LinkedIn Pinpoint #711 Answer & Analysis 

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What connects "Na'vi", "Klingon", "Elvish", "Esperanto", "Interlingua" in LinkedIn Pinpoint 711 — and why? We've got you covered! Try the hints first — you might crack it before the reveal.

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LinkedIn Pinpoint 711 Clues & Answer
Pinpoint 711 Clues:

💡 Hover (desktop) or tap (mobile) each clue to see how it connects to the answer

#1
Na'vi
#2
Klingon
#3
Elvish
#4
Esperanto
#5
Interlingua
Pinpoint 711 Answer:
ⓘ Scroll down for full analysis
ByPinpoint Answer Today

🧩 Pinpoint 711 Answer & Full Analysis

Today’s puzzle totally baited my inner sci-fi nerd.

When I saw Na’vi, my brain immediately jumped to Avatar. Blue aliens. Pandora. James Cameron. Easy, right?

Well… not quite.

🎬 From Movie Aliens to a Dead End

My first instinct was to group it under something like “Fictional alien races.” It felt obvious. Maybe too obvious. Still, I went for it.

Wrong.

Then came Klingon.

Now I was even more confident. Avatar and Star Trek? This had to be about pop culture alien species. I refined my guess to something along those lines — “Pop culture alien species.”

Wrong again.

Okay. Now I was annoyed.

Because both Na’vi and Klingons are absolutely alien races. The connection made sense. But Pinpoint doesn’t care about “almost right.”

🧝 The Word That Changed Everything

Then the third clue dropped: Elvish.

And that’s when it clicked.

Elves aren’t aliens. They’re fantasy beings. Different genre entirely. So the “alien species” theory? Gone.

Collapsed.

Instead, something else connected all three words — not the speakers, but the languages.

Na’vi is a language. Klingon is a language. Elvish is a language.

That shift in perspective changed everything.

I immediately guessed “Fictional languages.”

And this time — success.

Once the answer was locked in, the last two clues made it even clearer: Esperanto and Interlingua.

Unlike the first three, these aren’t from movies or fantasy worlds. They’re intentionally created international auxiliary languages.

So the category wasn’t just fictional languages.

It was broader.

Constructed languages.

That’s the real umbrella — languages that were deliberately invented rather than naturally evolved.

And suddenly, every clue fit perfectly.

✅ Category: Pinpoint 711

Constructed Languages

📚 Words & How They Fit

WordPhrase / ExampleMeaning & Usage
Na'viNa'vi language (Avatar)A fictional language created for the film Avatar, spoken by the Na'vi people.
KlingonKlingon language (Star Trek)A constructed language developed for the Star Trek universe.
ElvishElvish languages (Lord of the Rings)Fictional languages created by J.R.R. Tolkien for his fantasy world.
EsperantoEsperanto international languageAn invented auxiliary language designed to promote global communication.
InterlinguaInterlingua auxiliary languageA constructed international language based on common European vocabulary.

❓ FAQ

What is a constructed language?
A constructed language (or conlang) is a language that was intentionally created by an individual or group, rather than naturally evolving over time.

Are Esperanto and Klingon the same type of language?
They’re both constructed, but their purposes differ. Esperanto was designed for real-world international communication, while Klingon was created for a fictional universe.

Did J.R.R. Tolkien really create Elvish?
Yes. Tolkien was a linguist and developed fully structured Elvish languages (like Quenya and Sindarin) as part of building his Middle-earth world.

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