Talk:Kaled

Dal
To settle arguments between names, it is possible that "Dal" could be what the Thals called the Kaleds... or possibley part of the Dalek name... like if they had like a recorder and the dalek said somat like "we are daaaleeeks!" and like the recorder was destroyed in mid-word... u know stuff like that will help.Forerunner 20:49, 1 January 2008 (UTC)


 * The first idea's more likely, but another interpretation could be that Dals and Thals were two races of the Kaled species, but the Dals, being arrogant, considered only themselves worthy of having their species name and dropped the name "Dal" in favour of "Kaled". Whatever theories you can come up with, however, will still just be speculation. 07:55, 2 January 2008 (UTC)


 * In one of the I, Davros audio drama series Davros does mention in passing the Dals, Thals and some others I think, so they were separate species / groups at some point prior to the war (have only listened to them all once so can't point out which specific one out of the four it was though). --Tangerineduel 11:55, 2 January 2008 (UTC)

Shouldn't we maybe add to the Appearances section all of the appearances of Davros, he is a Kaled so they count as Kaled appearances. I'm A Hydroponic Tomato! Bigredrabbit 01:09, November 29, 2009 (UTC)

Anagram
In the opening of the article it says that Kaled is an anagram of Dalek. Surely within the show it is the other way round, dalek is an anagram of kaled. Should we not swap this round? Thetictocmonkey 15:47, April 5, 2010 (UTC)


 * Given that no one has replied I will go ahead and make this minor edit :) - The tictoc monkey  18:41, April 5, 2010 (UTC)

It seems obvious to me that Terry Nation, who based the Daleks on the Nazis, intended the Kaleds to be a political party (or politico-religious? See the horned war god) within the Dal nation, with the Dals in the role of the Germans and the Kaleds as the Nazis. To underline this, he chose two obviously related names for the main nations involved in the Thousand-Year War: Dals and Thals. Any English-speaker who also speaks a bit of German will see that these two closely-related languages have adopted one of the same linguistic mutations which distinguishes English from German: a German "D" is almost invariably an English "Th". Examples: Thick - Dick, Thin - Dünn, That - Dass, This - Dies, Thumb - Daumen, etc. and I could go on for hours. I do not believe that the Kaleds were originally intended to be a race or a species.79.88.81.69talk to me 11:25, May 25, 2013 (UTC)