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OverviewIs it possible to express ourselves with symbols independent of their sounds in spoken language? To denote basic concepts using a reasonably small set of symbols, with a pictographic link to what each represents, that can be augmented or compounded to represent more complex concepts? To capture the poetry of words in the sound of silence? Yes, it is! This book presents an outline blueprint for Symese, a universal symbolic script that is simple but not simplistic, with an elegance and coherence lacking in modern pictographic-rooted scripts. Symese is a writing system whose semiotics turns traditional alphabet-based linguistics on its head. My quest has been inspired by how the Chinese script bridges many spoken dialects and appear even in other languages like Korean and Japanese. Notwithstanding syntactical and semantic differences in the use of Chinese characters across dialects and languages, can we achieve today on a global scale what ancient civilisations did at a local level? Yes, we can! Full Product DetailsAuthor: Tim LeePublisher: Scribblese Imprint: Scribblese Dimensions: Width: 20.30cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.762kg ISBN: 9781763543508ISBN 10: 1763543501 Pages: 284 Publication Date: 10 October 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews""The creation of an entirely new script is a rare event. Academics rhapsodize about how an illiterate Alaskan genius, Uyaquq, invented a script to communicate in his central Alaskan language Yup'ik. The Cherokee genius Sequoyah became famous for inventing a script for his native tongue which survives today. But Tim Lee is even more ambitious. Uyaquq and Sequoyah created scripts for their own languages. Symese could become a medium of communication uniting all cultures. In quest of this noble aim, Tim's claim to have developed a rigorously logical and intuitive system of communication deserves to be examined."" - Michael Cook, Author & Journalist Author InformationTim Lee speaks three languages - his mother tongue (Chinese), the language of his country of birth (Malay) and English, the closest thing there is to a global language. He also speaks the language of the heart (music) - self-taught, with no formal music education. As a Business Analyst, he discovered the elegance of capturing business logic and processes in computer code. Finally, his grandchildren taught him to speak babese and toddlese. Integrating his experience of language into a whole that is more than the sum of its parts, he embarked on a decade-long quest to invent a universal symbolic script - Symese - the language of symbols. Tim thinks he has succeeded in developing a logical framework for a script that can become a living universal language.Such a labour of love is an age-old quest with hundreds of offspring and Esperanto coming closest to maturity but without achieving the critical mass needed to become self-sustaining. Has Tim succeeded? You be the judge. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |