* <<F61.0708>> NOVO HIKETEP :hiketep: It's always novo Hiketep, isn't it? I'm quite settled on the phonemes, but the representations still escape me. I want systematic glyphs – I want phonemes with the same articulation, like k, g, and ng, to have visually related representations. H K X T Þ F P h, (k,g,ng,kh), (sh,zh), (t,d,n,s,z), (Þ,Ð), (f,v), (p,b,m), ? ({r,l},y,eh,e,a,ah,o,u,û,uh,ih) Also, for Hiketep-Latin ...I guess what I really want is Hiketep-ASCII, because I hate having to go through the rigamarole of inputting Unicode characters. There are five sticky wickets in the consonants: 1 2 3 4 5 H, (C,G,?,K), (?,?), (T,D,N,S,Z), (?,?), (F,V), (P,B,M) And I need twelve glyphs for vowels/approximants, but the five primary vowel characters, plus R and L, plus Y and W only give me nine. I need eight more characters (five consonants, three vowels), but I only have three left-over: Q, J, and X. So, where do I start using punctuation or diacritics? Where do I start doubling-up letters? It's probably more confusing than it should be to restrict myself to ASCII. ISO-8859-1 (or 15) is probably best. Just ...try to minimize the number of glyphs outside the ASCII range to minimize the headache of inputting them. Consonants are a relatively easy fix, since Ð and Þ are available for their correlating sounds, X for 'sh', J for 'zh', and Q for 'ng' because it's what I have left-over. Some of the vowels are obvious – some are a bit fiddly. Eve, Able, Etta, Adam, Oswald, Otis, Una, Woody, Tuttle, Pip Y ? E A O ? W ? U I My inclination is to use A, E, I, O, and U in their English short-vowel roles. Eve (Y) and loon (W) are chosen because these letters double as consonants (diacritized, preferably). I wouldn't mind using diacritized letters for Able and Otis, but... which letters? Do I use a diaresis or a macron? Three Scandinavian vowels are readily available: Å, Æ, and Ø. If I wanted to be more IPA-like, I'd use Æ for Adam, A for Oswald, and O for Otis; and Ø is ~sort-of~ in the right IPA neighbourhood for Woody. But do I want to be IPA-like? In Scandinavian languages, Å is close to Otis, Æ is still like Adam, and Ø is ...not at all like any English vowels, so ...hrm. Eve, Able, Etta, Adam, Oswald, Otis, Una, Woody, Tuttle, Pip Y A E Æ O Ö W Ø U I Or perhaps, since I like my English short vowels: Y Æ E A O Ö W Ø U I ----- CRÖRW CRETMÖ WINDYBET, CADWÆMÖ RWBW FÖRDRIC YØM. Crorro cretmo windybet, cadwaymo rooboo fordric yoom? NOT RWDZDÆY YET, BUT GETYQ PREPT FÖR IT! -- Excerpted from: PUBLIC NOTES (F) http://alph.laemeur.com/txt/PUBNOTES-F ©2015 Adam C. Moore (LÆMEUR) <adam@laemeur.com>