Caber Logograms
- Man in Space
- roman
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Caber Logograms
So this is for a language family I'm developing and the script that is used to write it. I saw something somewhere asking why conlangers didn't use logograms more often. I'm trying to go with it. Help would be appreciated and I apologize for the quality of the drawings as I'm currently using a trackpad.
Basics
What you see at the start of the post is what the language speakers call(ed) themselves—in Common Caber, Caber "the people"—written in Caber logograms. You see the glyph for cabe "person" followed by a collective marker -r. I'm thinking that most of the descriptions of the glyphs, at least in the early stages, will be in Common Caber; I haven't worked out all the sound changes for the daughter languages yet.
The script is currently written top-to-bottom, left to right, though the idea of doing a modified Mayan-style thing with blocks of characters that are read before going to the next block is a possibility, but I'm not sure if I want to do that.
Pronouns
See these symbols above? You're probably going to get a lot of mileage out of them. These are the singular personal pronouns—first, second, and third. To make them plural you simply repeat the glyph (this is how most plurals are marked, actually). These shapes were originally a representation of two people talking and pointing at whatever the referent of the pronoun was (speaker, listener, or somebody else).
An important note that the pronouns help demonstrate—the "default" orientation of something is on the right of the glyph, facing left.
Sound complements
Sometimes the same base symbol is reused for many different concepts. For example, the base glyph of a square is used for words such as śeư "six" and rubes "ball, sphere, circle" (yes, it uses a square; the design of the script is very angular).
What happens in these cases is that you get a composition of two glyphs, the second of which is a sound complement that tells you what sound the word begins with if it's not the "primary" concept of the glyph. For example, śeư "six" is a composition of the square glyph and the glyph for śocơ (a type of four-legged animal):
A special case: Marking the genitive phrase
The genitive particle fe has a special glyph that extends around the connected NPs. An example is in the phrase "my foot" ("the foot of me"):
Twin Aster megathread
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
Re: Caber Logograms
This is a pretty good explanation and demonstration you've given in this post.Linguifex wrote:So this is for a language family I'm developing and the script that is used to write it. I saw something somewhere asking why conlangers didn't use logograms more often. I'm trying to go with it. Help would be appreciated and I apologize for the quality of the drawings as I'm currently using a trackpad.
As for why conlangers don't use logograms so much...I'm not sure.
I like this.The script is currently written top-to-bottom, left to right, though the idea of doing a modified Mayan-style thing with blocks of characters that are read before going to the next block is a possibility, but I'm not sure if I want to do that.
A special case: Marking the genitive phrase
The genitive particle fe has a special glyph that extends around the connected NPs. An example is in the phrase "my foot" ("the foot of me"):
It's unique, while I can see hint of Mayan-ish style in layout, at least in your "my foot" example.
At work on Apaan: viewtopic.php?f=6&t=4799
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Re: Caber Logograms
Connectives
The connectives, bưf "and", bưcuś "but, except", and śemuc "or" (there is no difference between inclusive and exclusive or). The symbol for bưf comes from two people together; bưcuś, from someone putting up a hand to stop something (note the direction the person in the symbol is facing, which is different from usual); the symbol for śemuc was originally someone looking at two objects, but these were points and reduced to a line.
The first glyph also means "with"; the same word is used for both. Some regions have another reading for the second glyph, ec "NEGATIVE", though ec typically has its own symbol.
Negatives
The symbol ec "NEGATIVE" gets a lot of mileage and is often used as a shorthand for other words dealing with negatives (nothing, no one). I actually basically took the Egyptian hieroglyphic solution for the negative and adapted it for use here.
Numbers
From left to right, top to bottom: mưgưi "zero", bưćơ "one", bơći "two", ǵeśac "three", račboć "four", ơ "five", śeư "six".
Samples
Left to right, top to bottom: seśo "hand", bosa "water", ćơ "fire", čư "tree", ru "give", ruơa "pole", ča "wind", eseć "hear", bưbư "see", and ota "take".
The connectives, bưf "and", bưcuś "but, except", and śemuc "or" (there is no difference between inclusive and exclusive or). The symbol for bưf comes from two people together; bưcuś, from someone putting up a hand to stop something (note the direction the person in the symbol is facing, which is different from usual); the symbol for śemuc was originally someone looking at two objects, but these were points and reduced to a line.
The first glyph also means "with"; the same word is used for both. Some regions have another reading for the second glyph, ec "NEGATIVE", though ec typically has its own symbol.
Negatives
The symbol ec "NEGATIVE" gets a lot of mileage and is often used as a shorthand for other words dealing with negatives (nothing, no one). I actually basically took the Egyptian hieroglyphic solution for the negative and adapted it for use here.
Numbers
From left to right, top to bottom: mưgưi "zero", bưćơ "one", bơći "two", ǵeśac "three", račboć "four", ơ "five", śeư "six".
Samples
Left to right, top to bottom: seśo "hand", bosa "water", ćơ "fire", čư "tree", ru "give", ruơa "pole", ča "wind", eseć "hear", bưbư "see", and ota "take".
Twin Aster megathread
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
Re: Caber Logograms
I really like this.
The pronouns seem intuitive and economical.
If I may ask, wouldn't it make sense for "zero" to use the negative logogram also? Couldn't the current glyph for "zero" be thought of as "two", given the system?
(So the egyptian hyeroglyphic for negation also resembles a human silhouette, then? My avatar is also supposed to be a negative logogram, but I don't remember from which natlang. How weird... )
The glyph for fire is fantastic.
I hope we get to see more Caber logograms soon
The pronouns seem intuitive and economical.
If I may ask, wouldn't it make sense for "zero" to use the negative logogram also? Couldn't the current glyph for "zero" be thought of as "two", given the system?
(So the egyptian hyeroglyphic for negation also resembles a human silhouette, then? My avatar is also supposed to be a negative logogram, but I don't remember from which natlang. How weird... )
The glyph for fire is fantastic.
I hope we get to see more Caber logograms soon
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Re: Caber Logograms
Thank you!Keenir wrote:This is a pretty good explanation and demonstration you've given in this post.
[. . .]
I like this.
It's unique, while I can see hint of Mayan-ish style in layout, at least in your "my foot" example.
Probably because A) it's a lot of stuff to keep track of and B) you have to create a lot of them.Keenir wrote:As for why conlangers don't use logograms so much...I'm not sure.
Thank you!Sights wrote:I really like this.
The pronouns seem intuitive and economical.
To your first question, perhaps. To your second question, not really because of their layout. I wanted to avoid using a circle for zero. I figured it'd be something different.Sights wrote:If I may ask, wouldn't it make sense for "zero" to use the negative logogram also? Couldn't the current glyph for "zero" be thought of as "two", given the system?
Actually, it's just a pair of arms shrugging or something.Sights wrote:(So the egyptian hyeroglyphic for negation also resembles a human silhouette, then? My avatar is also supposed to be a negative logogram, but I don't remember from which natlang. How weird... )
Sights wrote:The glyph for fire is fantastic.
Me too!Sights wrote:I hope we get to see more Caber logograms soon
Twin Aster megathread
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
Re: Caber Logograms
conlangers rarely make use of logograms because you need to spend your entire life making thing. Who has time to painstakingly compose 15,000 symbols?
There are or have been conlangers with logographies, but most of them aren't seen around very often, because they're off making logograms...
There are or have been conlangers with logographies, but most of them aren't seen around very often, because they're off making logograms...
Re: Caber Logograms
clawgrip, for one, has made Fkeuswa script for Himmaswa, and Naduta.Who has time to painstakingly compose 15,000 symbols?
And he does quite well. (ZBB & CBB)
And there's David Peterson's Kamakawi:
http://dedalvs.com/kamakawi/main.html
Lyhoko Leaci has made the Cor logographic script (viz. ZBB)
Kiwikami also made a logographic script for Wa Qan, which debuted here on the CBB.
It was very interesting. I have no idea what's precisely up with either kiwikami or Wa Qan nowadays (I understand Wa Qan has become a prestige language in E-Space, as she continues her travels therein...).
Chagen's Pazmat is purported to use hanzi-style pictographs.
I have a syllabary and some logographic glyphs for my Yauchuan. Even though it may look Chinese, it is actually Cuneiform-inspired.
There are no doubt some others in the far reaches of Cyberspace. Granted, Logoc.onscripters are not common, but they do exist.
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- Location: Ohio
Re: Caber Logograms
More Examples
Top row: dơ "kick", čengac "smell", ơgoc "leg", nici "spine", nuơc "road"
Second row: rưsaco "break, split", ćưiu "fall", ćưa "QUESTION", hưr "speak, say", besrơ "mountain"
Third row: ba "DEFINITE", cać "think", nơ "boat", caơ "bean", śuśo "drop"
Fourth row: ǧatfum "walk", ǧubśư "place, area", cưgrưni "knot", [several words] "RELATIVE", huśơ "vine"
Bottom row: mačư "throw, toss", ćưcơ "ramp, inclined plane", ưbacư "screw", reśu "twist; weave", mesơ "bed, mattress"
Top row: dơ "kick", čengac "smell", ơgoc "leg", nici "spine", nuơc "road"
Second row: rưsaco "break, split", ćưiu "fall", ćưa "QUESTION", hưr "speak, say", besrơ "mountain"
Third row: ba "DEFINITE", cać "think", nơ "boat", caơ "bean", śuśo "drop"
Fourth row: ǧatfum "walk", ǧubśư "place, area", cưgrưni "knot", [several words] "RELATIVE", huśơ "vine"
Bottom row: mačư "throw, toss", ćưcơ "ramp, inclined plane", ưbacư "screw", reśu "twist; weave", mesơ "bed, mattress"
Twin Aster megathread
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
Re: Caber Logograms
An excellent continuation.Linguifex wrote:More Examples
Top row: dơ "kick", čengac "smell", ơgoc "leg", nici "spine", nuơc "road"
Second row: rưsaco "break, split", ćưiu "fall", ćưa "QUESTION", hưr "speak, say", besrơ "mountain"
Third row: ba "DEFINITE", cać "think", nơ "boat", caơ "bean", śuśo "drop"
Fourth row: ǧatfum "walk", ǧubśư "place, area", cưgrưni "knot", [several words] "RELATIVE", huśơ "vine"
Bottom row: mačư "throw, toss", ćưcơ "ramp, inclined plane", ưbacư "screw", reśu "twist; weave", mesơ "bed, mattress"
Now I have a question: is there a way to determine which way the logograms are to be read, or are they only written in one direction? (at least as far as the parent script-language is concerned; not concerned with adaptations in the daughter scripts or langs who borrow the script)
At work on Apaan: viewtopic.php?f=6&t=4799
- Man in Space
- roman
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- Location: Ohio
Re: Caber Logograms
Thank you!Keenir wrote:An excellent continuation.
They're written left-to-right, top-to-bottom.Keenir wrote:Now I have a question: is there a way to determine which way the logograms are to be read, or are they only written in one direction? (at least as far as the parent script-language is concerned; not concerned with adaptations in the daughter scripts or langs who borrow the script)
Twin Aster megathread
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
Re: Caber Logograms
This is kinda a neat base.
Re: Caber Logograms
I applaud your decision to make a logographic script. It's not an easy undertaking by any means (despite what some people's comments imply), so I wish you luck. I think it's probably pretty easy to get exhausted and discouraged after the first 30 or 50 or so. I recommend finding a way to classify and arrange them so that you can easily cross-reference glyphs and vocabulary and so on to aid you in making new ones. I look forward to seeing more.
Re: Caber Logograms
I've been rolling a multidimensional script around in my head for a while, which has many of the same issues as logographic scripts.
I keep thinking about how to minimize the number of unique symbols and how to make them intuitive in the same way that sounds are. It seems a real challenge.
Keep it up, I'd like to see some complete thoughts written in the logograms :)
I keep thinking about how to minimize the number of unique symbols and how to make them intuitive in the same way that sounds are. It seems a real challenge.
Keep it up, I'd like to see some complete thoughts written in the logograms :)
A grammar for one of my languages: The Standard Laoran Handbook
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Re: Caber Logograms
This is cool. It reminds me of old cave drawing logograms rather than the more famous Chinese ones, which is cool.
No darkness can harm you if you are guided by your own inner light
Re: Caber Logograms
A question occurs to me:
does the thickness of the line matter to the meaning? (such as the thick lines of the X in "fire", vs the thin lines rising from the X)Linguifex wrote:Left to right, top to bottom: seśo "hand", bosa "water", ćơ "fire", čư "tree", ru "give", ruơa "pole", ča "wind", eseć "hear", bưbư "see", and ota "take".
At work on Apaan: viewtopic.php?f=6&t=4799
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Re: Caber Logograms
MrKrov wrote:This is kinda a neat base.
HoskhMatriarch wrote:This is cool. It reminds me of old cave drawing logograms rather than the more famous Chinese ones, which is cool.
Thanks, guys!xybre wrote:Keep it up, I'd like to see some complete thoughts written in the logograms :)
Thank you! Part of the frustration comes in when I want the logograms to fit a certain aesthetic and I can't seem to find one that works. What sort of classification system do you use for your logograms, if I may ask?clawgrip wrote:I applaud your decision to make a logographic script. It's not an easy undertaking by any means (despite what some people's comments imply), so I wish you luck. I think it's probably pretty easy to get exhausted and discouraged after the first 30 or 50 or so. I recommend finding a way to classify and arrange them so that you can easily cross-reference glyphs and vocabulary and so on to aid you in making new ones. I look forward to seeing more.
No, that's sort of due to my fingers sliding when I'm actually drawing.Keenir wrote:does the thickness of the line matter to the meaning? (such as the thick lines of the X in "fire", vs the thin lines rising from the X)
More Glyphs
First row: mačư "hammer, (tool)", ćucơh "chain", to "comb", čo "teach", goč "learn"
Second row: atobmơ "willow tree", cưfe "shield", usić "bow", cơhahe "arrow", tơhư "dig"
Third row: du "crop(s)", mư "bone", ưmư "paint, write", itan "hatchet, axe", utin "paintbrush"
Fourth row: itu "measure", nagi "welcome", do "call to, address", hoc "knife, dagger", [verb endings] "PAST"
Mačư "hammer, (tool)" is a result of semantic drift; originally it meant "tool" in general but eventually came to specifically to refer to a hammer. The "tool" sense is behind its inclusion in such symbols as the one for "paintbrush". Conceptual complements generally appear to the right of a glyph, as demonstrated with "paintbrush", and often have no bearing on actual pronunciation, instead acting as sort of a hint as to the semantic aspect of a concept.
The past-tense marker is a stylized sunset. I think the idea behind it was that it implied "yesterday" and so indicated the past.
Last edited by Man in Space on 21 May 2016 11:48, edited 1 time in total.
Twin Aster megathread
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
Re: Caber Logograms
cool; so its not "thick X means this, thin X means that"...you just made it cooler.Linguifex wrote:No, that's sort of due to my fingers sliding when I'm actually drawing.Keenir wrote:does the thickness of the line matter to the meaning? (such as the thick lines of the X in "fire", vs the thin lines rising from the X)
Mačư "hammer, (tool)" is a result of semantic drift; originally it meant "tool" in general but eventually came to specifically to refer to a hammer. The "tool" sense is behind its inclusion in such symbols as the one for "paintbrush". Conceptual complements generally appear to the right of a glyph, as demonstrated with "paintbrush", and often have no bearing on actual pronunciation, instead acting as sort of a hint as to the semantic aspect of a concept.[/quote]
neat! (sounds like something I thought Sumerian hinted at, but never found out one way or another; either way, its a good development)
The past-tense marker is a stylized sunset. I think the idea behind it was that it implied "yesterday" and so indicated the past.
makes sense.
*eagerly awaits more*
may I attempt a sign or sentence in Caber?
At work on Apaan: viewtopic.php?f=6&t=4799
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Re: Caber Logograms
I agree with Clawgrip and the others, a logography is awesome!
How can you make a sentence if Linguifex hasn't revealed whether it's SVO, SOV, VSO, etc. yet?Keenir wrote: may I attempt a sign or sentence in Caber?
♂♥♂♀
Squirrels chase koi . . . chase squirrels
My Kankonian-English dictionary: 88,000 words and counting
31,416: The number of the conlanging beast!
Squirrels chase koi . . . chase squirrels
My Kankonian-English dictionary: 88,000 words and counting
31,416: The number of the conlanging beast!
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- Location: Ohio
Re: Caber Logograms
Certainly!Keenir wrote:*eagerly awaits more*
may I attempt a sign or sentence in Caber?
Thank you!Khemehekis wrote:I agree with Clawgrip and the others, a logography is awesome!
I'm thinking that it is SVO, though I might change it to SOV. I'd go with SVO for now though.Khemehekis wrote:How can you make a sentence if Linguifex hasn't revealed whether it's SVO, SOV, VSO, etc. yet?
Twin Aster megathread
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
AVDIO · VIDEO · DISCO
CC = Common Caber
CK = Classical Khaya
CT = Classical Ĝare n Tim Ar
Kg = Kgáweq'
PB = Proto-Beheic
PO = Proto-O
PTa = Proto-Taltic
STK = Sisỏk Tlar Kyanà
Tm = Təmattwəspwaypksma
Re: Caber Logograms
Talarian, too, has its logograms (as you can see in my seal below!). Just not 15k of them! It's easier to make fifty or a hundred of the things and sprinkle them liberally within a more normal syllabo-alphabetic system!Lambuzhao wrote:clawgrip, for one, has made Fkeuswa script for Himmaswa, and Naduta.Who has time to painstakingly compose 15,000 symbols?