ddskbnbn > 19-07-2025, 11:40 AM
Kendiyas > 20-07-2025, 03:24 PM
Battler > 30-07-2025, 10:50 PM
(16-11-2024, 03:46 PM)MarcoP Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.It doesn't need to be a cipher. Hiragana and katakana, sure, are not alphabets, but they have two shifters - the dakuten, which voices the consonants, and the handakuten which turns h or f into p (and k into ng / ŋ in the transcription of some dialects which turn intervocalic -g- into -ŋ-). There's no reason why something similar couldn't be applied to an alphabet, so bcdfghjklmnpqrstvxz which is itself really two sounds less at least in Latin because c, k, and q represent the same sound in different context, so we already get bcdfghjlmnprstvxz, and with a voicing marker, we can in turn turn that into cfhjlmnprstx + voicing marker, yielding only 12 consonant signs.zamolxe Wrote:About the alphabet. An 24 letter alphabet can be written using 13 signs, 12 letters and one "joker"/shifter. If the joker is attached to a letter, it will change/shift it to another letter (second meaning). So the alphabet will be represented both by single signs and bigrams.
That's a special case of a verbose cipher, a scenario that is often considered. An implication is that Voynichese spaces cannot be trusted, because Voynich words are not longer than plain-text words.