This is an old revision of the document!
Numerals
atel 0 | ![]() |
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araz 1 | ![]() | arash 2 | ![]() | aras 3 | ![]() | arar 4 | ![]() | aral 5 | ![]() |
arah 6 | ![]() | arab 7 | ![]() | arap 8 | ![]() | aran 9 | ![]() | aram 10 | ![]() |
arav 11 | ![]() | araph 12 | ![]() | arath 13 | ![]() | arat 14 | ![]() | arad 15 | ![]() |
araj 16 | ![]() | arag 17 | ![]() | araq 18 | ![]() | arak 19 | ![]() | araks 20 | ![]() |
Alphabet
<fc #ff0000>WARNING</fc>: This section is still work-in-progress.
(No glyphs final; numeral glyphs in table purely for author's reference.)
The kavkem alphabet is larger than the Kendaneivash alphabet (which consists of the elements a, b, d, e, g, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, o, p, q, r, s, s̈, t, u, v, y, z), since possibly digraphs have their own symbol, inspired by the numeral system where digraphs find direct use and get their own glyph as well.
It does, however, keep the Kendaneivash convention of keeping two separate alphabets - one for consonants, one for vowels. In recitations, they are often merged, with the shorter vowelphabet observing repetitions (za, sha͡i, sa͡u, re, … jo͡u, nja, ga͡i, … tsi).
z | ![]() | sh | ![]() | s | ![]() | r | ![]() | l | ![]() |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
h | ![]() | b | ![]() | p | ![]() | n | ![]() | m | ![]() |
v | ![]() | ph f | ![]() | th | ![]() | t | ![]() | d | ![]() |
j | ![]() | nj | . | g | ![]() | q kw | ![]() | k | ![]() |
ks x | ![]() | s̈ | . | ts | . |
a | . | a͡i | . | a͡u | ? | e | . | e͡i | . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
e͡u | ? | i | . | i͡y | . | i͡u | . | y | . |
y͡i | ? | u | . | u͡i | . | o | . | o͡i | ? |
o͡u | ? |
(The questionmarks denote glyphs the author is considering removing as they do not currently appear in the dictionary.)