Eighth edition lekma: Difference between revisions

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==<font face=plain>Abstract</font>==
==Abstract==
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{|style='background:#ffffff'
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|<span style=color:#ffffff>____</span> This content is concerned [[Eighth_edition_lekma#%E2%80%B9%20lekmae%20%E2%80%BA|<span style=color:#000000><span title='Which is pronounced /ˈʔekmɐ/'>‹ lekmae ›</span></span>]], pronounced /ˈʔekmɐ/'. Group name of theoritic persons who speak <span title='/ˈʔekmɐ/'>‹ lekmae ›</span> is <span title='/kuˈtäi̯çiu̯/.'>‹ cvetaizue ›</span>, pronounced /kuˈtäi̯çiu̯/. The eighth variant from <span title='/ˈʔekmɐ/'>‹ lekma ›</span> practically means [[Eighth_edition_lekma#%E2%80%B9%20lekmae%20%E2%80%BA|<span style=color:#000000>this version</span>]] solely, is a bit more to a variant in that whose lexical items are cognisable to have been supplied themselvesly. Although discontinued to rebuild. This content is written in the language, that is oversea language to the [[User:Neubalhhonn|<span style=color:#000000>writer</span>]]. This writing is affected by the made culture. [[User_talk:Neubalhhonn|<span style=color:#000000>User talk</span>]] is for comment. <br><span style=color:#ffffff>____</span> Structure of <span title='/ˈʔekmɐ/'>‹ lekmae ›</span> is diction, a frame that composites two sets of words to mean "is doing that" or "Theme" or the two all together. A set of words is, links of nouns continue till lattermost noun, is making a set, "momental stopping" after lattermost noun designates an end of set of words. "momental stopping" may be short time since toneme falls on thematic set of words also designates that there is a boundary. Any set of words of beginning of a frame turns to descriptive "adjective". A set of words is a descriptive since when this is preceded by nothing in the diction, latest set is theme since preceded by the descriptive in the diction. Either of descriptive or thematic set might be away from diction when the other is still them from given contexts. A diction can possess a theme, means either subject/object/agent to include is possible, to represent an object in the series of preceding agent or object, agent vice versa, needs another diction which may have a support verb to solely mean the next word is object/agent. Words have two categories, two subsets before being a constituent of diction. Names of objects are nouns, this includes relational noun, rel. in short. Resulted nouns are also nouns. Names of motions are verbs, this includes stative verb, sta. in short. A set of verb-noun that when verb is modifying noun, results in a noun. Every noun save for a noun right before a pausing is modifier of the latter next noun. Set of words has two way categorisations alternatively, descriptive or thematic. Notation to write, this is hypothetic content, thus fonts are modified, words that braced by ‹ › is lekmae or lekma word, braced by " " is in a sense an equivalent word. .... is a certain quantity of words.
|<span style=color:#ffffff>____</span> Talks of outer story. This conlang is "lekmae" or "eighth lekma", pronounced /ˈlekmɐʔ/ that meant to be a simpliest structure that [[User:Neubalhhonn|<span style=color:#000000>I</span>]] can get, other element of the conlang is temporal. Source of words are Germanic origin and other random origin, though well modified to fit CVC. Also fewest morphemes, in an experimental minded, there is a certain period of pause before a theme. To speak beginning of a phrase would have tense, may be loudness. Genre of the words is verb and noun, nouns be either an object or a theme, theme be either subject or objective that the verbal phrase is referring. Two words will make a phrase, verb foreceded, noun afters. Basic full phrase is "verb /*pause/ noun" *pause is optional. A word on top of a phrase always considered a verb, other words of the phrase is therefor nouns. Any word turns to be a verb in this way. Least words that can do a phrase always contain a verb, when object of verb is also the theme or somebody wanting to say a noun solely, there is wany verb "haa" for it, meaning "a object, next to it, is the theme of the phrase". Verbal phrase may have an object, object afters a verb, forecedes a theme. A  noun can modify a noun that afters it. Making a longer phrase, "saz" meanig "this" in "lekmae", is a relative noun. Next to it is a descriptive word that forecedes it, a description afters it, a description is normal phrase.
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|<span style=color:#ffffff>____</span> Talks of inner settings, incomplete so fewly though. Graphemes are "t a e i o v u l n m f d c k h s z b", "initial letters" t /t/ h /ʔ/ l /l/ n /n/ m /m/ f /f/ d /d/ c /k/ s /s/ z /ɡ/ b /b/, "medial letters" that is vowels, a /äː/ e /eː/ i /iː/ o /oː/ v /uː/ u /yː/, "medial to final letters" that vowels end in /ʔ/, aa /äːʔ/ ae /ɐʔ/ ai /äi̯ʔ/ ei /eːʔ/ eu /äu̯ʔ/ ie /iːʔ/ ou /oːʔ/ ve /uːʔ/ iu /yːʔ/ uo /y̯oʔ/ ua /y̯äʔ/ ui /ɰ̩ʲʔ/, "final letters", t /t/ l /ɰ/ n /n/ m /m/ k /k/ h /ŋ/ s /s/ z /ɡ/.
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==<font face=plain>‹ lekmae ›</font>==
Settings that is the line that construction of <span title='/ˈʔekmɐ/'>‹ lekma ›</span> shall accords.
{|style='background:#ffffff'
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|colspan=7|<center><font face=plain>every former-latter side by sides results in
|-
|colspan=2|
|colspan=5|<center><font face=plain>latter
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|colspan=2|
|<font face=plain>‹<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›
|<font face=plain>noun
|<font face=plain>rel.
|<font face=plain>verb
|<font face=plain>sta.
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|rowspan=6|<font face=plain>former
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|<font face=plain>‹<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›
|<font face=plain><span title='Two ›momental stop‹ are adequate with a ›momental stop‹.'>‹<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›</span>
|<font face=plain>sta. noun / theme
|<font face=plain>sta. / theme
|<font face=plain>sta. / theme
|<font face=plain>sta. / theme
|-
|<font face=plain>noun
|<font face=plain>noun words
|<font face=plain>noun / noun words
|<font face=plain>sta. / sta. words
|<font face=plain><span title='More specifically these ---- means words indirectly tied in the set.'><nowiki>----</nowiki></span>
|<font face=plain>sta. words
|-
|<font face=plain>rel.
|<font face=plain>sta. words
|<font face=plain>noun
|<font face=plain>sta. words
|<font face=plain><nowiki>----</nowiki>
|<font face=plain><nowiki>----</nowiki>
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|<font face=plain>verb
|<font face=plain>sta. words
|<font face=plain>noun
|<font face=plain><nowiki>----</nowiki>
|<font face=plain><nowiki>----</nowiki>
|<font face=plain><nowiki>----</nowiki>
|-
|<font face=plain>sta.
|<font face=plain>sta. words
|<font face=plain>noun
|<font face=plain>sta.
|<font face=plain><nowiki>----</nowiki>
|<font face=plain><nowiki>----</nowiki>
|}
{|style='background:#ffffff'
|-
|colspan=4|<center><font face=plain><span title='Vocalisation of the graphemes. That is basically phonemic realisation.'>Phonemes</span>
|rowspan=32|
|colspan=2|<center><font face=plain>Graphemes
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|<font face=plain>proto-typical <br>reading
|<font face=plain>lexemes
|<font face=plain>typical standard <br>realisation
|<font face=plain><span title='/kuˈtäi̯çiu̯/.'>‹ cvetaizue ›</span> <br>realisation
|<font face=plain><span title='/ˈʔekmɐ/'>‹ lekmae ›</span> side||<font face=genova><span title='original letter approximates, that is a made. originally colours may differenciate majuscule/minuscule, also for punctation. letter tracing the original. letter of numbers. Graphs of numbers are unphonemical..'>shared meanings with</span> <span title='/ˈʔekmɐ/'>‹ lekma ›</span>
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|<font face=plain>tˢ||<font face=plain>'txx', 'xxt'||<font face=plain>t||<font face=plain>t
|<font face=plain>T/t/E/e||<font face=plain>"zero", "minus one"
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|<font face=plain>e||<font face=plain>'xex', 'xee'||<font face=plain>e||<font face=plain>ɐ
|<font face=plain>A/a, E/e, U/u, I/i, O/o, V/v, R/r, ´, `, ¨, ^||<font face=plain>"zero", "vowels"
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|<font face=plain>eː||<font face=plain>'xéx', 'xei'||<font face=plain>ei̯||<font face=plain>äi̯
|<font face=plain>L/l||<font face=plain>"sole"
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|<font face=plain>eɐ̯||<font face=plain>'xàx', 'xeà'|||<font face=plain>ei̯ɐ̯|||<font face=plain>eɐ̯
|<font face=plain>N/n||<font face=plain>"double"
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|<font face=plain>äu̯||<font face=plain>'xêx', 'xeu', 'xkx'|||<font face=plain>äu̯|||<font face=plain>äu̯
|<font face=plain>M/m/R/r||<font face=plain>"three"
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|<font face=plain>uɐ̯||<font face=plain>'xèx', 'xua'||<font face=plain>uɐ̯||<font face=plain>yɐ̯
|<font face=plain>F/f||<font face=plain>"four"
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|<font face=plain>ɑ||<font face=plain>'xax'||<font face=plain>ä||<font face=plain>ä, ɐ
|<font face=plain>D/d||<font face=plain>"five"
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|<font face=plain>äɐ̯||<font face=plain>'xáx', 'xaa', 'xai', 'xäx', 'xlx'||<font face=plain>äi̯||<font face=plain>äi̯, äː
|<font face=plain>K/k||<font face=plain>"six"
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|<font face=plain>ɐ̯ä||<font face=plain>'xäx', 'xea', 'xeä'||<font face=plain>e̯ä||<font face=plain>e̯ä
|<font face=plain>H/h||<font face=plain>"seven"
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|<font face=plain>ɐ||<font face=plain>'xâx', 'xae', 'xax'||<font face=plain>ɐ||<font face=plain>ɐ
|<font face=plain>S/s||<font face=plain>"eight"
|-
|<font face=plain>i̯u||<font face=plain>'xux', 'xue'||<font face=plain>iu̯||<font face=plain>y
|<font face=plain>Z/z||<font face=plain>"nine"
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|<font face=plain>ii̯||<font face=plain>'xix', 'xie'||<font face=plain>iː||<font face=plain>i
|<font face=plain>X/x||<font face=plain>"a graph"
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|<font face=plain>o||<font face=plain>'xox', 'xoe'||<font face=plain>o||<font face=plain>ɐ̠ˀ
|<font face=plain>B/b||<font face=plain>"ten", "extra one"
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|<font face=plain>ou̯||<font face=plain>'xóx', 'xóe'||<font face=plain>oː||<font face=plain>o
|<font face=plain>U/u/Ll||<font face=plain>"eleven", "extra two"
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|<font face=plain>u̯o||<font face=plain>'xòx', 'xòe'||<font face=plain>u̯o||<font face=plain>y̯o
|<font face=plain>A/a/Lt||<font face=plain>"twelve", "extra three"
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|<font face=plain>uu̯||<font face=plain>'xvx', 'xve'||<font face=plain>uː||<font face=plain>u
|<font face=plain><span title='these two are identical.'>‹<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›/‹<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›</span>||<font face=plain>"a space"
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|<font face=plain>u̯i||<font face=plain>'xrx', 'xui'||<font face=plain>ɰʲ||<font face=plain>ɰ̩ʲ
|colspan=2 rowspan=12|<font face=plain> * c is a consonant. a is a vowel. <br>á is a vowel with a diacritic, that is a diphthong. <br>aa is a diphthong. e is phonemically a blank graph. <br>l is almost a blank graph. <br>A word may ether of ca, caa, cac, caac. <br>add a e to ca then cae, caa stays, <br>cac stays, substitute aa with á to caac. <br>l of lal/lál out of cac/caac <br>may be written with "a space". <br>Large graph means this is a number, <br>numbers after that are written <br>with a small graph, <br>this mode ends with a ‹ . › "decimal point". <br><br><font face=plain> ** It is allowed for anybody to mix dialects
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|<font face=plain>jʷ||<font face=plain>'lxx', 'xxl', <span title='Also ‹ ua ›, ‹ ea ›, ‹ uo ›, ‹ ui ›, ‹ ai ›, ‹ oi ›.'>'xxe'</span>||<font face=plain>ʔ||<font face=plain>ɰ
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|<font face=plain>n||<font face=plain>'nxx', 'xxn'||<font face=plain>n||<font face=plain>nˡ
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|<font face=plain>m̥||<font face=plain>'mxx', 'xxm'||<font face=plain>m||<font face=plain>m
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|<font face=plain>v||<font face=plain>'fxx', 'xxf'||<font face=plain>f||<font face=plain>ʋ
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|<font face=plain>d̥||<font face=plain>'dxx', 'xxd'||<font face=plain>d||<font face=plain>t
|-
|<font face=plain>øi̯, oi̯||<font face=plain>'xöx', 'xoi', 'xdx'||<font face=plain>øː||<font face=plain>u̯ei̯, u̯äi̯
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|<font face=plain>k, q||<font face=plain>'kxx', 'xxk' 'cxx', 'xxc'||<font face=plain>k||<font face=plain>x
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|<font face=plain>ŋ̥||<font face=plain>'hxx', <span title='also long vowel of the equal quality is considered allophone of ‹ h ›'>'xxh'</span>||<font face=plain>ŋ||<font face=plain>ɳ
|-
|<font face=plain>s̪||<font face=plain>'sxx', 'xxs'||<font face=plain>s||<font face=plain>s
|-
|<font face=plain>t͡ʂ||<font face=plain>'zxx', 'xxz'||<font face=plain>ç||<font face=plain>ʂ
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|<font face=plain>b̥||<font face=plain>'bxx', 'xxb'||<font face=plain>b||<font face=plain>b̥ⁿ
|}
{|style='background:#ffffff'
|-
|<center><font face=plain>signs
|<center><font face=plain>meanings
|<center><font face=plain>notes
|-
|<font face=plain>‹ X ›
|<font face=plain>number
|<font face=plain>a <span title='Which instead means majuscule.'>larger letter</span>, also 'a negative number sign', designates this is a beginning of number, which ends till a ‹  ›/‹ .  ›. ‹ Xxx ›/‹ 'xxx ›/‹ Xx ›/‹ 'xx ›/‹ X ›/‹ 'x › is a <span title='Save for quantity ‹ xxx....x › before ‹ o ›, after ‹ . ›.'>positional system of decimal</span>. First ‹ X ›/‹ x › of ‹ Xxx ›/‹ 'xxx › is a hundredfold since two ‹ x › afters. First ‹ X ›/‹ x › of ‹ Xx ›/‹ 'xx ›/is a tenfold since a ‹ x › afters. First ‹ X ›/‹ x › of ‹ X ›/‹ 'x › is their numbers.
|-
|<font face=plain>‹ E ›/‹ e ›
|<font face=plain>number
|<font face=plain>a measurement of quantity. number this is a 'zero', fills the place,  the place is 'zero', a number before this will be tenfold. '1 000' is ‹ Ett ›. ‹ E › may be a lot of 'zero' in a row. ‹ E › is on beginning of a fraction number.
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|<font face=plain>‹ T ›/‹ t ›
|<font face=plain>quantity
|<font face=plain>a measurement of quantity. number/a number, every twelveth. this is a 'zero', fills the place now it is 'zero',  placed before/after a <.> a number plainthis will be twelvefold.
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|<font face=plain>‹ C ›/‹ c ›
|<font face=plain>quantity
|<font face=plain>measurement of quantity. ‹ xc › is a hundredfold ‹ x › though, ‹ xc › equals ‹ xtt ›, ‹ C ›/‹ c › in this sense is out of date.
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|<font face=plain>‹ O ›/‹ o ›
|<font face=plain>quantity
|<font face=plain>a measurement of quantity. number, a 'thousand'. quantity is a measure word. this is a thousand, placed after a ‹ . ›, a number before this will be thousandfold. ‹ x › of ‹ .xo › means an amount, a number right before ‹ . › is ‹ x ›-much-thousandfolds. ‹ xxx....xo › would be addition of ‹ x › ‹ x › ‹ x ›....‹ x ›.
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|<font face=plain>‹ k .... k ›
|<font face=plain>sign
|<font face=plain>‹ K › in formation ‹ k .... k › is a <span title='Also strikethrough. Seconed ‹ k › might be flipped when handwritten.'>parentheses</span>, <span title=<nowiki>'When nested, they are ‹ k .... ka .... ke .... ko .... ok ek ak k ›/‹ k ka ke ko .... ok .... ek .... ak .... k ›.'</nowiki>>‹ ka .... ak ›, ‹ ke .... ek ›, ‹ ko .... ok ›</span>.
|}
{|style='background:#ffffff'
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|<center><font face=plain>samples
|colspan=2|<center><font face=genova>descriptions
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|<font face=plain>‹ bbzo ›
|<font face=plain>a  number ›29-fold-thousand‹
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|<font face=plain>‹ See ›
|<font face=plain>number ›800‹. ‹ Seee. ›, ›8 000‹ equals ‹ S.o ›.
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|<font face=plain>‹ L.fo ›
|<font face=plain>›first-multiplication-fourthousandfold‹ would be number '1 000 000 000 000'.
|-
|rowspan=2|<font face=genova>‹ N.do Dst Stn Fnk Mzz Dlh. Emk<nowiki>'' </nowiki>L.bo ›/<br>‹ N.do Dst.fo Stn.mo Fnk.no Mzz.o Dlh.a-Emk<nowiki>'' </nowiki>L.bo ›
|<font face=plain>a set of numbers, 2 580 802 426 399 517.000000000000000000000000000036
|-
|colspan=2|<center><font face=genova>------------------------------------------------
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|<font face=plain>‹ H'ett'ett'dse. <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›/‹ H.mo'E'dse. <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›
|<font face=plain>a number 7 000 000 580.
|-
|<font face=plain><span title=three plus two makes five.>‹ M.-N./ D. doz// ›</span>
|<font face=plain>a number of, 3 plus 2 equals 5
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|<font face=plain><span title=five is made of nine minus four, in another word, three plus two.>‹ a D./ doz Z- 'F o M.-N.// ›</span>
|<font face=plain>a number of, 5 equals 9 minus 4 or 3 plus 2
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|rowspan=5|<center><font face=plain><span title='three plus two makes five. concerning five, which is solution of nine minus four, also solution of three plus two.'><span title='‹'>˄</span><span style=color:#ffffff>_</span><br><span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>M.<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span><br>-'<br>N.<br>/ <br>D. <br><span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>doz<br>/<br>e <br>a <br><span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>D.<br>/ <br><span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>doz <br><span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>Z<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span><br>-'<br> 'F <br>o <br><span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>M.<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span><br>-'<br>N.<br>//<br><span title=<nowiki>'›'</nowiki>>˅</span></span>
|<font face=plain>when sole diction is vertically written, that presumably more merginless between words.
|-
|colspan=2|<center><font face=plain>------------------------------------------------
|-
|colspan=2|<center><font face=plain>------------------------------------------------
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|colspan=2|<center><font face=plain>------------------------------------------------
|-
|colspan=2|<center><font face=plain>------------------------------------------------
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|<font face=plain>‹ Aaaa,aaau ›
|<font face=plain>ninetyfive of twelve based number, ten based number of that is ‹ Zd. ›
|}
{|style='background:#ffffff'
|-
|<center><font face=plain>signs
|<center><font face=plain>genres
|<center><font face=plain>notes
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹ ` ›
|<center><font face=plain>component
|<font face=genova>roundness quality
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹ ´ ›
|<center><font face=plain>component
|<font face=genova>palatal quality
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹ ¨ ›
|<center><font face=plain>component
|<font face=plain>quality
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹ . <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›
|<font face=plain>signaliser
|<font face=plain>decimal point of ‹ .a › 'that number is multiplied by first', <span title='‹ a › of ‹ .a <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>› is usually unwritten, this is applied without a signal of another way.'>‹ . › originates ‹ .a ›</span>.
|-
|<font face=plain><center>‹ . ›
|<font face=plain>signaliser
|<font face=plain>multiplication, a number before ‹ . › <br>is multiplied by a number after ‹ . ›
|-
|<font face=plain>‹<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span> ' ›
|<font face=plain>signaliser
|<font face=plain>‹ ' › of ‹ 'x.... ›/‹ -'x.... ›, is a beginning of a negative number.  a ‹ › is before the signal.
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹ ' ›
|<font face=plain>signaliser
|<font face=plain>X of <X' >/<Xx....'>/<Xa >/<Xx....a> have the common quantity. a ‹ › afters.
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹ <nowiki>''</nowiki> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›
|<font face=plain>division
|<font face=plain>‹ ....x<nowiki>''</nowiki> X.... ›/‹ ....x<nowiki>''</nowiki> 'x.... ›, a number before ‹ <nowiki>''</nowiki> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>› <br>is divided by a number after ‹ <nowiki>''</nowiki> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›, a ‹ › afters.
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›
|<font face=plain>addition
|<font face=plain>add the numbers/words, ‹ / <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›/‹ // <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›, momental stop after a word/words degnates foremer next word is a lattermost word, an ›intonation‹ or ›a side‹ meant a boundary between words
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹ - ›
|<font face=plain>addition
|<font face=plain>also ›a space‹, addition when their units are mutual, words with links is spaceless between words, ‹ - › may divides eight or more words uncutting the links
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹ ' ›
|<font face=plain>separator
|<font face=plain>boundary in a set word, ‹ '›/‹' › or 'on sides of a word when spaced' <span title='‹'› of ‹'-› is unwritten.'>this ‹'› is usually unwritten</span>.
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|<center><font face=plain><span title='‹/ ›,  ‹ , › is ‹/ › of poetics.'>‹ / <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›</span>
|<font face=plain>separator
|<font face=plain>end of words/a diction, ›comma‹. ‹<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›/‹/ › of ‹/ › is unwritten when there is a side of board. is noun, or a close of a diction / a thematic words
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹ . <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›
|<font face=plain>separator
|<font face=plain>end of a words/addition, ‹ ›/‹/ › of ‹/ › is unwritten when there is a line break or a side of writing board. a ‹ › afters.
|-
|<center><font face=plain><span title='‹ / › is inspirited by Indic scripts, namely danda.'>‹ / <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›</span>
|<font face=plain>separator
|<font face=plain>To end a diction, "full stop". a ‹ › afters. ‹<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span> is unwritten when a board side instead. ‹ , › is ‹ / › in poetic writing.
|-
|<center><font face=plain>‹<span style=color:#ffffff>_</span> <span style=color:#ffffff>_</span>›
|<font face=plain>addition
|<font face=plain>a space means basically addition, this is applied without a signal of another way, when their units are mutual, add the numbers/words
|-
|<center><font face=plain>----
|<font face=plain>addition
|<font face=plain>‹Xxx›/‹'xxx› is multiplied by quantities/units after ‹ . ›
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Latest revision as of 17:22, 3 March 2022

Abstract

____ Talks of outer story. This conlang is "lekmae" or "eighth lekma", pronounced /ˈlekmɐʔ/ that meant to be a simpliest structure that I can get, other element of the conlang is temporal. Source of words are Germanic origin and other random origin, though well modified to fit CVC. Also fewest morphemes, in an experimental minded, there is a certain period of pause before a theme. To speak beginning of a phrase would have tense, may be loudness. Genre of the words is verb and noun, nouns be either an object or a theme, theme be either subject or objective that the verbal phrase is referring. Two words will make a phrase, verb foreceded, noun afters. Basic full phrase is "verb /*pause/ noun" *pause is optional. A word on top of a phrase always considered a verb, other words of the phrase is therefor nouns. Any word turns to be a verb in this way. Least words that can do a phrase always contain a verb, when object of verb is also the theme or somebody wanting to say a noun solely, there is wany verb "haa" for it, meaning "a object, next to it, is the theme of the phrase". Verbal phrase may have an object, object afters a verb, forecedes a theme. A noun can modify a noun that afters it. Making a longer phrase, "saz" meanig "this" in "lekmae", is a relative noun. Next to it is a descriptive word that forecedes it, a description afters it, a description is normal phrase.
____ Talks of inner settings, incomplete so fewly though. Graphemes are "t a e i o v u l n m f d c k h s z b", "initial letters" t /t/ h /ʔ/ l /l/ n /n/ m /m/ f /f/ d /d/ c /k/ s /s/ z /ɡ/ b /b/, "medial letters" that is vowels, a /äː/ e /eː/ i /iː/ o /oː/ v /uː/ u /yː/, "medial to final letters" that vowels end in /ʔ/, aa /äːʔ/ ae /ɐʔ/ ai /äi̯ʔ/ ei /eːʔ/ eu /äu̯ʔ/ ie /iːʔ/ ou /oːʔ/ ve /uːʔ/ iu /yːʔ/ uo /y̯oʔ/ ua /y̯äʔ/ ui /ɰ̩ʲʔ/, "final letters", t /t/ l /ɰ/ n /n/ m /m/ k /k/ h /ŋ/ s /s/ z /ɡ/.