Friday, January 24, 2014
Assignment 1: The Gorean Alphabet and Writing in
Gorean Style and Method
The
Gorean alphabet has twenty-eight characters. Most show a clear cut resemblance
to Greek, Egyptain, Roman, Cretan letters as well as those of oriental origins.
Many of the letters have a variety of pronumciations, depending on the context.
The Caste of Scribes has been working to standardize the written word. Of the
twenty-eight characters, I have been able to find seventeen. They are: Al-Ka,
Altron, Ar, Be-Ta, Delka, Eta, Homan, Ina, Kwah, Kef, Omnion, Nu, Shu, Sidge,
Tau, Tun and Val.
"I
nodded. The rest of it I did not need to be told. The expressions 'Al-Ka' and
'Ba-Ta' are the first two letters of the Gorean alphabet. In effect these men
had no names, but were simply known as Slave A and Slave B."
--Priest-Kings of Gor, page 90
"True,'
admitted Bosk. 'And these innovative scribes have has little success with their
proposed reforms. Yet, from their labors, various interesting facts have
emerged. For example, we have learned not only the order of frequency of
occurrence of letters but, as would be expected, rough percentages of
occurrence as well. Eta, for example, occurs to hundred times more frequently
in the language than Altron. Over forty percent of the language consists of the
first five letters I mentioned, Eta, Tau, Al-Ka, Omnion and Nu.'
'That
seems impossible,' said Samos.
'It
is true,' said Bosk. 'Further, over sixty percent of the language consists of
those five letters plus Ar, Ina, Shu and Homan.'"
--Slave Girl of Gor, page 384
"He
rolled one of the bodies to its back. On the chest was a bloody triangle, the
'delka.' That is the fourth letter in the Gorean alphabet..."
--Magician of Gor, page 176
"I
have not spelled it 'Feikah' in English because the letter in question, in the
Gorean spelling, is a 'kwah' and not a 'kef'. The 'kwah' in Gorean, which I
think is possibly related directly or indirectly, to the English 'q', does not
always have a 'kwah' sound."
--Mercenaries of Gor, page 13
"The
Gorean alphabet has twenty-eight characters, all of which, I suspect, owe their
origin to one or another of the alphabets of Earth. Several show a clear-cut
resemblance to Greek letters, for example; 'Sidge', on the other hand, could be
cuneiform, and 'Tun' and 'Val' are probably calligraphically drifted from
demotic. At least six letters suggest influence by the classical Roman
alphabet, and seven do, if we count 'Kef', the first letter in 'Kajira'. 'Shu'
is represented by a sign which seems clearly oriental in origin and 'Homan', I
speculate, may derive from Cretan."
--Explorers of Gor, page 9
======================================================================
Assignment:
Gorean
Alphabet
'Al-Ka'
and 'Ba-Ta' are the two first letters of the Gorean alphabet. There were
twenty-eight characters in the Gorean alphabet.
al-ka
("a")
ba-ta
("b")
delka
("d")
eta
("e")
human
("h")
ina
("I")
kef
("K")
mu
("m")
nu
("n")
omnion
("o")
kwah
("q")
ar
("r")
shu
("s")
tau
("t")
sidge
("c"?)
tun
(?)
val
("v"?)
alton
("l"?)
Gorean
is written, as it is said, as the ox plows. The first line is written left to
right, the second, right to left, the third left to right, and so on. I had
once been informed by my friend, Torm, that the whole business was quite
simple, the alternate lines, in his opinion, at least, also being written
forward, 'only in the other direction.'
bk 20 pg 243 Players of Gor
Writing in
Gorean Style
It
is know that the Barbarians of Earth have a very strange way of from white
always Barbarians the, Goreans us unlike, writing the left side to the right
side, I bet their vision is not so good, as
the
like write to tried I. excercised getting not are eyes their Barbarians, but I
made too many mistakes. One day I will become write to quil gold solid a buy to
tarsks enough earn
and
scribe full a with and beautiful leather bound books to place my stories.
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Labels: Alphabet, Assignment
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