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Marain is a language consciously designed as a comprehensive and inclusive vehicle for communicating cultural and technical information.[1]

Marain was created during the formative years of the Culture,[1] when its essential identity was still in flux.[2]

Glyphs and encoding[]

"Written" Marain is fundamentally a binary language. Each symbol — or glyph — is a representation of a binary number — or byte - created by arranging the bits within a multi-dimensional container.[2] Different strata of Marain use different byte sizes, with a commensurate increase in the number of possible unique glyphs. Byte size, and the number of dimensions a glyph may be constructed in, are limited only by computational resources.[2][3] In practice, the more complex strata of Marain — using very long bytes and multi-dimensional glyphs — are only used by and comprehensible to machine intelligences like Minds.[2]

Glyphs may be used to represent a wide range of data, including musical notation[2] and arbitrary symbols and pictograms.[3]

Culture standard nonary[]

Marain1

The Culture's standard "nonary" encoding[2][4] used 9-bit bytes;[3][5] its glyphs were created by laying out the bits on a 3x3 grid.[2][3][4]

The principle set of Culture glyphs — representing the basic alphabet — could each be rotated or mirrored without being mistaken for any of the other primary glyphs. The remaining glyphs were used to represent numbers (in base 8), and a variety of symbols and numerical constants.[3]

Marain in Popular Culture[]

A language called "Marain" was created by Reddit users u/comradelenin456 and u/ratioprosperous using the alphabet from "A Few Notes On Marain".[6] It is a synthetic language with such features as flexible word order, no tenses, six grammatical cases, fourth-person pronouns, and genderless third-person pronouns.[6] Though it has recognition within Reddit and has been used to make tattoos,[7] this language is non-canonical.

Marain in the Culture[]

Marain was designed to be clear, concise and as unambiguous as technically feasible.[3]

The Culture used its standard nonary encoding and primary glyph set to express its form of Marain. Each primary glyph represented a phoneme, with rotated glyphs representing either similar phonemes or different vocalizations.[3] It had a phoneme to denote upper case.[5] The range of represented phonemes was intended to allow the replication of nearly any pan-human language.[3]

It has a Secondary Numbering Series, which may be used to denote Shellworld levels in Full Names.[8]

A single pronoun was used to describe all sentient entities, regardless of sex or species.[9]

While Marain was the predominant language in the Culture, it also saw significant use outside of that polity.[1]

See also[]

References[]