Tauro-Piscean writing system: Difference between revisions

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==Usage of Scripts==
==Usage of Scripts==
Most Tauro-Piscean sentences will contain both Sonitos and Grammatikos. Sonitos are used for stems of articles, nouns, verbs and adjectives, while Grammatikos are used for
Most Tauro-Piscean sentences will contain both Sonitos and Grammatikos. Sonitos are used for stems of articles, nouns, verbs and adjectives, while Grammatikos are used for inflectional endings or variants of said parts of speech.
inflectional endings or variants of these.


The writing format is horizontal and read left to right.
The writing format is horizontal and read left to right.

Revision as of 13:37, 16 May 2008

The modern Tauro-Piscean writing system uses two scripts:

  • Sonitos, an alphabet and
  • Grammatikos, an ideographic system

Here is an example of text that uses both scripts (Sonitos red and Grammatikos green):

Sonitos Grammatikos.png 'I build a house for you'

Usage of Scripts

Most Tauro-Piscean sentences will contain both Sonitos and Grammatikos. Sonitos are used for stems of articles, nouns, verbs and adjectives, while Grammatikos are used for inflectional endings or variants of said parts of speech.

The writing format is horizontal and read left to right.

Sonitos

Sonitos is a phonemic alphabet organised into syllabic blocks, which are called 'units'. Each unit consists of three letters or 'constituents' that are written vertically top to bottom, the initial of and final of which are consonants, zero-consonants or consonant clusters and the medial of which is a vowel.

There are two types of constituent, occupational and supplementary. Occupational constituents represent only one or two consonants (the latter of which is often the voiced counterpart and marked with a 'Dakútên') and these are the same regardless of being in the initial or final position. Here is a table of occupational constituents:

File:Occ Constits

Supplementary constituents are harder to learn because each one stands for one or two consonant clusters, but represent usually entirely different consonant clusters when in initial and final position.

File:Supp Constits