Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set
International Organization for Standardization
Organisation
Internationale de Normalisation
_______ ____ ___ ___ _ _ ______ _ ___
A. Administrative
1. Title
Proposal to encode the NKo script in the SMP of the
UCS.
2. Requesters name
Mamadi Doumbouya, Mamadi Baba Diane.
3. Requester type
Professors of NKo, Publishers, and Manden Community
Leaders.
4. Submission date
2002-04-06.
5. Requesters reference
www.nkoinstitute.com/nkounicode.html
6a. Completion
This is a complete proposal.
6b. More information to be provided?
No.
B. Technical General
1a. New script? Name?
Yes. NKo ( Manden
1b. Addition of characters to existing block? Name?
No.
2. Number of characters
53.
3. Proposed category
Category A.
4. Proposed level of implementation and rationale
As a simple right-to- left alphabetic script, NKo requires Level 1. ?
5a. Character names included in proposal?
Yes.
5b. Character names in accordance with guidelines?
Yes.
5c. Character shapes reviewable?
Yes
6a. Who will provide computerized font?
Mamadi
Doumbouya, Diane Baba Mamadi.
6b. Font currently available?
Yes.
6c. Font format?
TrueType
7a. Are references (to other character sets, dictionaries, descriptive texts, etc.) provided?
NO
7b. Are published examples (such as samples from newspapers, magazines, or other sources) of use of proposed characters attached?
Yes, (see below).
8. Does the proposal address other aspects of character data processing?
NO
C. Technical Justification
1. Contact with the user community?
Yes
2. Information on the user community?
Yes, see www.nkoinstitute.com/nkounicode/nkospeakers.html
3a. The context of use for the proposed characters?
Used to write
Manden language groups (
3b. Reference
4a. Proposed characters in current use?
Yes.
4b. Where?
Used in West Africa an principally by Manden people in Guinea,
Mali, Cote dIvoire, Burkina-Faso, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Benin, Gambia,
Senegal etc,
5a. Characters should be encoded entirely in BMP
Yes
5b. Rationale
Accordance with the Roadmap.
6. Should characters be kept in a continuous range?
Yes
7a. Can the characters be considered a presentation form of an existing character or character sequence?
No.
7b. Where?
7c. Reference
8a. Can any of the characters be considered to be similar (in appearance or function) to an existing character?
No.
8b. Where?
8c. Reference
9a. Combining characters or use of composite sequences included?
Yes.
9b. List of composite sequences and their corresponding glyph images provided?
See www.fakoli.net/kanjamadi/kogbe-4.htm
10. Characters with any special properties such as control function, etc. included?
No
Proposal
for the Universal Unicode Character Set
Row xx: NKO
Xx0
|
Xx1
|
Xx2
|
Xx3
|
Xx4
|
Xx5
|
0 |
q
|
k
|
Q
|
K
|
0
|
`
|
1 |
o
|
f
|
O
|
F
|
1
|
%
|
2 |
u
|
g
|
U
|
G
|
2
|
|
|
3 |
x
|
s
|
X
|
S
|
3
|
~
|
4 |
i
|
@
|
I
|
@
|
4
|
^
|
5 |
e
|
z
|
E
|
Z
|
5
|
|
6 |
a
|
y
|
A
|
Y
|
6
|
$
|
7 |
r
|
w
|
R
|
W
|
7
|
&
|
8 |
d
|
h
|
D
|
H
|
8
|
*
|
9 |
c
|
n
|
C
|
N
|
9
|
|
A |
j
|
v
|
J
|
V
|
|
|
B |
t
|
\
|
t
|
|
|
|
C |
p
|
|
P
|
|
|
|
D |
b
|
|
B
|
|
|
|
E |
m
|
|
M
|
|
,
|
|
F |
l
|
|
L
|
|
&
|
|
|
|
|
|
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Row xx: NKO
hex |
Name |
|
hex |
Name |
00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0F 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B 1C 1D 1E 1F 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 2A 2B 2C 2D 2E 2F 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 3A 3B 3C 3D 3E 3F 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 4A 4B 4C 4D 4E 4F 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 |
NKO LETTER O (showing conjoined
form) NKO LETTER OO NKO LETTER U NKO LETTER E NKO LETTER I NKO LETTER EE NKO LETTER A NKO LETTER RA NKO
LETTER DA NKO
LETTER CHA NKO
LETTER JA NKO
LETTER TA NKO
LETTER PA NKO
LETTER BA NKO
LETTER MA NKO LETTER
LA NKO
LETTER KA NKO
LETTER FA NKO
LETTER GBA NKO
LETTER SA NKO
LETTER RRA NKO
LETTER NNA NKO
LETTER YA NKO
LETTER WA NKO
LETTER HA NKO
LETTER NA NKO
LETTER NYA NKO LETTER NLA (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) NKO LETTER O (showing isolated
form) NKO LETTER OO NKO LETTER U NKO LETTER E NKO LETTER I NKO LETTER EE NKO LETTER A NKO LETTER RA NKO
LETTER DA NKO
LETTER CHA NKO
LETTER JA NKO
LETTER TA NKO LETTER
PA NKO
LETTER BA NKO
LETTER MA NKO
LETTER LA NKO
LETTER KA NKO
LETTER FA NKO
LETTER GBA NKO
LETTER SA NKO
LETTER RRA NKO
LETTER NNA NKO
LETTER YA NKO
LETTER WA NKO
LETTER HA NKO
LETTER NA NKO
LETTER NYA NKO LETTER NLA (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) NKO DIGIT ZERO NKO DIGIT ONE NKO DIGIT TWO NKO DIGIT THREE NKO DIGIT FOUR NKO DIGIT FIVE NKO DIGIT SIX NKO DIGIT SEVEN NKO DIGIT EIGHT NKO DIGIT NINE (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) NKO PUNCTUATION COMMA NKO PUNCTUATION QUOTATION MARK NKO COMBINING NASALIZER NKO COMBINING SHORT MIDDLE TONE NKO COMBINING RISING-FALLING TONE NKO COMBINING LOW TONE NKO COMBINING LONG DESCENDING
MIDDLE TONE NKO COMBINING SUSPENDED BRUSK
MIDDLE TONE NKO COMBINING LONG RISING-FALLING
TONE NKO COMBINING LONG LOW TONE NKO COMBINING SECOND CONSONANT
MODIFIER |
|
59 5A 5B 5C 5D 5E 5F 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 6A 6B 6C 6D 6E 6F 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 7A 7B 7C 7D 7E 7F |
NKO COMBINING THIRD CONSONANT
MODIFIER (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) (This position shall not be used) |
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Group 00 Plane 00 Row
XX
E. Proposal
Manden people live mainly in West Africa, however other people of
Manden origin can be found in other part of the world. They are also known as
Bamanan, Dioula, Maninka, and Mandingo, etc. The language they speak is known
as Mandenkan. The suffix, -kan in means language of. A suffix of -ka, would means the
people of.
The language is a combination of multiple languages, dialects, and
accents. It comprises four main branches, Bambara, Dioula, Mandinko, Maninka,
and many sub-groups who speak the various branches of these branches.
Some of the branches are different only by the dialect or by simple accents
while subgroups can be vastly different in many aspects.
When Mandens from different sub-groups talk to each other, it is
common practice for them to switch, consciously or sub-consciously, from one's
own dialect to a conventional dialect known as, commonly known as Kangbe (the
clear language). N'Ko is Kangbe. This is
even true, sometimes, during conversations between the Bamanan of Mali , the
Maninka of Guinea , and the Mandinko
of Gambia or Senegal . Although the pronunciations
of those languages are practically the same it is sometimes necessary to switch
to kangbe (NKo) either by the use of a central word or a central phrase. As an
example, the word Name in Bamanan is Toko, and in Maninka it is
Toh. In written communications each will write it as T (^Qt) in NKo, and
yet may read and pronounce it differently.
Throughout the centuries people of Manden origin are referred to or
have referred to themselves as NKo speakers.
The great Sundiata Kante, emperor of Manden (Mali ) referred to
the delegation from every Corners of Manden gathered to sign treaty of
Kurukafuwa generally as NKo speakers. It was natural therefore that the great Solomana Kante the inventor of the Manden writing
system will call it NKo.
There are various accounts for the number of NKo speakers.
Depending on the system used for accounting the number varies widely from 18 to
20 millions. The reason for this variation is due to the method of inclusion of
various subgroups or the method used to determine those groups. Nevertheless
there exists not only a substantial number of Mandens, but other non Mandens
that speak Mandenkan as a second language.
The inclusion of NKo will benefit all these people by contributing to
their literacy in the region.
Structure
- NKo is written from right to left.
- It is very orderly writing system for those
who understand it. That is because
it is read as it is written. It is
written as heard.
- It contains
7 vowels and each of the vowels can be accented in 4 ways : 4 short, 4 long, 4 short nasal, and 4
long nasal or a combination of 16X16.
It also contains 19 consonants
and 2 abstracts. All can be pronounced in 16 ways by
adding accents. The consonant and
accent combination is considered extended characters because they are used
only to include foreign sounds that are not generally used by NKo
speakers.
- The N
character (Z)
is a neutral character therefore is not considered a vowel or consonant. Nevertheless it can be accented but has
no nasal form.
- The system also contains 10 numeric
characters 0
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 (1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0) also written from right to
left.
Ordering and names
Ordering
The collating
sequence of in NKo starts with the 7 vowels followed by the N character, the
19 consonants, the wild characters.
However the wild character follows immediately the characters that transforms
to it. Next in the sequence are the
accents, and finally the punctuations. (See Collating)
Names
The names of the consonant are constructed
by adding the vowel A (A) to them.
Thus the name of the letter B (B) is AB or ab .
Similarly the name of the letter M will be AM or am. The names of the vowels
take their sounds as their name. (see English approximations)
Bibliographie
www.kanjamadi.com/leradayida.html
Web Ressources
www.nkoinstitute.com,
www.kanjamadi.com, http://home.gwu.edu/~cwme/Nko/Nkohome.htm
Solomana
Kante (The Teacher)
Early Writing of the teacher
NKo Newspaper
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