ah, okay; thank you for clarifying that.bradrn wrote: ↑Sun Jan 09, 2022 4:54 pmIn Semitic languages, the vowels are more or less incidental to the meaning of the word: they’re very important grammatically, but in terms of distinguishing the roots themselves, they aren’t all that important. By contrast, in a language without consonantal roots, such as Korean — or English, since I’m unfamiliar with Korean — vowels play a hugely important role in distinguishing words such as pen and pin and pun and pan, or cat and kit and cut and cot, or has and his and he’s and whose.keenir wrote: ↑Sun Jan 09, 2022 4:31 pmWhen I replied initially, I was pretty sure I knew what you meant by that; but since then, doubt has crept into my brain and taken over...so, in case I misunderstood your meaning, what do you mean by "carry a much higher functional load"?bradrn wrote: ↑Sun Jan 09, 2022 1:35 am I’m confused. Isn’t the defining attribute of an abjad that it doesn’t have mandatory vowels?
Also, I’m not convinced an abjad would work well for Korean as anything other than an intellectual exercise. Remember, abjads were a reasonable choice for Semitic languages precisely because Semitic languages are based around consonantal skeletons. Korean is quite different in this regard — vowels carry a much higher functional load.
Hm, so as a pure abjad (utterly no vowels shown ever), English and Korean would fall flat utterly. But as an impure abjad like Arabic and Hebrew, it would need a lot of work before its stable?
EDIT: hm...wait, maybe also use radicals? pen-{radical ink vs pin-{radical sharp vs pan-{radical flat or cook...its a line of inquiry to try out, even if it amounts to nothing.
Its still just an intellectual exercise, granted, but this discussion helps clarify things on this subject, which I can use in future projects (always assuming my mind doesn't go blank when i need it, which also happens).