Post by seniorcitizen007 on Jan 29, 2023 1:55:59 GMT
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N
O P S T U V W X Y Z
Q R
Q and R are O and P with an additional mark attached.
A and O, E and U, I and Y are vowels.
B and P and D and T are the voiced and voiceless versions of the same sounds.
F and V are the other way round ... transpose their sounds.
Transpose K and W so that G and K are the voiced and voiceless versions of the same sound
Transpose C and Z so that Z and S are the voiced and voiceless versions of the same sound.
We now have:
A B Z D E V G H I J W L M N
O P S T U F K X Y C
Q R
With a bit more juggling of the letters (their shapes and sounds) I anded up with:
I Y
C J
Q X H N
W K G M
L V F R
U E
T D
S Z
P B
O A
... an arrangement of the alphabet that suggests that there maybe once was an original alphabet of just 10 voiceless sounds:
I, C, X, K, V, U, T, S, P, O
I and C are a line and a curve, X and K are a line and a curve arranged in two different ways.. V and U are two lines and two curves, as also are T and S. P and O may be derived from I and C.
Taking things further ... maybe these ten signs were a prevocal alphabet and were later given sounds?
There also seems to be our numerals in this alphabet ... 1 is I, 2 is Z, 3 is X, 4 is K, 5 is F, 6 is U. 7 is T, 8 is S, 9 is P, 10 is O
The ten original symbols may have the following meanings:
I male, C female, X sex, K marriage, V male to male, U female to female, T son, S daughter, P father, O mother.
Could it be the case that our alphabet existed prior to the development of speech ... went out of use almost everywhere when sounds were applied to the symbols, then, maybe thousands of years later, came back into use?
The symbols with voiced sounds appear to represent abstract concepts, senses, and emotions ...
I'm currently toying with the premise that Anglo Saxon may have incorporated very ancient language forms derived from this protolanguage. Heligoland, an island in the North Sea, interests me as possibly being an ancient source of language
O P S T U V W X Y Z
Q R
Q and R are O and P with an additional mark attached.
A and O, E and U, I and Y are vowels.
B and P and D and T are the voiced and voiceless versions of the same sounds.
F and V are the other way round ... transpose their sounds.
Transpose K and W so that G and K are the voiced and voiceless versions of the same sound
Transpose C and Z so that Z and S are the voiced and voiceless versions of the same sound.
We now have:
A B Z D E V G H I J W L M N
O P S T U F K X Y C
Q R
With a bit more juggling of the letters (their shapes and sounds) I anded up with:
I Y
C J
Q X H N
W K G M
L V F R
U E
T D
S Z
P B
O A
... an arrangement of the alphabet that suggests that there maybe once was an original alphabet of just 10 voiceless sounds:
I, C, X, K, V, U, T, S, P, O
I and C are a line and a curve, X and K are a line and a curve arranged in two different ways.. V and U are two lines and two curves, as also are T and S. P and O may be derived from I and C.
Taking things further ... maybe these ten signs were a prevocal alphabet and were later given sounds?
There also seems to be our numerals in this alphabet ... 1 is I, 2 is Z, 3 is X, 4 is K, 5 is F, 6 is U. 7 is T, 8 is S, 9 is P, 10 is O
The ten original symbols may have the following meanings:
I male, C female, X sex, K marriage, V male to male, U female to female, T son, S daughter, P father, O mother.
Could it be the case that our alphabet existed prior to the development of speech ... went out of use almost everywhere when sounds were applied to the symbols, then, maybe thousands of years later, came back into use?
The symbols with voiced sounds appear to represent abstract concepts, senses, and emotions ...
I'm currently toying with the premise that Anglo Saxon may have incorporated very ancient language forms derived from this protolanguage. Heligoland, an island in the North Sea, interests me as possibly being an ancient source of language