Doug Ewell wrote: > The Atlantean alphabet is a little different, though. > It was not intended to be just another cipher for English, but was > designed to write the fictional Atlantean language (invented by Marc > Okrand, who also invented the Klingon language). It has separate > letters for CH, SH, and TH, which takes it out of the realm > of straight one-for-one substitution ciphers. And then there's > the directionality issue. Atlantean is written in boustrophedon > style.
Hmmm... The Atlantean language (by Okrand) is a nice linguistic divertissement, but the script (invented by the animation artists) is a very poor attempt. IMHO, it is also didactically misguiding: kids will think that all world's writing systems are just glyph variations of their own alphabet. Atlantean script has the same 26 letters as the English alphabet, and in the same order. It even includes "c", "f", "j", "q", "v", "x", and "z", which seem pretty unusable for Atlantean phonology. On the other hand, Atlantean as long vowels and other sounds ("kh", "kw", "gw") which don't seem to have a corresponding letter. And two of the three additional letters, "ch" and "th" seem only used for writing a single word: "Thatch" (the main character's English surname). Boustrophedon was chosen by the animators because it "goes like water goes". They must have misunderstood something that Okrand told them: boustrophedon goes like an ox ("bous") ploughing a field. _ Marco