118 Additional Notes. 



Conclusion. 







The alphabet appears from this analysis of it to consist of thirty-one 

 letters, which spell all European languages. 



Three mute consonants, P, T, K. 



Three antesonant consonants, B, D, Ga. 



Three narisonant liquids, M, N, NG. 



Six sibilants, W German, F, Th, S, Sh, H. 



Six sonisibilants, W, V, Th, Z, J French, Ch Spanish. 



Two orisonant liquids, 11. L. 



Eight vowels, Aw, ah, a, e, i, y, oo, o. 



To these thirty-one characters might perhaps be added one for the 

 Welsh L, and another for whistling with the lips; and it is possible, 

 that some savage nations, whose languages are said to abound with 

 gutturals, may pronounce a mute consonant, as well as an antesonant 

 one, and perhaps another narisonant letter, by appressing the back 

 pr,^t of the tongue to the back part of the palate, as in pronouncing the 

 H, and Ch Spanish. 



The philosophical reader will perceive that these thirty-one sounds 

 might be expressed by fewer characters referring to the manner of 

 their production. As suppose one character was to express the aute- 

 sonance of B, D, Ga; another the orisonance of R, L; another the sibi- 

 lance ofW, S, Sh, H; another the sonisibilance of W, Z, J French, Ch 

 Spanish ; another to express the more open vowels ; another the less open 

 vowels; for which the word micron is here use<l, and for which the 

 word mega is here used. 



Then the following characters only might be necessary to express 

 them all; P alone, or with antesonance B; with narisonance M; with 

 sibilance W German; with sonisibilance W; with vocality, termed 

 micron OO; with vocality, termed mega O. 



T alone, or with the above characters added to it, would in the 

 same manner suggest D, N, S, Z, EE, Y, and R with a mark for 

 orisonance. 



K alone, or with the additional characters, would suggest Ga, NG, 

 Sh, J French, A, E, and L, with a mark for orisonance. 



F alone, or with a mark for sonisibilance, V. 



