To anyone who has not seen Lower Decks, and either doesn’t want to or can’t:
Rumdar is a Pakled (the “It Makes Us Go”, “capture Geordie and force him to make them strong” dumb guys)
When the captain of the USS Cerritos meets this Pakled (and others) they all call her Janeway (because she’s a woman and in starfleet, therefore either she must be captain Janeway or all female captains are named Janeway)
They also refer to the Cerritos as “Enterprise”, as well as the USS Titan, which they call “Another Enterprise”, so either they think all ships are coincidentally named Enterprise , or all starfleet ships are called Enterprise.
I don’t know about in Trek lore, but I think in the real world, when a ship is designed or used to travel from one star system to another, it’s classified as a starship
Don’t forget the -J from the ENT future
Or NX-01!
Also recall that NCC-1701 and NCC-1701-A are different ships.
Also don’t forget to include Janeway’s Enterprise. Rumdar was able to steal all of it’s secrets.
Rumdar truly is a master spy.
? The Voyager wasn’t called enterprise.
Go watch Lower Decks and you’ll get the joke.
To anyone who has not seen Lower Decks, and either doesn’t want to or can’t:
Rumdar is a Pakled (the “It Makes Us Go”, “capture Geordie and force him to make them strong” dumb guys)
When the captain of the USS Cerritos meets this Pakled (and others) they all call her Janeway (because she’s a woman and in starfleet, therefore either she must be captain Janeway or all female captains are named Janeway)
They also refer to the Cerritos as “Enterprise”, as well as the USS Titan, which they call “Another Enterprise”, so either they think all ships are coincidentally named Enterprise , or all starfleet ships are called Enterprise.
Does the ringship count? I’m not sure at what point a “spaceship” becomes a “starship”.
I don’t know about in Trek lore, but I think in the real world, when a ship is designed or used to travel from one star system to another, it’s classified as a starship
In ST they definitely use shuttles and runabouts to travel between star systems, but they aren’t called starships.
So the X-Wing Luke flies to meet Yoda for the first time (ostensibly in a different star system) was a starship?
I mean, I did specify “in the real world” and that we were taking about ST, but sure, I guess it applies to SW, too.