B],27:[1,#I],32:[4,#I],49:[3,#B]@1Cliffs of Heaven@2Location on planet Sumiko III that is renowned as a spot for diving. Holodeck program 47-C is a simulation of this spectacular site. Enterprise -D crew member Kristin (no last name given) hurt herself twice in this program, so Dr. Crusher recommended she tackle the Emerald Wading Pool on Cirrus IV instead. (“Conundrum” [TNG]).
~1: [2, #b], 77: [2, #b], 93: [1, #i], 103: [1, #i]@1cloaking device@2An energy screen generator used to render an object (typically, a space vehicle) invisible to the eye and to most sensor systems. Most cloaking devices require so much power that a vessel so equipped cannot use weapons systems without decloaking. (“Balance of Terror” [TOS]). Romulan and Klingon spacecraft are often equipped with cloaking devices, although Federation ships are prohibited from doing so under the terms of the Treaty of Algeron. (“Pegasus” [TNG]). In the anti-time future created by Q, some Federation starships were equipped with cloaking devices, including the upgraded Enterprise -D, commanded by Admiral Riker in this future. The Pasteur, a medical ship, was not so equipped. (“All Good Things…” [TNG]). SEE: phased cloaking device.
~1:[3,#B],15:[1,#B],43:[1,#B],51:[1,#B]@1cloaking device, Aldean@2An immensely powerful forcefield that effectively rendered the entire planet of Aldea invisible from space. Used to isolate the peaceful inhabitants of that planet, the Aldean cloaking device worked for millennia before defensive shields caused damage to the planet's ozone layer. (“When the Bough Breaks” [TNG]). SEE: Aldea.
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~1:[1,#B],30:[1,#B],52:[2,#B],59:[1,#B],75:[1,#B]@1clone@2Asexual reproduction technique in which the DNA of a parent organism is used to grow a genetically identical copy of that organism. Cloning was used to populate the Mariposa colony because their initial population base was too small to form an effective gene pool. (“Up the Long Ladder” [TNG]). SEE: replicative fading. In 2369, a man named Ibudan created a clone of himself, then killed it to frame Deep Space 9 security chief Odo for murder. (“A Man Alone” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],8:[1,#B],11:[2,#B]@1Cloud William@2(Roy Jenson). Leaders of the Yangs on planet Omega IV in 2268, known among his people as the son of chiefs, guardian of the holies, and speaker of the holy words. (“The Omega Glory” [TOS]).
~
~1:[3,#B],7:[2,#B],10:[1,#B],12:[1,#I],30:[29,#I]@1Cluster NGC 321@2 Location of planets Eminiar VII and Vendikar. The Enterprise was sent there to open diplomatic relations with Eminiar VII in 2267. (“A Taste of Armageddon” [TOS]). NGC stands for New General Catalog of nebulae and star clusters, an actual list of objects visible from Earth, compiled in the late 19th century by astronomer J.L.E. Dreyer.
~1:[1,#B],3:[3,#B]@1CMO@2SEE: chief medical officer.
~1:[2,#B]@1co-orbital satellites@2A pair of objects (such as planetoids) whose orbits are very close to each other. Under certain circumstances, a near collision between the two bodies can result in each object assuming the orbit previously occupied by the other. In other words, the two objects trade orbits. Data described the process to Picard and Lwaxana Troi. (“Manhunt” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],34:[3,#B],50:[3,#B],63:[3,#B]@1coalescent organism@2Rare microscopic life-forms that absorb other organisms, then assume the form of the organism they've absorbed, right down to the cellular level. On a larger scale, this is essentially a shape-shifter. Lieutenant Keith Rocha was apparently killed by a coalescent organism just prior to his assignment to Relay Station 47 in 2369. The organism assumed Rocha's form, and later threatened Lieutenant Aquiel Uhnari, and killed her dog, Maura. (“Aquiel” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],16:[2,#B],29:[1,#B],36:[1,#I],49:[1,#BI],52:[2,#B]@1Coalition@2One of the two main rival factions in control of the colony on planet Turkana IV following the collapse of the colonial government in 2337. Led by Hayne, the Coalition offered assistance to the Enterprise -D crew in their mission to rescue the crew of the freighter Arcos in 2367. Ishara Yar was a member of the Coalition. (“Legacy” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],10:[1,#I],20:[1,#B],25:[2,#B],68:[22,#I]@1Cochrane deceleration maneuver@2Classic battle tactic used by the Enterprise to defeat the Romulans at Tau Ceti. When Captain Garth impersonated Kirk at the Elba II penal colony in 2268, Spock asked the two to identify the maneuver in hopes of differentiating the two. The attempt was unsuccessful because the maneuver was so well known that any starship captain would know of it. (“Whom Gods Destroy” [TOS]). It is possible that this Romulan defeat may have been the incident depicted in “Balance of Terror” (TOS), but this is unclear.
~1:[2,#B],31:[2,#B],58:[16,#I],74:[3,#BI],77:[17,#I],94:[3,#BI],97:[2,#I],99:[2,#BI],101:[46,#I],150:[1,#B],155:[2,#B]@1Cochrane, Zefram@2(Glenn Corbett). Discoverer of the space warp (2030-2117?). Cochrane became one of history's most renowned scientists when he revolutionized space travel in 2061 with the invention of the warp drive, making faster-than-light travel possible. Zefram Cochrane disappeared from Alpha Centauri in 2117 at the age of 87 and is presumed to have died in space. In 2267, Cochrane was discovered by Captain Kirk to be living on an planetoid in the Gamma Canaris region with the cloud creature known as the Companion, who loved him. Traveling along with Kirk was Federation commissioner Nancy Hedford, dying of Sakuro's disease. Hedford merged with the Companion, choosing to remain with Cochrane, where they would both live the remainder of a normal human life span. Kirk promised never to reveal Cochrane's fate, so the main body of this entry indicates uncertainty about what happened to the famous scientist. (“Metamorphosis” [TOS]). SEE: millicochrane. The first test of soliton wave based propulsion in 2368 was likened to Cochrane's breakthrough. (“New Ground” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],14:[2,#B],24:[2,#I],27:[4,#B]@1Code 1 Emergency@2Federation signal for a total disaster, requiring an immediate response. Nilz Baris sent a Code 1 Emergency call to the U.S.S. Enterprise from Deep Space Station K-7. (“The Trouble with Tribbles” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],13:[1,#I],37:[1,#B]@1Code 1@2Starfleet designation for a declaration of war. In 2267 the Enterprise received a Code 1 message from Starfleet Command stating they were at war with the Klingon Empire. The starship then proceeded to planet Organia, where the Klingons were expected to strike. (“Errand of Mercy” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],25:[3,#B],71:[1,#B]@1Code 2@2Starfleet encryption protocol that the Romulans had broken as of 2267. While under the affects of the aging disease acquired on planet Gamma Hydra IV, Kirk ordered a message sent using Code 2, forgetting that Romulan intelligence had broken that code. After he was cured of the illness, he again used Code 2, but intended the Romulans to understand what he was saying. (“The Deadly Years” [TOS]). SEE: corbomite.
~1:[2,#B],13:[1,#I],20:[2,#B]@1Code 710@2Interstellar code prohibiting a spacecraft from approaching a planet. The Enterprise received a Code 710 from planet Eminiar VII in 2267. (“A Taste of Armageddon” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],34:[1,#B]@1Code Factor 1@2Starfleet code meaning invasion status. An unexplained time-warp distortion that swept across the galaxy in 2267 caused Starfleet Command to issue a Code Factor 1. (“The Alternative Factor” [TOS]). SEE: Lazarus.
~1:[4,#B],31:[2,#BI]@1Code One Alpha Zero@2Signal indicating the discovery of space vehicle in distress. Riker issued a Code One Alpha Zero following the detection of an automated distress signal from the U.S.S. Jenolen. (“Relics” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],32:[3,#B],37:[2,#BI],45:[1,#B],49:[2,#B],54:[1,#I],66:[1,#I],86:[12,#I]@1coded transponder frequency@2A specific subspace frequency and code that activated a starship's transponder to send back its identifying code, permitting allied vessels and authorities to accurately track the ship. When Captain Benjamin Maxwell, commanding the U.S.S. Phoenix, made an unauthorized attack on a Cardassian ship in 2367, Gul Macet asked for the Phoenix's coded transponder frequency so that other Cardassian ships could track the Phoenix. Ironically, the Federation Starfleet already possessed the ability to track Cardassian ships using Cardassian transponder codes. (“The Wounded” [TNG]). One would assume the Cardassians changed all their transponder codes after this.
~1:[3,#BI],21:[3,#B]@1Cogito ergo sum@2“I think, therefore I am.” A truism written by Earth philosopher Descartes. The computer intelligence version of Professor James Moriarty quoted this phrase before attempting to exit the holodeck on his own volition. (“Ship in a Bottle” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],10:[2,#B],22:[2,#B],28:[2,#B],38:[2,#I],56:[1,#I]@1Cogley, Samuel T.@2(Elisha Cook). Attorney who successfully defended James Kirk in 2267 when Kirk was accused of the murder of Ben Finney. At the court-martial on Starbase 11, Cogley petitioned to hold the trial on the Starship Enterprise, on the grounds that Kirk had the right to face his accuser, in this case the Enterprise computer. Cogley proved that a computer malfunction, deliberately caused by Finney, had wrongly implicated Kirk. Cogley had a love of old books, and shunned the use of computers whenever possible. Cogley later defended Ben Finney. (“Court Martial” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],14:[2,#B]@1coherent graviton pulse@2Energy waves that can neutralize tetryon emissions. (“Schisms” [TNG]). SEE: tetryon particles.
~1:[2,#B],15:[2,#B],18:[1,#B],31:[1,#B]@1coladrium flow@2Term in an unknown alien language for tenuous space matter collected by arva nodes in Tosk's ship converting the interstellar hydrogen into usable fuel. (“Captive Pursuit” [DS9]). SEE: ramscoop.
~1:[4,#BI],9:[3,#B]@1Cold Moon Over Blackwater@2Gothic novel enjoyed by Lieutenant Aquiel Uhnari. (“Aquiel” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],35:[23,#I]@1cold, common@2An infection of the upper respiratory tract caused by any of over 200 viruses in many humanoid species. By the 24th century, the common cold was a curable ailment. (“The Battle” [TNG]). McCoy noted in “The Omega Glory” (TOS) that the common cold had not yet been cured by that point in the 23rd century.
~1:[2,#B],10:[2,#B]@1coleibric hemorrhage@2Cause of death of the infamous Cardassian Gul Darhe'el, who died in 2363. (“Duet” [DS9]).
~1: [3, #b], 20: [2, #b], 34: [3, #b], 54: [3, #b]@1Coleman, Dr. Arthur@2(Harry Landers). Physician who was one of two survivors of a disastrous scientific expedition to planet Camus II in 2269. Shortly after the death of his colleagues, Coleman conspired with Dr. Janice Lester, the other survivor, to use a life-energy transfer device to place Lester's mind into the body of Captain James Kirk, and to trap Kirk's mind in Lester's body. Coleman, who was in love with Lester, indicated he would care for her after it was discovered she was insane at the time she caused the deaths on Camus II. (“Turnabout Intruder” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],12:[1,#I]@1colgonite astringent@2Beauty treatment offered in the barber shop aboard the Enterprise -D. Beverly Crusher was an occasional user of the treatment. (“The Host” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],9:[2,#B],13:[1,#B],33:[1,#B]@1collar of obedience@2Neck bands worn by the drill thralls on planet Triskelion that tightened when the thrall disobeyed an order. Each collar was coded with a specific color that signified which Provider owned that particular drill thrall. (“The Gamesters of Triskelion” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],4:[3,#B]@1collective consciousness@2SEE: Borg; Borg collective.
~1:[2,#B],9:[1,#I],23:[1,#B],25:[1,#B]@1Collins, Ensign@2(Harley Venton). Transporter technician aboard the Enterprise -D. Collins was on duty when an away team beamed down to meet Bajoran leader Orta in 2368.(“Ensign Ro” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B]@1Colt Firearms@2Nineteenth-century Earth weapons manufacturing company, founded in 1847 by Samuel Colt. The company was famous for handheld weapons, including the double-action cavalry pistol discovered in 2368 in a cavern on Earth. (“Time's Arrow, Part I” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],22:[3,#B],28:[2,#B]@1Coltar IV@2Planet with a farming colony that experienced a “hiccough” in time that was found to be the result of Dr. Paul Manheim's time/gravity experiments at Vandor IX in 2364. (“We'll Always Have Paris” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#BI],7:[1,#I],14:[2,#B],26:[1,#B]@1Columbia, S.S.@2Federation science vessel. The Columbia made a forced landing on planet Talos IV in 2254. The only survivor was a crew member named Vina, who was cared for by the natives of that planet. (“The Cage,” “The Menagerie, Part I” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#BI],11:[2,#I],22:[2,#BI],26:[1,#I],30:[2,#B],35:[1,#I],38:[7,#I]@1Columbus, Shuttlecraft@2Registry number NCC-1701-2. Shuttle attached to the original Starship Enterprise. This vehicle participated in a visual search for the Shuttlecraft Galileo, after the Galileo crashed on planet Taurus II in 2267. (“The Galileo Seven” [TOS]). Named for terrestrial explorer Christopher Columbus (1451-1506).
~1:[2,#B],15:[1,#I],54:[40,#I]@1Comic, The@2(Joe Piscopo). An unnamed 20th-century comedian re-created on the holodeck of the Enterprise -D by Data, who had hoped to learn the concept of humor. Although The Comic tutored Data in stand-up comedy, the android found the concept difficult to grasp. The Comic's holodeck program was RW-93216. (“The Outrageous Okona” [TNG]). The holodeck program menu used by Data to select this simulation identified the comic's name as Ron Moore. By amazing coincidence, Visual Effects Coordinator Ron Moore was one of the people who assembled the computer graphic on that holodeck readout.
~1:[1,#B],17:[7,#I],26:[6,#I]@1commodore@2Title formerly given to high-ranking Starfleet officers such as those in charge of a starbase. The term commodore, used in the original Star Trek series, has fallen into disuse since Star Trek: The Next Generation.
~1:[1,#B],67:[22,#I],91:[20,#I],150:[2,#B],158:[1,#I]@1communicator@2Personal communications device used by Starfleet personnel. Communicators provided voice transmission from a planetary surface to an orbiting spacecraft, and between members of a landing party. Communicators also provided a means for a ship's transporter system to determine the exact coordinates of a crew member for transport back to the ship. Early versions of the communicator were compact handheld units with a flip-up antenna grid. When the communicator was first “invented” in 1964, it seemed incredibly compact and amazingly advanced. Few would have believed back then that Star Trek would still be on the air when portable cellular telephones, the same size as those original props, became a reality.
Starfleet briefly used wrist communicators, but more recent units have been incorporated into the Starfleet insignia worn on each crew member's uniform and had a dermal sensor that can be used to restrict usage to one authorized individual only. Roga Danar, fleeing from security confinement aboard the Enterprise -D, successfully bypassed this restriction by using an unconscious security officer's own finger to activate his communicator. (“The Hunted” [TNG]). The device is constructed of a crystalline composite of silicon, beryllium, carbon-70, and gold. (“Time's Arrow, Part I” [TNG]).
Click on SHOW RESOURCE at left to view communicators resource data.
~1:[1,#B],11:[3,#B],21:[2,#B],70:[3,#B],75:[1,#I],76:[1,#B],77:[1,#BI],90:[2,#B],127:[26,#I],155:[8,#I]@1Companion@2Cloudlike life-form that lived on a planetoid in the Gamma Canaris region. In 2117, the Companion discovered aged scientist Zefram Cochrane drifting in space, near death. The Companion brought Cochrane to her planetoid and cared for him, rejuvenating his body, giving him effective immortality, but subjecting him to extreme loneliness. Over time, the Companion grew to love Cochrane. In 2267, the Companion abducted Kirk, Spock, McCoy, and Federation commissioner Nancy Hedford from the Enterprise shuttlecraft Galileo to live with Cochrane to alleviate his isolation. Hedford, terminally ill with Sakuro's disease, agreed to merge with the Companion, becoming a single, human individual. The resulting individual, still in love with Cochrane, remained with Cochrane on the planetoid for the rest of a normal human lifetime. (“Metamorphosis” [TOS]). The Federation remained unaware of Cochrane's fate and of the existence of the Companion because of Kirk's promise to Cochrane. The Companion was designed by future Star Wars Oscar-winner Richard Edlund at Westheimer photographic effects company.
~1:[3,#B],8:[1,#B],12:[1,#I],19:[2,#B]@1compressed teryon beam@2Weapon used by the Lenarians to attack an Enterprise -D away team in 2369. Captain Jean-Luc Picard caught the full effect of the weapon, which fused the bio-regulator in his artificial heart, damaged his spleen and liver, and nearly killed him. (“Tapestry” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],5:[1,#I],13:[1,#B],16:[1,#B],26:[1,#B]@1Compton@2(Geoffrey Binney). Starship Enterprise crew member who was subjected to biochemical hyperacceleration on planet Scalos in 2268 when exposed to Scalosian water. Because the Scalosian males were sterile, Compton was to be used for reproduction but he quickly sustained cellular damage, resulting in his death. (“Wink of an Eye” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],12:[1,#I],26:[1,#I],33:[1,#B],47:[16,#I]@1computer core@2One of three large, redundant cylindrical chambers aboard a Galaxy -class starship, housing the ship's primary computer hardware. The upper core of the Enterprise -D was taken over by sentient nanites when that newly created race was exploring the ship in 2366. (“Evolution” [TNG]). The computer core set was also used in “The Bonding” (TNG) for Worf and Troi's talk.
~1:[2,#B]@1Condition Green@2Covert Starfleet code used to secretly indicate on a clear channel that the speaker is being held captive. Captain Kirk relayed this code to Mr. Scott when Kirk was being held captive on planet 892-IV in 2267. Condition Green also prohibits the listener from taking any action such as a rescue mission. (“Bread and Circuses” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],8:[1,#BI]@1Conklin, Captain@2Commander of the Federation starship Magellan. (“Starship Mine” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],4:[2,#B]@1conn@2Abbreviation for flight controller.
~1:[2,#B],10:[2,#B],13:[2,#B],37:[3,#B],69:[1,#I],101:[1,#I],121:[4,#B],125:[10,#I]@1Conor, Aaron@2(John Snyder). The leader of the isolated Genome Colony on Moab IV. Like everyone in the carefully planned colony, Conor was genetically engineered and trained for his specific job. When tidal forces from a stellar core fragment threatened to disrupt the planet and destroy his colony in 2368, Conor was faced with an impossible choice. If he accepted an offer of help from engineers aboard the Enterprise -D, he risked serious cultural contamination of his totally isolated colony. The alternative of rejecting outside help would have led to near-certain destruction of the colony. Conor chose to allow the Enterprise -D to help, but had to deal with the social consequences of their aid. (“The Masterpiece Society” [TNG]). SEE: Bates, Hannah; Benbeck, Martin. John Snyder also played Centurion Bochra in “The Enemy” (TNG).
~1:[1,#B],5:[3,#B],10:[1,#B]@1Constable@2Affectionate nickname for Deep Space 9 security chief Odo. (“Emissary” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#BI],5:[1,#I],11:[1,#I],17:[1,#B],25:[1,#I],40:[9,#I]@1Constantinople, U.S.S.@2Federation starship, Istanbul class, registry number NCC-34852. The Constantinople suffered a hull breach near Gravesworld while carrying some 2012 colonists in 2365. Enterprise -D conducted a rescue mission to save that ship's crew. (“The Schizoid Man” [TNG]). Named for the Turkish city also known as Istanbul.