Ruby Novacna > 17-07-2025, 12:22 PM
Koen G > 17-07-2025, 01:29 PM
(17-07-2025, 12:04 PM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Could be percussionem, I guess.
magnesium > 17-07-2025, 03:45 PM
(17-07-2025, 11:10 AM)MarcoP Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.From You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.. This fragment reads (transcription from You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view., footnote 79)
Hoc ungentum conficitur ex oleo et balsamo. Oleum lucet, balsamum redolet (This ointment is made from oil and balsam. The oil shines, the balsam is fragrant)
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view., this scribe often uses -3 for -et, and this is the case for “lucet” ("it shines", third person singular).
For the third word in the Voynich You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. marginalia, assuming that the text is Latin (very doubtful) and that the initial is ‘L’, a possible reading could maybe be “lucent” (where the macron stands for the missing ‘n’) - "they shine", third person plural. It would be interesting to see if the ‘c3’ abbreviation, or even just any combination with final -3, ever has a macron in L.52.
Comparing “milites” (L.52 f.11r line 10) with Voynich “multos”[?] shows that the final -s shape is (often) similar, but it appears to have been drawn in opposite directions in the two manuscripts.
magnesium > 17-07-2025, 04:00 PM
magnesium > 17-07-2025, 04:39 PM
(17-07-2025, 01:29 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(17-07-2025, 12:04 PM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Could be percussionem, I guess.
That's also my best guess.
I scanned a few dozen more pages but haven't found any "c-3" yet. With the evidence we have though, I think Marco's suggestion of "lucent" is a reasonable one. Cappelli doesn't have "c-3" but does have two examples of "consonant-3", which are transcribed as -ent, in contrast to -et.
The "apparent" is a broader abbreviation, but the principle appears to be the same. The first example "debent" is a good parallel of how we'd get "lucent".
Koen G > 17-07-2025, 05:15 PM
nablator > 17-07-2025, 05:24 PM
magnesium > 17-07-2025, 09:03 PM
(16-07-2025, 03:45 AM)magnesium Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.In the name of thoroughness, this other manuscript I just found might not be nearly as good as the first one I found, but it's still pretty decent: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
nablator > 17-07-2025, 09:46 PM
ReneZ > 18-07-2025, 12:05 AM