Adamic Code: Difference between revisions

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*'''Rule 1 (1 syllable):''' The first and last members take the initial and final positions, the first member in between them is the medial one, and if there is none, it will be a glottal stop.
*'''Rule 1 (1 syllable):''' The first and last members take the initial and final positions, the first member in between them is the medial one, and if there is none, it will be a glottal stop.


: Example 1: ''Planck'' yields ''-p-l-k-'' "Quantum Mechanics".
: Example 1: ''Planck'' yields ''-p-l-k-'' "quantum mechanics".


: Example 2: ''Grimm'' yields ''-g-r-m-'' and not ''-g-s-m'' for "Folklore", as /r/ is counted before /ɪ/.
: Example 2: ''Grimm'' yields ''-g-r-m-'' and not ''-g-s-m'' for "folklore", as /r/ is counted before /ɪ/ in both priority and sequence.


: Example 3: ''Gauss'' yields ''-g-v-s-'' and not ''-g-’-s-'' for "Mathematics", as /a/ has less priority than the semivowel /w/.
: Example 3: ''Gauss'' yields ''-g-v-s-'' and not ''-g-’-s-'' for "mathematics", as /a/ has less priority than the semivowel /w/.


*'''Rule 2 (2 syllables):''' The first three members are counted to assume their respective positions, except those members that act as closed codas in a consonant cluster.
*'''Rule 2 (2 syllables):''' The first three members are counted to assume their respective positions, except those members that act as closed codas in a consonant cluster.


: Example 1: ''Plátōn'' yields ''-p-l-t-'' and not ''-p-l-n-'' or ''-p-t-n-'' for "Metaphysics".
: Example 1: ''Plátōn'' yields ''-p-l-t-'' and not ''-p-l-n-'' or ''-p-t-n-'' for "metaphysics".


: Example 2: ''Caesar'' yields ''-k-s-r-'' for "political/militar might".
: Example 2: ''Caesar'' yields ''-k-s-r-'' for "political/militar might".


: Example 3: ''Darwin'' yields ''-d-v-n-'' and not ''-d-r-v-'' or ''-d-r-n-'' for "Biology", because /ɹ/ acts as a closed coda in the consonant cluster /ɹw/. Compare ''-’-k-
: Example 3: ''Darwin'' yields ''-d-v-n-'' and not ''-d-r-v-'' or ''-d-r-n-'' for "Biology", because /ɹ/ acts as a closed coda in the consonant cluster /ɹw/.  


*'''Rule 3 (3 or more syllables):''' Each first consonant of the first three onsets/open codas takes its respective position.
*'''Rule 3 (3 or more syllables):''' Each first member of the first three syllables takes its respective position.


: Example 1: ''Sōkratēs'' yields ''-s-k-t-'' for "philosophy".


*'''Rule 0.2:''' Glottal stops and the first members of an intervocalic consonant cluster with closed coda aren’t considered consonants in the counting.
: Example 2: ''Aristotélēs'' yields ''-’-r-t-'' for "logic", as every bare initial vowel in a syllable is considered to bear a glottal stop in Adamic.
: EX:


: Example 3: ''Lavoisier'' yields ''-l-v-z-'' for "chemistry".


aocar


v'l




*'''Rule 3:''' If the word starts with a vowel, the first position is a glottal stop.
: EX: ''Euler'' yields ''-’-l-r'' "Mathematics".
*'''Rule 4:''' The two extreme consonants of a consonant cluster are counted when able.




socrates > s cr t




for the transfiguration of their names into a canonic form
H
hayawa


''-k-r-n-'' "aging" > ''šanat-'' "year"
''-k-r-n-'' "aging" > ''šanat-'' "year"