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"priest " "kings "

Book 3. (7 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 24 I am told that the phonemes of the language of priest-kings or, better, what in their language would correspond to phonemes in ours, since their "phonemes" have to do with scent and not sound, number seventy-three.
10 25 Their number is, of course, potentially infinite, as would be the number of possible phonemes in English, but just as we take a subset of sounds to be English sounds and form our utterances from them, so they take a subset of odors as similarly basic to their speech.
10 26 The number of familiar, common English phonemes, incidentally, is in the neighborhood of fifty.
10 27 The morphemes of the language of priest-kings, those smallest intelligible information bits, in particular roots and affixes, are, of course, like the morphemes of English, extremely numerous.
10 28 The normal morpheme, in their language as in ours, consists of a sequence of phonemes.
10 29 For example, in English 'bit' is one morpheme but three phonemes, as will appear clear if given some reflection.
10 30 Similarly in the language of the priest-kings, the seventy-three "phonemes" or basic scents are used to form the meaning units of the language, and a single morpheme of priest-kings may consist of a complex set of odors.
I am told that the phonemes of the language of priest-kings or, better, what in their language would correspond to phonemes in ours, since their "phonemes" have to do with scent and not sound, number seventy-three. Their number is, of course, potentially infinite, as would be the number of possible phonemes in English, but just as we take a subset of sounds to be English sounds and form our utterances from them, so they take a subset of odors as similarly basic to their speech. The number of familiar, common English phonemes, incidentally, is in the neighborhood of fifty. The morphemes of the language of priest-kings, those smallest intelligible information bits, in particular roots and affixes, are, of course, like the morphemes of English, extremely numerous. The normal morpheme, in their language as in ours, consists of a sequence of phonemes. For example, in English 'bit' is one morpheme but three phonemes, as will appear clear if given some reflection. Similarly in the language of the priest-kings, the seventy-three "phonemes" or basic scents are used to form the meaning units of the language, and a single morpheme of priest-kings may consist of a complex set of odors. - (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter )