Within many natural languages, maintaining consensus in one universe, within a single timeline, is hard enough. In a multiverse with multiple competing timelines where events both did and did not happen, wires can get crossed quick. Alphabit is a language designed to simplify and unify communication across multiple universes at once. Though this may sound daunting, it is no harder to learn than any other constructed language.
- Distinguish the Alphabit language from an alphabit clause - Identify the parts of an alphabit clause - Write your first alphabit clause
The alphabit clause is the base unit of the Alphabit language. Sometimes reffered to as Schrodinger's clause, or simply the alphabit, the alphabit clause can be used to organize information in time, across multiple realities, simultaneously. It is composed of four universes, or verses. Each verse is a timeline made of three bits. So what's a bit?
Let's begin with a brief poem about the moment before a new adventure:
Here I stand before I open the door
Now tweak the second line...
Here I stand before the heavy, locked, door
...and the picture changes. Twin Universes, one of freedom, the other, confinement, with only a door between. Two interdependent ideas entangled in this way make a bit.
...and it is revealed that the two are separated not in space, but time. the door, the key, the opening, - like - the faces of a coin, the metal that binds them, and the final flip. A pair of ideas entangled in this way are the contents of an alphabit. ...
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