User talk:EmperorZelos: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Waahlis.png|35px|link=Linguifex:Administrators]] '''[[User talk:Waahlis|<span style="color: Orange;">Waahlis</span>]]'''  20:09, 22 May 2013 (CEST)
[[File:Waahlis.png|35px|link=Linguifex:Administrators]] '''[[User talk:Waahlis|<span style="color: Orange;">Waahlis</span>]]'''  20:09, 22 May 2013 (CEST)
== Re:Kanonu Script ==
How it works is, let's say you wanted to write, "I'm eating bread." You would take the verb for eating (Which i haven't decided on yet), then since it's present tense, you draw a horizontal line above the verb with a dot in the center. If you didn't have this, the verb would be an infinitive. Next you add the person below it, in this case one dot since it's first person singular. A hyphen to the right would make it plural (we). There are four persons, the extra one being for singular anyone and for plural everyone. This is one symbol. The next symbol would be the bread symbol (A hemisphere with a vertical line in the center) with a symbol below that looks like "n" which makes it an object. The nice thing about this is you can switch them around, and it'll mean the same thing. The other grammatical symbols I have are the logical symbol for not (Meaning opposite) above the symbol, a "d" above a symbol to make it possessive, and a hyphen below a noun which is not a pronoun, which like with pronouns, makes the word plural. I'm also considering adding + and - below verbs to replace adverbs (much and little, for example much below running would make it quickly running, so it's "much" in the most suitable context). This pretty much makes nouns and verbs the only symbols that aren't grammatical.
To answer why they look geometrical, it's because I had simplicity in mind. They only look marginally like what they actually represent. If I had made them look like what they represent, I'd likely end up with something extremely similar to Whiteoglyphics. To explain the symbol in the center, ''to speak'', The circle represents a head and the arc represents the speaker's arm, or the sound coming from his mouth. If you added an exclamation point between the two, you'd get ''to command''.about half the verbs I have have a head, and only five verbs do not have body parts (is (=), move (->), change(->|), add(+), take(-)).
Thank you for asking. (BTW, ''to ask'' is O?) --[[File:Mocha.png|25px|link=User:Mocha2007]]&nbsp;'''<span style="color:#800000;">Mocha</span>&nbsp;[[User Talk:Mocha2007|<span style="color:#00c0c0;">Talk</span>]]&nbsp;•&nbsp;[[Mochadian|M]]&nbsp;•&nbsp;[[Fluffian|F]]&nbsp;•&nbsp;[[Canon|C]]''' 08:30, 27 May 2013 (CEST)
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