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A dragon explores space, finds Amenta.
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The secrets of Delver technology could not resist decryption forever. While the tools they wielded are deeply weird, jealously guarded, and immensely complicated, living beings built the tools that brought aliens to the dragons' first world. The great calamity left ruins aplenty behind, and once grown the Seeker gathered these old tools as their very favorite sort of treasure. Dragons are not intelligent in quite the same way as a No-Tail, but they are far from stupid. They live forever and can be very determined if they set their mind to it.

The Seeker brought all its tools and treasure along with it when the world was evacuated ahead of the Tailless's relentless growth and hunger for resources. It studied under the great elder Darktooth on the new world, studied together with Darktooth (an arrangement not very common with dragons, as they are not particularly social), for a very long time. And eventually, by application of the hard claws of experiment and calculation and theorizing, the universe revealed its workings, cold and precise and mathematical. Creating more and more tools of the highest sophistication, and teaching others of its kind in exchange for wealth, and even spawning offspring and guiding them to adulthood, was all satisfying for a long while, but eventually... He got bored.

And so, the Seeker wondered if the long sleep for the journey between stars was really necessary, and got to work seeing about making it not. He managed it eventually, and built a starship, and went exploring. Stars come in a beautiful variety of kinds, and the worlds around them do too, but very, very few bear any sign of life. They are mostly barren and empty.

...Oh, this one is emitting curious amounts of low-frequency light. Worth investigating. Pushing a starship faster than light requires a touch of magic (at least for now), which he provides.

In the outer solar system of a certain star, well above the plane of the ecliptic, a black sphere the size of a city block appears and has a look around with powerful telescopes.

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Thank you. May you be blessed.

Ice goes to talk with some of the other diplomats. Partition scurries over with a big bag hanging around his neck!

I have writing materials!

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Amseli can set him up with linguists as soon as they arrive!

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He passes out sets of transparent sheets with colored characters on them. He warns the linguists that it's character based and it might be hard to learn because it was designed before anything else to be intuitive to Draak by using correspondences with the Song. The character for a Draak kind of 'looks' like a Draak does.

 

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"That'll make it harder to use casually but just that much more interesting and informative!" says a green.

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It's pretty interesting, yep. He starts explaining! It uses characters to represent nouns and adjectives, and those are mostly blocky or circular. Verbs are smaller and more like lines with things added on. Multiple nouns and adjectives can be written on top of each other rotated or shrunk or transformed in thus and such ways.

Verbs can connect to as many nounadjectives as they want and these little curves and dots indicate things like time order and what is doing a verb versus what is having a verb done to it. 'I bite rock and tree' is just 'I bite rock' with an extra bit pointing to 'tree'.

Every character has an associated color: Red green, blue, white, black, infrared, copper, silver, gold. This character means fire if it's red but steam if it's blue and lightning if it's white! He uses the plastic flimsies to write out simple thoughts as examples.

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The greens are SO fascinated. Doesn't it limit the writing system a lot to require colors? It does add a useful dimension but sharply limits the media you can use to write.

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It does, and it makes it harder to preserve if you use dyes or paint, but writing is high art and getting things just right is important and a very satisfying feeling. The precious metal colors are sometimes used interchangeably with red, blue, green. (Copper, silver, gold - white can be made from mother of pearl, black from obsidian)

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That just makes writing expensive and technically difficult.

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Originally at least half of the point of the writing system was to make written things Treasures. Treasure is perfect and lovely and the root of most good feelings, and anything you wanted people to pay attention to and emulate had to be appropriately shiny. Over the last two centuries most writers in the world agreed to change it up a bit for practicality.

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It's still pretty impractical. Maybe they could have a monochrome version with little diacritics to symbolize colors.

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He bets Draak wouldn't like it, it sounds like that be much less pretty and more importantly less Song-analogous, but he'd be interested to show some readers and see what they think if these linguists come up with something.

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It's not urgent since no one needs to write Draak in monochrome right now and anyway they are trying to learn, more than influence, the script; they were just wondering what the design constraints that produced this system were.

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He thinks Treasure-likeness and intuitive readability were the two big goals. And paper doesn't last but metal dripped into engravings does.

He has a copy of the first written thing in this system! It's engravings copied from cave art, a mythologized and illustrated history of the creation story of Draak and the first war against humans.

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Ooooh the greens want copies.

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They can take photos. Or if someone wants to pay a bunch of money for this one that works too, he remembers it perfectly and can always make another.

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His is a copy anyway, they'll settle for photos.

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Dang, he wants money to buy shiny tech toys. Well, Amseli said he'd get paid a little bit for this anyway.

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Oh yeah, their universities are footing the bill.

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Fun fact! This writing system uses base ten numbers because Draak have five claws on each paw. Lucky correspondence, or convergent evolution? Probably a lucky correspondence, he thinks.

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Yeah, five doesn't seem that special. And some Amentan cultures used to use bases eight or twelve in spite of having five-fingered hands.

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There are a lot of them, it makes sense that people would try nonstandard things once in a while.

He gives some more vocabulary and mentions that they're having a bit of a difficult time fitting new technical jargon into the system.

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"It does seem limited that way. Some of our character-based languages will squish existing characters together."

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We already combine characters a lot so that's what we've been doing, mostly. We don't have much of a spoken language and trying to create an alphabet for thoughts sounds... Impossible, so characters may be the best we can do for general use.

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This makes sense.

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He happily continues to lead them through exercises of arranging simple thoughts into dense colorful combos.

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