Reminds me of Solresol, except being a 5-tree makes it so it could fit a pentatonic scale, which is fun.
Yesss! Solresol is definitely a spiritual cousin — and you’re right, the pentatonic scale connection is super interesting.
Kamelo using 5 phonemes intentionally echoes both:
the pentatonic musical scale (so it could be spoken, signed, or played as music),
and tree-based semantic logic, where each level refines the concept more.
Solresol mapped syllables to meanings too, but Kamelo’s twist is:
Tree depth encodes specificity.
Context compression is built-in (like pronouns or omitted branches).
Designed from the start to be machine-readable, signable, musical, and tactile.
So theoretically:
A blind person could feel a string of raised tactile glyphs.
A deaf person could see it signed.
A device could parse and translate it.
And a musician could sing meaning.
Reminds me of Solresol, except being a 5-tree makes it so it could fit a pentatonic scale, which is fun.
Yesss! Solresol is definitely a spiritual cousin — and you’re right, the pentatonic scale connection is super interesting.
Kamelo using 5 phonemes intentionally echoes both:
the pentatonic musical scale (so it could be spoken, signed, or played as music),
and tree-based semantic logic, where each level refines the concept more.
Solresol mapped syllables to meanings too, but Kamelo’s twist is:
Tree depth encodes specificity.
Context compression is built-in (like pronouns or omitted branches).
Designed from the start to be machine-readable, signable, musical, and tactile.
So theoretically:
A blind person could feel a string of raised tactile glyphs.
A deaf person could see it signed.
A device could parse and translate it.
And a musician could sing meaning.