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The script of Seuna

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Consonants

These are the 17 consonants. The ampersand "@" represents a glottal stop.

These 17 shapes have been more or less copied from Tibetan. This subset of the Tibetan alphabet was chosen as I feel that these symbols are distinct from each other but at the same time similar. They were given completely different phonetic values to what they have in Tibetan.

There is no scheme that gives these symbols common elements corresponding to common articulation methods. However it can be noted that "b", "p" and "m" have a common element. As do "h" and "@". Also "g" and "y" are quite similar and in language g => y is quite a common sound change.

There is also no correspondence between how a sound "feels" and how it is written. If that were the case there would be no angle in the "s" and nasal sounds and "k", "p" and "t" would be extremely angular.

Bitmap 5 Seuna.PNG

Vowels

The vowel marks are given below. They are written above the consonant that they follow. According to approved articulation, no syllable should begin with a vowel ; there should be a glottal-stop then a vowel. However to drop the glottal-stop seems to be quite common, in which case the first figure given in the consonants list is merely a place-holder to mount the vowel on.

Bitmap 6 Seuna.PNG

Off-gestures

An off-gesture (or off-flurish) is when a consonant is immediately followed by "y","l" or "w". Off-gestures only occur word initially and are restricted to certain letters (see "initial consonant clusters" in "Seuna word shape"). The off-gesture is indicated by a mark placed just to the top right of the main figure (see below).

Bitmap 8 Seuna.PNG

On-gestures

An on-gesture (or on-flurish) is when a non-initial-consonant is preceded by "l", "s" or "n". These on-gestures co-occur with most consonants but a very few combinations are disallowed(see "xxxx consonant clusters" in "Seuna word shape").

Bitmap 9 Seuna.PNG

The on-gesture is indicated by a mark placed just to the left of the main figure (see above).

Unadorned words

In the Seuna writing system, some 2,000 of the most common words always occur in their unadorned form. This is the word shorn of vowel marks. For example "to walk" = dono. This happens to be the word choosen from all the two syllable words with initial event D and secondary event N.

Vowels and initial-consonant-tail-gestures and secondary-consonant-head-gestures will be represented as lower case letters.

kloga = shoe => K˪oGa

tolnu = to grind => TolNu

dono = to walk => DN and not (DoNo)


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Index

  1. Introduction to Seuna
  2. Seuna : Chapter 1
  3. Seuna word shape
  4. The script of Seuna
  5. Seuna sentence structure
  6. Seuna pronouns
  7. Seuna nouns
  8. Seuna verbs (1)
  9. Seuna adjectives
  10. Seuna demonstratives
  11. Seuna verbs (2)
  12. Asking a question in Seuna
  13. Seuna relative clauses
  14. Seuna verbs (3)
  15. Methods for deriving words in Seuna
  16. List of all Seuna derivational affixes
  17. Numbers in Seuna
  18. Naming people in Seuna
  19. The Seuna calendar
  20. Seuna units