ReneZ > 23-04-2025, 12:55 PM
cvetkakocj@rogers.com > 23-04-2025, 05:24 PM
(22-04-2025, 06:36 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Anyway, these kind of illustrate my point. There is a clear difference in context between EVA o and a. These contexts roughly correspond to one of the two forms. So even when many utterances are imperfect, we still end up assigning them to different characters.In the VM, there is a clear difference between a and o, although some letterforms a and o are not that perfect, however since there are no diacritic markers to differentiate short and long vowels, the pronunciation might be different, because the short vowels are often pronounced as semivowels, or they are not written, which is often the case in the VM.
ErinaBee > 25-04-2025, 06:36 PM
cvetkakocj@rogers.com > 25-04-2025, 10:46 PM
Bluetoes101 > 25-04-2025, 11:09 PM
BessAgritianin > 26-04-2025, 07:11 AM
(25-04-2025, 11:09 PM)Bluetoes101 Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The most logical assumption, given all the available data is that is it not a language.. at least not one we know.
Dobri > 26-04-2025, 07:45 AM
(25-04-2025, 10:46 PM)cvetkakocj@rogers.com Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.If the language is not Latin, nor German, would not Slavic be the most logical assumption, since Slovenian was spoken in the Middle Ages in entire Carinthia, Carniola, Styria, Istria, parts of Tyrol, and Veneto and Friuli region of Northern Italy.For the cipher language to be of Slavic origin, it has to include some distinctive features.
cvetkakocj@rogers.com > 26-04-2025, 11:35 PM
Bluetoes101 > 27-04-2025, 01:05 AM
cvetkakocj@rogers.com > 27-04-2025, 12:55 PM
(26-04-2025, 07:45 AM)Dobri Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.One simple encoding option is that "po" could possibly be the ligature qo.You are right, EVA qo is actually po, which was a most common prefix, which was also used to form a perfective verbs. Besides that, it can also be part of the word, or preposition po, if written separately. Because the Voynich words are short, po still very seldom occurs in the middle of the word, except when they are prefixed. This is one distinguishing similarity with Slavic language.