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Creating a Language, how hard can it be?
#6
I've been thinking the character which starts and or ends a word should describe the type of word it is, preceding characters depending on the word may or may not be significant,
In terms of word types I've been thinking;
Code:
Literal - letter sequence describing by the character literals - unchanged
Noun - Name - described by a capitalization at the start of a word (a change in the sound of a character so Ci (see) might become Ce (seh) or so on)
Poetic - letter sequence describing by loose interpretation of character literals - any use of capitalization
Poetics would use a suffix (To Do, To Be, To Have, etc.) to dictate the use of a word.
Capitalization should be the way in which the reader or listener tells a literal syllable from a non-literal, in some cases capitalization may even exist simply for the sake of the sound and not the meaning.
It has also just occured to me the following cases
Hand / To Attack / To Do / Sharp
Foot / To Move / To Jump / Round
Color / To Be Colorful / To Be Exciting / Exuberant
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RE: Creating a Language, how hard can it be? - by Bombshell93 - 06-28-2015, 12:49 AM

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