pfeaster > 02-03-2023, 04:54 PM
(01-03-2023, 09:06 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.If the author of the book (and for author of any books written in any language) writes prefix by concatenating to a word next to it, that author should write the same prefix in same way in every time. That is, if the prefixes are written separately from the word in that author's language, they should always be written separately. However, if the word is written by concatenating to a prefix, it should always be expected to be written adjacent.
However the author of the VM-texts have been write some parts that you interpret as prefixes, both separately and adjacently throughout the texts. Linguists who seeing prefixes in VM papers must explain this issue.
Ahmet Ardıç > 02-03-2023, 06:44 PM
(02-03-2023, 03:38 PM)cvetkakocj@rogers.com Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(01-03-2023, 09:06 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Are prefixes written adjacent to the words that follow them (concatenated), or are they written unconcatenated?Hi, Ahmet,
[from an article on Turkish grammar, I copied the following: In some languages, including Sindhi, Hindustani, Turkish, Hungarian, Korean, and Japanese, the same kinds of words typically come after their complement. To indicate this, they are called postpositions (using the prefix post-, from Latin post meaning 'behind, after)... Turkish has no prefixes.]
Anton > 02-03-2023, 07:00 PM
(02-03-2023, 01:19 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.If it really bothers you and others
R. Sale > 02-03-2023, 07:19 PM
Searcher > 02-03-2023, 07:45 PM
(01-03-2023, 09:05 PM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Not involving my asumptions about e, ee and eee, I can propose only "distance 1" solution, as it the most "safe" and strict in this case or on this stage. I agree that looking at Quire 13 it seems to help not much, but it's really a question what will help there. I suppose separate elements of enciphering in the VMs may be simple, contain simple steps, but be complex together.(01-03-2023, 07:16 PM)Searcher Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I suggested that such repetitions, multiplied words are garbage in the textHow do you consider repetitions at distance 2 then? They are even more frequent than at distance 1.
nablator > 02-03-2023, 08:25 PM
(02-03-2023, 07:19 PM)R. Sale Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Such structues are found in natural language: 'again and again', 'time after time', 'drop by drop'.These are possibilities but the difficulty remains to find as many repetitions of diverse words at distance 1 as in the VMs. The repetitions at distance 2 are a lot more frequent in European languages that at distance 1 for all the reasons that you listed. In the VMs they are only a little more frequent.
Or it may be that 'A' is a conjunction, like and, or, then - as part of a text that might read: "(composed of x) AND B AND (y)". A summation of these examples would demonstrate the variations, locations and the repetitions of such structures and provide a comparative vocabulary.
Ahmet Ardıç > 02-03-2023, 08:38 PM
(02-03-2023, 04:54 PM)pfeaster Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(01-03-2023, 09:06 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
[I'm not at all convinced that the structure of Voynichese words reflects a linguistic structure with prefixes and suffixes.]
We have not come across a single prefix in the ATA VM reading study so far. But we wouldn't be surprised if we come across this, because Turkish also has prefixes. The structure of Turkish is accepted as an agglutinative language by linguists in general.This definition should not exclude prefixes because they exist in Turkish, but word suffixes are much more overwhelming in number than prefixes.
[inconsistency in spacing -- in itself -- isn't evidence against the existence of prefixes.]
In fact, not a single linguistic evidence has been obtained that there are prefixes in VM texts. These are nothing more than treating researchers's such predictions as if they had come true.
[It's easy to find documents in which the same expression appears both spaced and unspaced with the same meaning, e.g., "le dict" and "ledict" (in French) or "mit namen" and "mitnamen" (in German).]
I did a quick scan of the "le dict" and "ledict" (in French) or "mit namen" and "mitnamen" (in German) texts you reference, but there is no old manuscript which has any word where has the same prefix was written both as adjacent to and separately from following words in same text by same author in same MS-book. May be there is such manuscript but may be just I didn't see that structure in it.
In other words, I couldn't find any example European manuscript has both structure. This may be just because of due to the fact that the language in which the academic sources are written is not a language that I know, so, probably I did not analyze and search it correctly. But please, if you can present the case of that structure, which is clearly known as you have mentioned, by giving examples in a sentence and by extracting the relevant images from that original manuscript pages as photographs to see all in one single manuscript than I can understand the subject better and we all will see the evidence you mentioned here.
So I hope you can prove what you said because the claim is yours. But even if that happens, a few exceptions, as I said, do not allow us to define the general structure or treat strong probabilities as a secondary assumption.
As a matter of fact, many researches on this platform do not even consider Turkish as the strongest possibility for VM, but the evidence we present provides the most serious and early clear results on VM to date. This is clearly the case, and the majority here, looking at ungeneral exceptional situations (if there is even only one exception if you can show us), seeing them tends to as claims with a high probability of being true and ignoring the evidence we have presented. In other words, it is contrary to the logical approch of science to view the exceptionally rare case as a strong scientific probablity while viewing the strong probablity as small likelihood. The rare probablity shouldn't be more prominent than strong one.
[Out of curiosity, how does your Turkish hypothesis account for pairs such as "ar.al" and "aral," "or.chey" and "orchey," etc.?]
R. Sale > 02-03-2023, 09:13 PM
nablator > 02-03-2023, 11:15 PM
(02-03-2023, 09:13 PM)R. Sale Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.What are these 'distance 2' vords and sequences most commonly repeated in the VMs examples?Distance 1 (including across lines) in TT_ivtff_v0a:
pfeaster > 03-03-2023, 02:17 PM
(02-03-2023, 08:38 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.So I hope you can prove what you said because the claim is yours. But even if that happens, a few exceptions, as I said, do not allow us to define the general structure or treat strong probabilities as a secondary assumption.