Some patterns of direct interest that relate to unique Vords and first Vords in the big-plant section (this is just a handful of examples to show some of the patterns):
- As an example of how a first Vord that appears to be a unique word might break down into components, if you take the first Vord of Plant 3r and remove the leading gallows glyph, then you get a Vord that appears at least once in most of the other sections.
- As an example of a first Vord that appears to be unique, that repeats if broken into components, the first Vord of Plant 3v is repeated in the same line (and in several other sections) if you add a prefix.
- As an example of a first Vord that appears to be unique but may represent two components, the first Vord of Plant 4v appears unique when read as ABCDEF but if it is read as ABC DEF, then ABC is a fairly common "prefix" that specifically appears at the beginnings of paragraphs, and DEF occurs on several other plant pages and a couple of pool pages.
- As an example of a Vord with ambiguous spaces, the first Vord of Plant 5v is unclear as to whether it's ABCDEF or AB CDEF. If it's one word, then it's unique, if not, it represents two Vords that are found elsewhere. The knee-jerk reaction is to assume that it's one Vord, in order to be consistent with unique Vords on other folios, but I think it should be considered both ways until that is known for certain, otherwise there might be patterns in the text that are overlooked. Note also that CDEF is frequently found with prefixes in other parts of the text and note that different transcriptions will treat words like this (with ambiguous spaces) in different ways.
This is a brief list of examples, but a study of the components that make up unique Vords provides clues as to how Vords are constructed.