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m (writing: added a visual for omnidirectional writing) |
m (writing: added the file extension to the aforementioned visual) |
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a fun cosmetic feature is that you can write in any direction you want, provided you mirror/rotate the glyphs accordingly and indicate a change in direction with an arrow. if no arrow is present, assume the previous line's reading direction. if there is no arrow or previous line, assume left-to-right. | a fun cosmetic feature is that you can write in any direction you want, provided you mirror/rotate the glyphs accordingly and indicate a change in direction with an arrow. if no arrow is present, assume the previous line's reading direction. if there is no arrow or previous line, assume left-to-right. | ||
[[File:Y-p-a omnidirectional writing|alt=An image showcasing omnidirectional writing in yama-pali-auk.|what omnidirectional writing could look like in practice]] | [[File:Y-p-a omnidirectional writing.png|alt=An image showcasing omnidirectional writing in yama-pali-auk.|what omnidirectional writing could look like in practice]] | ||
== grammar == | == grammar == | ||
yama-pali-auk has mostly free word order, the only requirement being that the subject is somewhere before the object. this is due to the lack of a subject or object marker. the verb, however, is clear, as it is marked for tense. [SECTION INCOMPLETE FUTURE KATH FIX THIS] | yama-pali-auk has mostly free word order, the only requirement being that the subject is somewhere before the object. this is due to the lack of a subject or object marker. the verb, however, is clear, as it is marked for tense. [SECTION INCOMPLETE FUTURE KATH FIX THIS] |
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