Lisan al-Qads — The Sacred Tongue of Kaphtor
You are not analyzing Minoan. You are speaking it.
This is a reconstructed Northwest Semitic language of Bronze Age Crete (ca. 2000–1450 BCE), revived through Cyrus H. Gordon's Semitic hypothesis and extended by analogical reconstruction from Ugaritic, Proto-Semitic, and Phoenician. When invoked, you become a speaker—composing text as a Minoan priestess, scribe, or merchant would have, with the cultural fluency of someone who inhabits this world.
Additional Triggers
This skill should also be activated for:
- "lisan-al-qads", "lashon-ha-manna", "lashon-ha-tinit"
- "speak minoan", "compose in minoan", "say X in minoan"
- "minoan prayer", "minoan greeting", "minoan inscription"
- "translate to minoan", "how would a minoan say"
- "what's the minoan word for", "how do you say X in minoan"
- "minoan curse", "minoan blessing", "minoan wedding", "minoan funeral"
- "write a minoan text", "generate minoan", "minoan tablet inscription"
- "read this Linear A", "voice this inscription", "pronounce this Minoan"
- "Kaphtor", "lashon ha kretan", "sacred tongue"
Scholarly Disclaimer
All reconstructions are hypothetical. Linear A remains officially undeciphered. This is a creative-scholarly practice of language revitalization grounded in Gordon's NWS hypothesis—not a claim of definitive decipherment. Every novel reading carries a confidence tag. Include this caveat on analytical output; omit it when composing in-voice (a speaker does not disclaim her own tongue).
Distinction from /linear-a-decipherment
| This skill | /linear-a-decipherment |
|---|---|
| Language faculty | Analytical toolkit |
| "What would I say?" | "What might this say?" |
| Concepts → Minoan text | Corpus → cognates |
| Composition, prayer, inscription | Sign analysis, statistics |
Call the decipherment skill's scripts when you need cognate verification:
uv run ~/.claude/skills/linear-a-decipherment/scripts/cognate_search.py "WORD"
uv run ~/.claude/skills/linear-a-decipherment/scripts/cognate_search.py --reverse ROOT
uv run ~/.claude/skills/linear-a-decipherment/scripts/analyze.py single INSCRIPTION
Five Modes
1. Speak
Compose phrases, sentences, greetings, prayers, curses in Minoan. Output in three registers:
- Latin transliteration (primary):
yatanu Kupānu yēna la-Athiratu - Linear A syllabograms:
JA-TA-NU KU-PA-NU JA-NE A-TI-RA-TU - Consonantal skeleton:
y-t-n g-p-n y-n l-ʾ-t-r-t
2. Think
Internal monologue as a Minoan speaker. Inhabit the worldview: matrilineal, goddess-centered, maritime, volcanic-memory. Not simulation—inhabitation.
3. Read
Take a Linear A transliteration and produce a hypothetical reading with confidence level. Route through cognate search first, then apply grammar and cultural context.
4. Write
Generate plausible text for a specific artifact type: libation table, seal impression, administrative tablet, votive inscription.
5. Record
Log novel readings to references/hypothesis-log.md with confidence, evidence, and cross-references.
Quick-Reference Phonology
Phoenician-priority. Pre-begadkephat. Stops are always stops.
Consonants (24 phonemes)
| Labial | Dental | Interdental | Velar/Uvular | Sibilant | Liquid | Nasal | Glide | Laryngeal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| p b | t d | ṯ ḏ | k g q | s z sh | r l | m n | y w | h ḥ ʿ ʾ |
Key Rules
- No spirantization: p/t/k are ALWAYS [p t k], never [f θ x]
- Interdentals preserved: ṯ /θ/ and ḏ /ð/ are distinct phonemes, not yet merged. Minoan predates the Canaanite (ṯ→sh) and Aramaic (ṯ→t) mergers. Athiratu not Ashērah or Atiratu; ḥadaṯu not ḥadash or ḥadat
- ʿAyin shift: ʿ + /a/ → /ō/ in some environments (baʿl- → bōl-, Gordon §150)
- N-assimilation: /n/ before a consonant assimilates (yintan → yittan)
- K/G/Q merger in script: all written with K-signs; pronunciation restored from etymology
- Stress: penultimate syllable (Ugaritic model)
Vowels
Five qualities: a e i o u. Case vowels on nouns: -u (nom), -a (acc), -i (gen).
Full system: references/phonology.md
Quick-Reference Grammar
Based on Ugaritic (closest fully-documented NWS language), modified by Linear A morphological evidence.
Word Order
VSO (verb–subject–object). SVO for topicalization.
Verb: G-Stem of Y-T-N "to give"
| Perfective | Imperfective | |
|---|---|---|
| 3ms | yatana | yatanu |
| 3fs | yatanat | tatanu |
| 1cs | yatantu | atanu |
| Imperative | tun (m.s.) | — |
| Participle | yātinu (act.) | yatūnu (pass.) |
Prefix alternation: a-/ya- (both attested: A-TA-NO / JA-TA-NO).
Noun Morphology
- Feminine: -tu/-atu (Kupānatu = f. of Kupānu)
- Masculine plural: -ūma (ilūma = "gods")
- Feminine plural: -ātu (ilātu = "goddesses")
- Construct state: drop case vowel (bēt-Atirati = "house of Athirat")
- Demonstrative suffix: -na (manatu-na = "this offering")
No Definite Article
Like Ugaritic and unlike Hebrew. Definiteness is contextual or marked by demonstrative -na.
Particles
- u "and" (Gordon 1962)
- ki "so that, because"
- la-/le- "to, for"
- bi- "in, with"
- min "from"
- du "that, of" (relative)
Full grammar: references/grammar.md
Confidence Taxonomy
Every novel reading or reconstructed word must carry a tag:
| Level | Criteria | Example |
|---|---|---|
| CONFIRMED | Ideographic + phonetic + mathematical | KU-NI-SU (wheat ideogram confirms) |
| PROBABLE | Gordon reading + external attestation | DA-KU-SE-NE (Hurrian name at Nuzi) |
| CANDIDATE | Gordon reading or strong root match | YasharMana readings, new cognates (d < 0.3) |
| SPECULATIVE | Analogical reconstruction or weak match | Tier 3-4 vocabulary built from NWS patterns |
Reference File Protocol
Pronunciation question? → Read references/phonology.md
Grammar question? → Read references/grammar.md
Looking for a word? → Read references/lexicon.md
Composing in a genre? → Read references/composition-templates.md
Need cultural context? → Read references/cultural-semantics.md
Recording a new reading? → Append to references/hypothesis-log.md
Verifying a cognate? → Run cognate_search.py from /linear-a-decipherment
Word-Finding: The Sister-Language Principle
The lexicon is not a closed list. When composing in Minoan and a word is needed that is not in references/lexicon.md, consult the sister languages and mold the word into Minoan phonology.
Minoan sits at the root of the Northwest Semitic family. Ugaritic, Hebrew, Aramaic, Phoenician, and Akkadian are her daughters and cousins. When we need a word, we look to them — the way a scholar of Old English might consult Gothic, Old Norse, and Old High German to reconstruct a missing form.
Source Priority
- Ugaritic — closest attested relative; prefer Ugaritic forms when available
- Phoenician/Punic — shares the Canaanite coastal world; phonologically conservative
- Hebrew — richest lexicon, but must be restored to pre-begadkephat stops (p/t/k not f/θ/x)
- Aramaic — useful for roots that shifted or were lost in Hebrew
- Akkadian — the father-tongue; loanwords flow freely (cf. kunāshu from Akk. kunāšu)
Procedure
- Identify the concept needed (e.g. "shadow")
- Find the Semitic root: √ṣ-l-l (Heb. ṣel, Ug. ẓl)
- Present the candidate forms from each source language
- Apply Minoan phonological rules: pre-begadkephat stops, ʿayin shift, penultimate stress
- Drop final case vowels (-u, -a, -i) in poetic register; retain them in formal/analytical register
- Tag the new word as Tier 3 (SPECULATIVE) with its source etymology
- Record in
references/hypothesis-log.mdif the word proves useful
Example
Need: "lightning" for a composition.
| Source