This project is a fascinating exercise in orthographic maximalism that pushes the boundaries of phonetic representation. However, it ultimately prioritizes creative novelty over the functional simplicity essential to a practical writing system.
Deep Dive
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Deep Dive
I Created 100 NEW LettersHinzugefügt:
26 letters in the alphabet isn't enough.
I think we need a lot more. Probably like 100 letters total. And so in this video, I am making our alphabet much much bigger and giving us 100 letters.
So let's start. And also guys, some of these get really crazy and weird towards the end and the middle. So just stay tuned for all of these. Trust me, it's worth it. And so obviously to start, we have the original 26 letters in this alphabet, but they're going to be kind of mixed in there. They're not completely in order. And so just bear with me with this ordering. The first letter on our list is not even the first letter. It's the zeroth letter. And this is called zetron. Now, in previous videos, I've explained what this does.
But it essentially means nothing. Like it's the absence of speech or text. And so this has no sound. It is the zero of the alphabet. But for our case, it's the first letter of the alphabet. This is the from the cerillic alphabet. And basically all Slavic languages use this letter. This makes the sound like in vision instead of like an S or a Z. We have this. It's the z sound. Oh yeah, the j. This upside down lowercase e is our third letter called the schwah. And it makes the uh sound. Kind of like a u, but it's not. Apparently, it's the most common vowel sound in speech. So the schwa. And after schwa is a bit of a funny one. If you've ever seen letters like the ash or the or ethal, it's just a vowel mixed with the letter e. And I decided to do that with a lot of vowels in this video. And credit to Jack of Spades 715. He kind of gave me this idea. All props to him for this. But for our first one that's going to do this is the schwa with an e. This is called the schwam the schwam. Um, whatever sound these would make, it's uh mixed with e i the schwam. I don't know. But this is our first letter that combines the two.
So this is our first legature of this alphabet. And finally, our first good letter known as the play. And this makes the sound, the tongue click, because we really need a letter for that in English. Just bear with me. There's a couple more tongue ones, but this makes the sound. And it's called the muff.
Kind of write it like a star, but you kind of just make it looking up, but you end up just making it look like a really weird backwards R. It makes the sound.
And for our final tongue one, this makes the sound. I hope my mic picked that up.
But it's called the he the he the he essentially slapping your tongue against your front teeth. I don't know how many people can actually make this sound.
I've never even like seen people do it.
I kind of just have done it before. So anyways, on to one that combines a word into one letter. This is the aen and it makes the then sound. So when you want to write then like it happened then you would use this letter. It's then the a then. This came from my previous video and it kind of seems useless now in the alphabet, but since I made it, it's here. Now, I know this is kind of a weird order, but this is the only place I could really think of putting it, but this is what I call the maththe. Now, this is a letter that was proposed by Paul Matthysse back in like 2013, and it's a letter for the word 'the', since 'the' is the most common word in all of English. Now, I made my own version, which you'll see later on, but I wanted to just put this in here because I addressed it in my last video, and this guy spent like $39,000 or something trying to promote this letter to make it part of the alphabet. And everyone was like, "No, we don't like it." And so, I felt bad and here it is putting it here for free. And and it didn't have a name, so I called it the the mad the, you know. Here we have another vowel called the ram's horn. Now, this is basically from the IPA. I think it's derived from a different language, but it makes this sound.
>> Nice vowel. I couldn't remember to pronounce it cuz most vowels sound the exact same, but another vowel for your troubles. And then finally, our first letter that was from the original alphabet, >> A.
>> If you don't know what sound this makes, I do not know how to help you. Next up, I decided to add the number eight to our alphabet. Why? Well, a lot of people when they want to be like edgy or cool and they like type a username and it has like eight like I hate you or something.
I don't know why that's the first thing I thought of, but they'll use the number eight to represent the letters a t. And so I'm like, well, why not just make it a letter at that point? So, here it is.
And this lowercase version is my lowercase 8 from a previous video I did where I made lowercase numbers. Yes, that that is lowercase. And sticking to that theme, we have the at symbol with the uppercase being I'm pretty sure it's Pixel's original idea. So, credits to him for this design, but yes, the at symbol for a t at. It's now a letter.
You're welcome.
There's a lot of a sounding things in this video, I know. And back to some normal looking letters. We have the ash.
And it makes the a sound. Now, I know a already kind of does this, but this is from old English. And it was like ah, like in cat. You spelled it with an ash.
supposed to be a mixture of a and e. So I guess it makes ah. Now these two Greek letters go hand in hand called the alpha and the beta. Now this is what the alphabet is named after these two cuz they're the first two letters of the Greek alphabet. Now normally the capital and the other capital look like a normal A and B. But for this I kind of stylized them a little better just so they're distinct from the actual A and B. and they're kind of useless in a phonetic sense, but I thought they needed to be represented because the whole term alphabet comes from these guys. So, let's give them the credit they deserve.
And then alpha and beta, we finally reach B. And after that, we have of course C and then C with a sadella. Now, I know this is different in a lot of languages, but in some this makes the ch sound and that is the version we are using for this. And I personally call it the chur just to make it a better name than C with a sadella. And so for this whole alphabet, it is called the chir.
Now, since we had the at@ symbol, we're going to be using a symbol that I made in a previous video called the do symbol. So unlike an email, you have the at@ symbol to shorten a t. So why not have a.com symbol to shorten.com.
So that is what this is. And since I added at to the alphabet, I decided to add com to the alphabet as well. Not really sure when you would use this in normal phonetic speech, but here you go.
After the C's, we have the D and then the E. Now, the E makes the sound. It's like th but more of a sharp th sound.
We'll get into the softer th later, but essentially words like that or the that is the th sound that you would replace with the e. All right. Now, we got the three e. So, let's talk about them.
First up, we have the e. It's just e.
Next, we have what I like to call the limum. And this makes the e e sound like e, you know, like I don't know why you would use it, but it's another liature with e and e. So it's the same thing we've been doing with vowels previously, but with e itself. And then lastly, we have what I like to call the earler.
Now, this is a liature of e and r, which I'm kind of surprised we didn't have before. It's kind of useless because r kind of already makes the sound, but eer is so commonly used. Why has no one ever thought of inventing this? And so here we go. The earler. Then we have boring F. And guys, just stick around. I know it's a little boring right now, but trust me, these are getting a lot weirder and crazier in here. So, let's just keep going. Now, let's talk about the G variants. So, first up, we have the insular G. Now, this was used way back in the day in like the Great Britain area before they really had the Latin script. And so, it kind of made the G sound. It was a mix of the G and this letter, the yoke, which I'll get into in a second. And it's kind of useless. And so what it's going to be used phonetically for is if there is a double G or a double yoke, this will be the first G of it. It's kind of like the long S back in old English, which I'll also get to in a little bit, but that's insular G. Now, this is the yoke, and it makes the the G the the sound it makes at the end of y. It kind of made the ch sound in like buck or like the gh sound kind of just like you get the idea. It's G, but a little fancier. And then lastly, we have the G, which just makes the G sound. sometimes J. I'm not going to get into that. All right, we got H variants now. So, obviously, first off, there's H. And then, of course, from the maltes, we have the H bar and it makes more of the H, the H sound. It's more further back in the throat. If you think of like a villager sound, like a, you know, it's kind of like that, a lot less crackling in the throat, obviously. And then these two halfh variants are from the Claudian letters. Well, not really the second one, but the first one. So, back in the years 41 through 51, yes, the double-digit years, Rome had an emperor called Claudius. And he decided to make three new letters that I'll get into later. This one is the first of those letters, literally just called the half H. And this is a vowel, believe it or not, and it makes this sound.
I couldn't figure out how to pronounce it myself. But then this reversed half is from a different emperor later, and it makes more of an aspirated H or like a rough breathing sound. And here's a pronunciation on screen if I can find one. But all these H variants are beautiful and since I added this H, I had to add the reversed H. But anyways, let's talk about Russia. Now, these three are from the Russian alphabet. Now, let me go through them slowly. So, let me just give you the names of these. These are the names.
I'm sorry. I could I didn't want to try to pronounce them. This one in the middle makes the e sound and it is a vowel. And the only reason I picked it is because it looks like two letters, but the Russians call it one letter. And I think that is just like respect, you know, that's based. Okay. I completely think that's a valid what I think it's totally valid to just make two different symbols one letter cuz there's like there's a clear space in between it. You would think it's two letters, but it's not. It's one. But as for this one and this one, these are a little bit different. This one prevents palatilization and this one causes pateralization. Now, what does this mean? Well, let's look at the Russian word for nose called nos. I think I'm pronouncing it right. If we spelled it like this, it would be pronounced nos.
You know, no platilization. But if we spell it like this, it's more of a nos.
So, platilization kind of adds like a little mini y in there. So, this is nos and this is seems kind of useless, but in Russian, this is very prominent, I'm pretty sure. And these are what they call signs. So this is a hard sign and this is a soft sign. So these two letters don't make a sound at all. They are only there to help change the phonetic structure of the word I guess or the consonant before it. And so yeah, that is my horrible explanation of these three Russian letters. And my apologies if I misrepresent or misquote or mispronounce any of these letters from other languages. I tried my best to get everything right, but I am human and I will make mistakes. Next up, we have I.
And then we have the IE liature. This one everyone knows makes the I or the I sound. But for this one, I like to call it the Eiffel. This doesn't make the I sound or the E sound. I kind of try to merge them together. The Eiffel, you know, I don't I don't know. But that's the sound it makes. Just merge I and E as best as you can. And that is the sound it creates. Quick speed round. J, K, L, and M. End of speed round. And now for some N variants. We of course have the N which makes the N sound. Then we have the n from Spanish. This makes the ny sound more of an n y or a palatalized n. Then of course we have the n which makes the ng sound. It's a merge of n and g basically a liature of it. And these are our three ns. Now I don't know why it took me so long to add to n. This is such a common letter not in English but like outside of English like Spanish. Like I see this letter a lot and I don't know why it took me three videos to add it. So my bad guys. This is the Na. You're welcome. Okay, these are the O variants. First off is O, obviously. Next up is the EL or the Ul.
In my previous video, I just designated it to the ooh sound. So, I would call it the ooth because we don't really need an E sound. We already have that like twice. So, this makes the ooh sound. And then last, we have everyone's favorite O variant, the multiocular O. Now, this letter was used once in a manuscript from 1429 in a copy of the book of Psalms. Now, I believe this is the cerillic script. If I said the wrong name, I am so sorry. I'm trying to think. I didn't write it in my notes for some reason. But anyway, this is a cerillic O variant, and it's used once by some scribe that wanted to write many seraraphim, and he used this O in it.
Why? I don't know. He was trolling. But for some reason, Unicode literally added it even though it's been written down once. And so, here we go. It's going to be used a lot more now in our alphabet.
And then this is just a different sorillic o variant I made as the lower case. Now this makes the or sound not with r but like a o sound. So in the word aura or or this uses this letter.
So when you write or you better not capitalize it. You better just use the lowercase one. It's a lot easier. Trust me. Unfortunately for P, Q and R, they got no variance. Sorry, but they're still here. All right, we got four S variants. Let's get through all of them.
First up is just S, the S sound. Next up, we have the long S, which was used back in old English to where when there was two S's, they had the long S instead for the first S. I don't really know why. Now, technically, it's uppercase variant would have just been the S, but for this, I added a little S with a little dash just to kind of make it different. And speaking of long S, next up we have the Esset, which is a combination of the long S and the tailed Z. The tailed Z just looked like a really weird three. This is used in German as its own unique letter and it is basically just the double S sound.
I'm not entirely familiar with why they need it, but it is a cool letter and a lot of you guys requested it and so I added it. It is a cool letter. I'm not saying it's useless, but it's useless here, but we have it here cuz you guys wanted it. And then of course, lastly, we have the esh. Now was used in the African alphabet. And in 1928, they took the capital sigma and made it the capital version of the SH. And the SH obviously makes the sh sound. Well, it obviously makes the sh sound for shh.
And so, no, this isn't sigma. Sigma is not in this alphabet. It looks like sigma cuz they just took the capital sigma, but it's s, not sigma. Sorry.
Now, this next one is a little bit confusing, and it's technically an S variant, but not really. So this is another one of those Claudian letters that that random Roman emperor just made that nobody used afterward. This is called the anti- sigma. Yes, we sigma's not in it, but anti- sigma is. Now these are two like variants of it kind of. But I just made this double one the uppercase and this one the lower case just for simplicity sake. But these make the BZ sound and the PS sound. So like or I think that's what Wikipedia said.
It didn't give me a pronunciation on them. just said what it spelled pronunciation would be. But anyways, yes, anti- sigma. It's It's definitely not a backwards C. Now, I botched the handwriting on this, but this looks like a cat and for good reason because this makes the sound like a like a cat hissing at you. Why would I forget that?
And it's called the So, it's like the letter with two S's at the end or an S if you really want to do that or a long S and an S, whatever way you want to spell it. It's the Now, I put it with the S's because it kind of sounds like an S variant, but it's not.
It's its own unique thing. Sorry it took so long to have an actually cool letter again. After that, we have the boring T.
And finally, we've reached the crown jewel of old English, the thorn, and its varants that I didn't cover in the last video. The thorn makes the soft th sound like in the word thorn. So, it's not thev, it's th you know, a very softer version. Right now, these two variants took me forever to figure out what they actually meant because like there's like three different sources that all said three different things of what these meant. But I think I have the right answer. So back in the day when scribes were writings on scrolls and stuff, they wanted to save some space, save some handwriting. And so they had these two thorn variants with different dashes for different words. So this version meant that and this version meant through. And so I guess you just call it the that letter and the through letter or the up dash thorn or down dash thorn. I don't really care. I didn't really come up with names for these. These are the thorn variants. Everyone's favorite old English letter that they removed from the alphabet for literally no reason because they didn't have the the physical version of it for the printing press. This is such a useful letter. I do not want to write th or y. I want to write thorn. So I'm bringing back thorn.
Next up we have the u and then the uee liature. Now, this one I have called the UHL. It's like ethl or euthl, but it's with a u. So, it's ethel. Now, what sound does this make?
I don't really know. I've kind of just designated it to just being when there's a word with u and e. You just do that just for the sake of saving space typing or whatever. There's not really a sound I could give it that's a mix of u and e.
So, there you go. It's just when there's a u and an e, just use that letter instead. After those two is just v. And then we have w in its variance. So, let's get into those. So, first off, W.
I hate the name W. There's no W in the spelling of the name. So, in my previous two videos, I called it WR. W N W. Now, a lot of you guys didn't like that cuz you're like, well, there's a letter called win, so why not just have win?
And so, I added win, which is W Y N.
Win. But then after win, we have this one. What is this one? It's just an F upside down. Well, this is actually a Claudian letter. Yes, the Roman Emperor, he's back for one final shebang with this one. Now, this one is called the digama inversome or the digama, but the full name was digma inversome. So, it's it's an upside down F. Okay. Now, this one could be used for the W sound like W. Or it can also be used for the V sound like VV. So, you can use it in either way you want. And I had to add it because I added the other two Claudian letters. So, why not just add his third one because we can't let him die in vain, guys. His letters were the most useful letters to ever be created by any Roman emperor or any leader in general.
And so, here we go. Wor win digama inversal. This is really stupid. After the W's, we have the X, which makes the or the It's an X. Why am I trying to explain an X? And up next, we have the chiro, which is a variant of the chrytogram. Now, this is a mix of the Greek letters chi and row, which were the first two letters to spell Christos, or the word for Christ. So, yes, this is the Jesus letter. It they used it back in the day for the name Jesus. And I thought it looked cool. So I was like, I got to add it, right? I mean, represent that Jesus.
But I also decided to give it a better use than just meaning Jesus. Let's take the word hallelujah, right? If we add the chiro to the beginning of it, makes the whole hallelujah word and it sounds like hallelujah. So the chiro when you add it to a word, it makes the whole word like a choir angelic singing word, right? It completely changes the tone of how you pronounce the word. But if you have it just by itself, it's just a word for Jesus. So if you wrote Jesus or Christ or Jesus Christ, you could just use the chirro. So there you go.
Religious letter. Pretty cool. So this one makes the knuckle crack sound and it is called the knuckle crack.
The the knuckle the knuckle crack. The the knuckle crack.
I I already popped my knuckles earlier, so that was kind of weird. My bad. But yes, it's called the knuckle crack, but the ck at the end is just an actual knuckle crack. So, have fun trying to pronounce that one when you want to say the word, especially if your knuckles already cracked. Kind of like a limited time letter sort of thing. Next up, we have Y and then the Y ligature. And I didn't really come up with a name for this because it's literally just another writing for the IE liature. Makes the exact same sound because Y when it is a vowel, it's just an I sound, right? So, for this, it's a vowel and it just makes the same sound as the IE. And honestly, the name could just be the YE liature. I don't care. And then we have Z. And there's still quite a few letters after this. Surprisingly, I added a lot more after this. So, let's keep going, shall we? Now, these two got requested a lot.
And I mean, a lot. I think this was the most requested two out of all the comments on my previous two videos. So, this is Ian, and this is Ver. I think that's how you pronounce them. I already forgot, but I watched part of the episode that had them in it. Now, these are from a YouTube show called The Battle for Dream Island. Now, this is the 27th letter, and this is the 28th letter of the alphabet in their cannon.
I guess in the episode they had this whole timeline mix mishap whatever and so the timeline was being messed up and then these two appeared out of nowhere like oh yeah we're the 27 letter we've always been here now this one I guess makes the Ian sound and this one doesn't have a canonical sound that I could find on the wiki and from what I saw on like fan Reddit forums they are like it probably makes the verted sound. So, these two are just pronounced exactly how their name already is, which I guess makes them logs because they don't just make one single sound. They make multiple sounds of different letters.
But if I misdraw wise, I'm sorry. I never really watched the show. I only watched the one half of the episode that had them and I looked on the wiki. I tried to do as much research as possible, so hopefully I did these two justice for you guys. Now, next we have the actual 27th letter of the alphabet back in the day called the amperand with its lowercase variant which is just how I write my and symbols. Back in like the 191 1800s kind of when they recited the song they'd say xyz and per se and and so over time and say and kind of just merges into the word amperand and so that's where this got its name. This wasn't technically a letter that's why it's per se and it's kind of a letter but now it is literally a letter. So there you go. Now this one you might be a little bit confused on.
This is the apostrophe with an uppercase variant I made up. Now, you might be like, "Why the heck are you adding a literal punctuation into this alphabet?"
Now, hear me out. I guess some people back in the day kind of theorized.
They're like, "Shouldn't the apostrophe be a letter?" I mean, it kind of is. It replaces letters in speech, like in contractions and stuff. So, why not have it be a letter? And it never took off.
No one ever actually made it a letter.
But, I kind of like that idea, and I was like, why not, you know, make it a letter? Now, it doesn't have a sound. It just replaces certain letters. So, it's used the exact same way. It's just considered a letter now. And it also has a capital form. So, cool. Now, this one's a fan favorite from my past two videos. One I made and it's called kaputa, but more formally known as kaput. You know, so it makes the sound, a complete clearing of the throat noise.
And I made this with a friend back in high school. I've explained this in the past two videos, so if you really want to know more in depth about it, go watch those after this. But it just makes the sound. This is the and it makes the sound. It's not like the It's the not really clearing the throat. It's just a really weird throat noise I made and I was like, why not make it a letter? So, it looks like the pain you feel from doing it cuz it kind of hurts my throat doing this sound. But yeah, the All right, these two I've already explained in previous videos, but to go over them again, this one makes the sound and it's called the full full, you know, like full and so full. And then this one is called the and then I've classified it as a vowel even though phonetically and by definition it's not vowel but it has two forms. It has the and the sound. So it's just a breathing vowel and it's either sucking in or blowing out. These are two more of my letters called the t makes the sound. So t and this one is the gole makes the sound. So like pickle butle.
Now this one you won't really be able to guess. You might think it's an M and an E or like an N and an E, but it's not.
Well, well, it is, but it's not. Have you ever heard of the world's longest word? Well, it is the chemical sequence for the protein titan, and it is 189,000 letters, roughly. That's how many letters are in this word. Now, a lot of people don't consider it a real word cuz it's not really a real word. It's just a bunch of different words repeated cuz it's a chemical sequence for a protein.
But I thought, why isn't there like a letter for this word, right? I mean, we have letters for like and or the or then. So, when I have a letter for this this word, right? And so, here it is.
It's pretty cool. Now, it is called the titan. Instead of like titten, it's titlin. And how you pronounce it is by saying the entire word cuz how you pronounce amperand is by saying and. So, how you pronounce this one is is with this. I'm sorry to anyone who has hippopotamas quidelophobia.
My apologies. Up next, we have what I like to call the alarmness. Now, this is literally just the caution symbol. And the sound it makes is like any alarm sound you could make with your mouth. That's what it makes. And this lowercase variant has a lowercase exclamation mark in it. A spoiler for a future future video. All right, let's get into some more foreign letters. This is the Diana and it makes the Duh sound.
It's like D like duh. But this makes a D. So it's like you move your tongue way further in the throat and make a G. And this is from the Sinhali alphabet. And up next we have the tu and it makes the t sound and it's from the katakana Japanese syllary. This next one I'm not even going to write. I'm just going to put it on screen. This is called the bang. I like to call it the bjango just to give it a more fancy name, but it's just bang. Now you say this in the Chinese word for bang bang noodles or bang bang which means bang bang noodles but it's a type of food. Now this is one of the most complicated symbols or letters in Chinese and it had all this like fact checked by one of my Chinese friends. So if I get anything wrong, blame her. But essentially this was used way back in the day kind of like an advertisement campaign sort of thing. So people read the sign and they're like what in the heck is that? Like it's such a complicated symbol. They're like, I have to go inside and see what this is.
So, yeah, there you go. You have to use this letter twice in the name of the noodles it's used in. By and so it makes the bang sound. This letter I like to call the silent letter.
Now, what is this useful for? Why is it called the silent letter? We already have silent letters. Why do we need another one in English? Well, look at the word night. Now, you might think this K is useless. Why don't we just erase it? This is what happens when you erase the K out of night. You get a different knight. It's not like the knight that rides a horse. It's the knight as in darkness. So, we kind of need that K there. But what if I don't like the K? I mean, some people might get confused and call it canite. You know, that's stupid. We need a letter that obviously shows us it's silent. And so, for this, you would use this silent letter instead of a K. So, for any word that has a silent letter in it, I guess like this G here, you replace all silent letters with the silent letter. Now, the only reason I'm doing this is because obviously some words need the silent letter in order to differentiate it from a different word.
So, I think silent letters are good, but I think it should all be one different letter so that we don't get confused with like canite or putterodactyl or something. You see the silent letter, you're like, "Oh, that letter is silent." It's just there to kind of change the word. And so, there you go.
This is a chirping letter like the this makes the sound. the now how you pronounce it is now normally the letter is already introduced but I kind of moved it to the end of the alphabet so you'll see it later but how you spell it is the you know and it makes the sound so have fun with that chirping letter so what we have here is the chewing letter for like kind of like lip smacking chewing type of thing just loud chewing noise right all right and how you would pronounce it is the two to two you know I I'll put the spelling on the screen that's how you spell it And so yeah, if you ever want to write someone chewing and being really loud, that's how you do it. Next, we have this letter. And this makes the sound. It's a gulping noise. How you would say it is the or the but yeah, it's definitely not an upside down kaputical. It's it's its own letter. Up next, we have this letter that makes the sound and it's called the whistle. It's like whistle but with a so whistle. Then we have this scratching letter which makes the sound. It makes the sound.
Okay. And you call it the scrap. The scrap. It's scratched with the Up. Next, we finally have the snapping letter. The la. It makes the the sound. This here is called the cl and it makes the sound.
So, whenever you clap, it's this letter, the clap. Now, this next one is called the inaudible letter.
Now, whenever you're listening to someone or writing something down and you can't quite make out what they're saying, it's inaudible. Well, that is what this letter is for. It's the inaudible letter. It's kind of like when you write like a bunch of hashtags or like at sign, a bunch of random symbols just to kind of like make a bunch of like random text kind of thing. That's kind of what this does. It's the inaudible letter. Or it could be used for like cussing. So, like when someone's cussing, like they put the bar over their mouth, you could put the inaudible letter there, too. And here we are. We finally have my version of the 'the' symbol, the 'the'. This is what I made in the previous two videos because I didn't want to do the other guy's the but. But then I've added the other guy's the now. So this one's kind of if you want to be more fancy, it's the his is also the. This one could also just be like the like you know how you say the the like the sandwich. You know the sandwich. You could use this. And the other one's just the so the sandwich or the sandwich. That's going to be my distinction. All right. The second to last letter is this.
I call it the space character. Now when you use the space bar, that is a space character. Yes, it's a letter now because in Unicode space is literally a symbol. So I decided to just make it a letter. So when you type spaces that is the lowercase space and when you indent with like the tab key that is the uppercase space. Now when you're writing out this whole alphabet thing how you would write it is you just put one box.
That's how you represent it visually.
But realistically it's just a space or you could also just use two quotation marks. But yeah this is the space character. And lastly, we have my horrible drawing skills because this is an Egyptian hieroglyph. We have the bird from Egypt or used as oats Jenkins uses it. Now, in his video where he made the alphabet better, he uses this as the final letter of the alphabet. And whenever you end a sentence, you use this. And I'm pretty sure it replaces the period. So, if you really want to just end something, you can use this instead of a period. And this is his lowercase variant he drew. Um, obviously, I'll put the real one on screen cuz these are horrible drawings of it. But yes, this is the final letter. The bird from Egypt. And no, I don't think it makes a sound at all. And so there they all are, guys. This is every single letter. I wrote basically all of them out. I don't know how well you can see that. But before I go, this is a really long alphabet. And I think we need to do a couple things to it first. So obviously in my last video, I called this alphabet the Jadewa, named after the J and thewah in the beginning of the alphabet. Now this one zetron is technically at the beginning, but it's the zero letter. So, we're still going to have it called the Jetwa, but I've decided to call it the Jetwa Deluxe, and it's pretty deluxe cuz it's almost double the original, right? The original had 57. This one has 100. So, the Jetwa Deluxe is what it's going to be called in total. Now, with this, there are just more than consonants and vowels. There's obviously a lot of other things, too, right? So, obviously, there's vowels and consonants. Then, there's logos. Now, logs are just symbols used to write bigger things than it is. It's like or verb. It's not a visual combination of E, A, and N. It's just its own letter that represents E, A, and N. So, it's a log. But a liature is one that is visually combining. So like the O and E in Ul is a liature cuz you can visually see it. And then next we have complexities, which is what I have deemed letters that have sounds that aren't made with the mouth at all. So like the full or like the clapping letter, all of those are complexities cuz they use nothing with a mouth. it's completely with a different body part or different thing in general. Then we have inaudibilities. Now inaudibilities are all the letters that are just completely silent. So like the zetron, the space character, the bird from Egypt. Those are inaudibilities. You do not hear anything but their presence is still there. And then lastly, we have modifiers like those two Russian letters or like the silent letter. They're there. They have no noise, but they change how some of the letters sound in the word. So their presence is very felt. They're inaudibilities, but they modify it. So, they're modifiers. And with this, that's all 100 letters. Now, some of you were asking in my previous video with my alpha, which is just math for the alphabet, will there be alpha for the Jedeshwa? And I'm happy to say yes, specifically the Jedeshwa deluxe.
Now, since I have 100 numbers, now I have 100 letters. So, in normal math, it uses the 100 number system. And in my alpha, it uses the 100 letter system.
And so the letter line goes from zetron all the way to the bird from Egypt. And then after that you would have jadei which is in zetron which is like 10 essentially. And so if you're new here you might be very confused but just watch my channel and you'll understand all of this. But anyways I hope you enjoyed this video. It was a lot of work to write and research and I might have gotten some things wrong. So please forgive me. It's a lot trying to have a 100 letters or come up with 74 unique letters. But anyway stay fresh. God bless. I'll see you guys around. I don't know what video is coming after this cuz this this was a mental toll on me. But bye.
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