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VMs: Interesting find



qopchekche

Word formed by backward scanning. The word form chekche does not appear in
my sample text but does here
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~stolfi/voynich/Notes/009/hea-c.factored ending
with y giving chekchey. Whereas qop always appears to start words in the
sample I have. So the qop here runs into what appears to be the start of
another vms word. Maybe a standard prefix according to the construction
rules?

Another strange one, scharchl, can be split into word forms s.char.chl which
are all stand alone in the vms. Tenuous, I admit, but so far the scans do
not seem to deviate from the general word structure.

Interestingly this "<f35r.P.10;A> oaiin chaiin ckhy r chl s chochy daiin"
was found here
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~stolfi/voynich/Notes/015/pages-html/f35r.html

A few more examples for what it's worth. Maybe these also break down in this
manner I haven't checked these.

qopchekchs
qodchy
poldchckh
poldchcky
olchocth
olchocty
kotchdal
teeodam
teeodan
doldar
shydas
olchodey
tydlo
olchodol
doldom
ddor
ydarodsf
odyd
poldcheal
poldcheam
poldchean
deeear
poldcheas
deeeay
chkeee
soleeg
dchodeeen
dchodeeeo
dchodeees

Just checked dchodeeen and dcho seems to be stand alone as well as deeen.
Dcho appears in my sample but deeen only appears as part of okshodeeen. The
question is does oksho appear as a stand alone in the vms?

Just checked in my sample and hey presto oksho appears as a stand alone word
and not merely at the start of words as okshodeeen would suggest.


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