Having and answer and constructing evidence to support it / Having evidence and constructing an answer to support it.
In my first post I wasn't unaware that the whole thing was pretty unscientific, but I just wanted to see if this theory could work more broadly by amending it.
Now I want to dismantle it a bit and see if there is any sort of supporting "evidence"
I rather to just think of it as logical steps which can be followed.
Lets looks at EVA: "r" and "s".
If you tilt this normal r backwards so the stem is at around 45', stick a curve on the bottom of it and you have s, sort of, right? Anyway, this is basically
how to tell apart "r" and "s" in Voynichese, "s" is curved at the bottom, "r" is not. Which sounds easy enough but..
hand writing.
From the below I think its fairly simple to see "r" is made up of a "\" line and "c" (backwards) curve.
In the system I propose "r" is made of "\" followed by "c".
This should mean that "s" is made up of "c" followed by "c", following the same logic.
Example of both on a page
Looking at You are not allowed to view links.
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Login to view. (as it has very clear writing, and I happen to be on it already), do "r" and "s" work in this way within the system?
r - Conformance to system - 13/13 - r has an "o" or "a" switch when following from a "c shape" glyph and is followed by a "c shape" or switch then "\ shape"
s - Conformance to system (includes EVA: sh) - 20/25 - excluding sh - 9/13
3 of the cases I wouldn't be too sure of as they are next to plant drawings and may have unobvious spaces, 2 seem clear.
All 5 cases are caused by "ls"
So does s not work this way, or does l not work as "\"?
Maybe it reflects what the l glyph looks like also, a straight line-curve combo
If this were the case "ls" could not be preceded by a glyph ending with a "c" shape - c, e, s, h, q, f, p, k, t, g also all sh, ch, sh, cth.. etc, but that is taken care of by "h".
Search results of entire manuscript
Total results for "ls" - 445. (of which "ls" as a stand alone word - 10)
cls - 0
els - 0
sls - 1
hls - 4
qls - 0
fls - 0
pls - 0
kls - 0
tls - 0
gls - 0
Factchecking
sls - incorrect transcription, it is "rl s"
hls - all 4 cases caused by "chls". 3 cases are unclear due to spacing, might be "chl s" (chl as stand alone word - 26. s standalone 244.) You are not allowed to view links.
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Login to view. contains a clear "chls", this case would not work with the system.
So I think that shows that "l" is more likely to function as "\" than "c", but it can't only be "\" if it is often followed by a glyph starting with a "c" shape - c, e, s, h, q, g
lc - 742
le - 62
ls - 445
lh - 0
lq - 2
lg - 15 (+4 more noted below)
If l is "\C" as the above seems to suggest, we should not see results for l followed by a glyph which is a "\ shape" - m, n, i. However transitional "\ shape"
glyphs should be fairly common in comparison - f, p, k, t, d - I will include r and l also,
assuming they are from the above.
lm - 8
ln - 0
li - 1
Factchecking
lm - lg,lg,lg,im,lg - 1 case not found. 2 cases are "lm", they are both line-end in recipes
li - la
Transitional glyphs
lf - 39
lp - 40
lk - 1079
lt - 107
ld - 452
lr - 40
ll - 28
Ideally I'd check the all the conforming instances too.. but.. time.
Conclusion, "l" works as starting with \ and ending with c.
It is likely "r" also works this way and "s" starts with c and ends with c.. but I will do similar tests using these glyphs before coming to a conclusion on that.
I'm sure it will all come crashing down at some point, but for this little bit of work it was nice to see the glyph shapes just followed the function idea.