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Re: Unofficial alphabet lists for Lojban/Latin/English, Greek, and Russian
- To: cbmvax!UUNET.UU.NET@cuvmb.cc.columbia.edu!snark.thyrsus.com!cowan
- Subject: Re: Unofficial alphabet lists for Lojban/Latin/English, Greek, and Russian
- From: cbmvax!uunet!prc.unisys.com!dave
- Date: Tue, 11 Feb 92 16:47:10 EST
- In-Reply-To: John Cowan's message of Tue, 11 Feb 1992 14:08:13 EST <9202111957.AA09874@cunixf.cc.columbia.edu>
If A and Alpha are distinguished only by the alphabet-shift letteral,
why does Aleph get a name of its own? Is it because upper-case A and
upper-case Alpha have the same glyph? If so, I don't like this,
because everybody uses the lower-case alpha to avoid this confusion.
("Everybody" meaning people who use Greek letters in formulae; I don't
know any Greek language.)
In my experience, the primary use for the non-English alphabet letters
is in writing mathematical formulae. Hence the main criterion for
letteral names is that they be easily read in that context (which
might involve a LOT of alphabet shifts!). I think whatever letteral
scheme is adopted ought to pay close attention to this issue.
Japanese kana come in two flavors: Hiragana and Katakana (not sure of
my Anglicized spelling...). These aren't alphabets, but
_syllabaries_, one glyph per syllable. [If you conclude from this
that the Japanese must use many fewer syllables than we do, you're
right.] Hence, each already has a pronunciation and an obvious
Roman alphabet (Romanjii) spelling. Now, I don't offhand know whether
they are all "legal" Lojban syllables, but most names have to get
seriously mangled in order to be legal Lojban.
On another issue: not being a physicist, I don't use femto- a whole
lot, but as a computer scientist, nano- and pico- and giga- are part
of my everyday vocabulary (and tera- is starting to be). Let's not
cripple the language for scientific use. Stay close to the metric
system, provide convenient ways to say things like "1.36^24" and
"(alpha) A (beta) --> B".