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EVA to IPA - Printable Version +- The Voynich Ninja (https://www.voynich.ninja) +-- Forum: Voynich Research (https://www.voynich.ninja/forum-27.html) +--- Forum: Analysis of the text (https://www.voynich.ninja/forum-41.html) +--- Thread: EVA to IPA (/thread-4923.html) Pages:
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RE: EVA to IPA - ReneZ - 12-09-2025 I like it! If you feel like continuing this, you could try to align it to the music I did on last year's Voynich MS day. RE: EVA to IPA - ErinaBee - 12-09-2025 it's easier to say /x/ than trying to force a "q" sound without the "u" after it, and /m/ is easier to say than "c-k-h" RE: EVA to IPA - Koen G - 12-09-2025 Out of curiosity, what is a "q" sound without "u" after it? Isn't it just /k/ in English? Iraq, Qatar, faqir, niqab... RE: EVA to IPA - Jorge_Stolfi - 12-09-2025 (12-09-2025, 08:58 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Out of curiosity, what is a "q" sound without "u" after it? Isn't it just /k/ in English? Iraq, Qatar, faqir, niqab... The Q without U is most often used when transcribing Arabic, to represent a consonant that does not exist in English -- the "voiceles unaspirated uvular plosive" ق, which sounds sort of like English K (which also exists in Arabic) but is articulated further back in the throat. TIL that faqir is the transliteration of the original Arabic term for ascetics who renounced to worldly possessions and concerns to serve Allah. It has been extended to similar people in other religions, notably Indian gurus, and as such the term is most commonly written in English as "fakir" (which is how I knew it). All the best, --jorge |