Poul Anderson, The Byworlder, IV.
Position, gesture and possibly voluntary odours may be more important than sound;
sounds, from vibrating tympani, are only partly reproducible by a synthesizer;
the language simultaneously uses hundreds of frequencies and amplitudes;
communication may involve many concepts at once or deal with aspects of reality that human beings treat one piece at a time;
the Sigman speaks and possibly thinks more slowly than human beings;
attempts to synthesize his sounds have been annoying or even painful to him;
human drawings and alphabet have been too ugly;
constructing an artificial language manageable and comprehensible by both species failed;
Yvonne uses a computer to devise a language that obeys the harmony rules detectable in the Sigman's speech;
at last, the Sigman responds positively.
3 comments:
Kaor, Paul!
I regret that the Sigman found human drawings and alphabets ugly. It might be a minor art form, but calligraphy, the elegant and skillful writing of characters and letters, is still one of the arts. And was considered a major art in China and Japan.
Sean
Sean,
Yvonne says, "'Maybe we should have tried Chinese characters.'" (IV, p. 48)
Paul.
Kaor, Paul!
Or Egyptian hieroglyphics!
Sean
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