Use of the word "Prime" in home worlds of various science fiction

That does explain things like two species being named after the twin brothers who founded Rome (Romulus & Remus). Or the Vulcans for that matter.

The universal translator seems to be out of order every time one says, “Kaplah!” or “P’tak!”… so, at some point i just have to give in to the fact that it’s a device…

Ka’plah!

I like to think that 24th-century English has adopted a number of Klingon loan-words, and the gizmo does not need to translate them any more that it would translate “Schadenfreude,” “Mammoth,” “Entourage” or any of the other-Earth-language-based words in 20th-century English.

Pretty sure it was

Innermos.

But it has been about 30 years since I read it.

this source

seems to agree that the third moon of mars, was indeed bottomos, which is how i remember it, too. Remember the use of puns by one of the characters was a plot point.

also [spoiler]http://booksonmars.blogspot.com/2010/05/cities-of-martian-rails-bottomos.html[/spoiler]

/hijack

Wikipedia gives a number of examples of the use of the term “Earth Prime” in science fiction, more often in comic books than in novels:

Generally the idea is that there are many parallel universes, each with a planet equivalent to Earth in them. You can refer to any of those planet in those parallel universes as Earth. To talk specifically about Earth in our parallel universe, you need to refer to it as Earth Prime. This terminology may have been introduced in the DC Multiverse.